- Adelaide Filleul, Marquise de Souza-Botelho
Adélaïde-Emilie Filleul, Marquise de Souza-Botelho (
May 14 ,1761 -April 19 ,1836 ) was a French writer.Biography
She was born in
Paris .Her mother, Marie Irène Cathérine de Buisson, daughter of the Seigneur de Longpré, near
Falaise , married abourgeois of that town named Filleul. It was reported, though no proof is forthcoming, that Mme. Filleul had been the mistress of Louis XV and most royal genealogists give hers as his daughter, although never recognized. Her husband became one of the king's secretaries, and Mme. Filleul made many friends, among themJean-François Marmontel . Their eldest daughter, Julie, married Abel François Poisson, Marquis de Marigny (1727-1781); Adelaide married onJanuary 30 ,1779 Alexandre Sébastien de Flahaut de La Billarderie, Comte de Flahaut de La Billarderie, a soldier of some reputation, who was many years her senior.In
Paris she soon gathered round her a salon, in which the principal figure wasCharles Maurice de Talleyrand . There are many allusions to their liaison in the diary ofGouverneur Morris , who was another of her lovers. In 1785 was born her sonCharles Joseph, comte de Flahaut , who was generally known to be Talleyrand's son. Mme de Flahaut fled from Paris in 1792 and joined the society of "émigré"s atMickleham, Surrey , described in Mme. d'Arblay's "Memoirs". Her husband remained atBoulogne-sur-Mer , where he was arrested onJanuary 29 ,1793 andguillotine d. Mme. de Flahaut now supported herself by writing novels, of which the first, "Adèle de Sénanges" (London, 1794), which is partly autobiographical, was the most famous.She presently left London for
Switzerland , where she met Louis Philippe, duke of Orleans. She travelled in his company toHamburg , where she lived for two years, earning her living as amilliner . She returned to Paris in 1798, and on17 October 1802 she married as his second wife Dom José Maria de Sousa Botelho Mourão e Vasconcelos (Porto ,March 9 ,1758 -Paris ,June 1 ,1825 ), Portuguese ministerplenipotentiary in Paris, 2nd Lord of theMajorat de Mateus, firstly married inLisbon onNovember 23 ,1783 to Dona Maria Teresa de Noronha, by whom he had issue, an only son, future 1st Count ofVila Real . Her husband was recalled in 1804, and was offered theSaint Petersburg embassy; but in the next year he resigned, to settle permanently in Paris, where he had many friends, among them the historianJean Charles Leonard de Sismondi . He spent his time chiefly in the preparation of a beautiful edition of the "Lusiads" ofLuís de Camões , which he completed in 1817.Mme. de Souza lost her social power after the fall of the First Empire, and was deserted even by Talleyrand, although he continued his patronage of Charles de Flahaut. Her husband died in 1825, and after the accession of Louis Philippe she lived in comparative retirement till her death. She brought up her grandson, Charles, duc de Morny, her son's natural son by Queen Hortense. Among her later novels were "La Comtesse de Fargy" (1822) and "La Duchesse de Guise" (1831). Her complete works were published between 1811 and 1822.
References
*1911
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