- Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre
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Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthièvre Penthièvre by Nattier Spouse Maria Teresa Felicitas d'Este Issue Louis Alexandre, Prince of Lamballe
Marie Adélaïde, Duchess of OrléansFull name Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon Father Louis Alexandre de Bourbon Mother Marie Victoire de Noailles Born 16 November 1725
Château de Rambouillet, FranceDied 4 March 1793 (aged 67)
Château de Bizy, Vernon, FranceBurial Chapelle royale de Dreux, Dreux, France Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon (16 November 1725 – 4 March 1793) was the son of Louis Alexandre de Bourbon and his wife Marie Victoire de Noailles. He was also a grandson of Louis XIV of France and his mistress, Madame de Montespan. From birth he was known as the Duke of Penthièvre. He also possessed the following titles: Prince of Lamballe (given later as a courtesy title to the duke's only surviving son); Prince of Carignano; Duke of Rambouillet; Duke of Aumale (1775); Duke of Gisors; Duke of Châteauvillain; Duke of Arc-en-Barrois; Duke of Amboise; Count of Eu; Count of Guingamp. He was the father in law of Philippe Égalité.
Contents
Biography
Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon was born at the Château de Rambouillet, the son of Louis XIV's youngest legitimised son with Madame de Montespan, the Count of Toulouse, and his wife, Marie Victoire de Noailles, one of the daughters of Anne Jules de Noailles, Duke of Noailles. Since his mother acted as a surrogate parent to the young, orphaned Louis XV, the duke formed a close relationship with the young monarch, who was his godfather.
At the age of twelve, upon his father's death, he succeeded to his father's military posts and titles:
- Admiral of France
- Grand Master of France
- Grand Huntsman of France
- Marshal of France
- Governor of Brittany
On 2 July 1733 at the age of six, he was made a maréchal de camp (field marshal) and the next year, a lieutenant général (lieutenant general). In 1740, he received the Ordre de la Toison d'or from the king. In 1742, the king conferred upon him the Order of the Holy Spirit. He served in the military under his maternal uncle, the maréchal-duc de Noailles, and fought brilliantly at Dettingen in 1743 and Fontenoy in 1745.
As the possessor of one of the largest fortunes in Europe, Louis Jean Marie was a very attractive marriage candidate, especially considering his close links with the French royal family.
A suggestion was made that he marry his cousin, Louise Henriette de Bourbon, the eldest granddaughter of his paternal aunt, Louise-Françoise de Bourbon. This idea, however, was abandoned as Louise Henriette's mother wished her daughter to marry Louis Philippe d'Orléans, the heir of the House of Orléans.
In 1744, at the age of nineteen, Penthièvre married Princess Maria Teresa Felicitas of Modena, (1726-1754), the daughter of Francesco III d'Este, the sovereign Duke of Modena and Reggio, and his first cousin, Charlotte Aglaé d'Orléans. The young couple occupied a suite of apartments at Versailles which had previously been occupied by their joint ancestor Madame de Montespan. These apartments were used by the duke and his family until the reign of Louis XVI of France when the space was given to Mesdames, the new king's spinster aunts.
The couple had seven children, only two of whom survived infancy. The Duchess of Penthièvre died in childbirth in 1754.
Very badly hurt by the loss of his young wife, the duke never married again.
After his wife's death, the duke lived increasingly away from the court at Versailles, dividing his time between two of his many country residences, the Château de Rambouillet and the Château de Sceaux. He devoted the majority of the rest of his life to dispensing charity. During the French Revolution, he gave refuge in Sceaux to the poet Jean Pierre Claris de Florian, who had formerly been one of his pages and secretaries at the Château d'Anet.
In 1791, he moved to the Château de Bizy,[1] at Vernon in Normandy,[2] where his daughter joined him in April of that year after leaving her husband, the duc d'Orléans. Greatly respected by the people because of his philanthropy, the duke was never bothered by the radicals as the French Revolution progressed. Others in his immediate family, however, were not spared. On 3 September 1792, his daughter-in-law, the princesse de Lamballe, was savagely murdered, and on 21 January 1793, his cousin Louis XVI was executed. He never saw the arrest of his daughter in April 1793, as he died on 4 March 1793 at Bizy. On the night of 6 to 7 March, his body was brought clandestinely to Dreux, where it was buried in the family crypt at the Collégiale Saint-Étienne. During his lifetime, the duc de Penthièvre had had one passion, that of collecting watches.
Legacy
Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon was also the head and founder of the house of Bourbon-Penthièvre, an extinct and illegitimate branch of the House of Bourbon, which was originally called the House of Bourbon-Toulouse after the title of his father Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, comte de Toulouse.
Penthièvre was one of the wealthiest men of his day and probably the richest in France. He was known to be very charitable. Most of his vast riches derived from the fortune of La Grande Mademoiselle, the first cousin of King Louis XIV.
In 1681, Louis XIV had given his consent that his cousin marry the duc de Lauzun, the only man she ever loved, on the condition she make the Duke of Maine, the newly legitimised son of the king and Mme de Montespan, her heir. All she could be made to accept, against her will, was to give the young duke the county of Eu and the principality of Dombes. Upon which, untrue to his word, Louis XIV refused to let her marry Lauzun.[3][4]
Du Maine's fortune was enlarged with many expensive gifts from his adoring father. His two sons inherited his fortune and when they both died childless, the duc de Penthièvre was the sole heir to du Maine's wealth. The châteaux at Sceaux, Anet, Aumale, Dreux and Gisors were part of this huge inheritance.
In addition, being his only child, the duc de Penthièvre was the only heir of the comte de Toulouse from whom he inherited the Hôtel de Toulouse in Paris, and the château de Rambouillet surrounded by the game-rich Rambouillet forest. The Hôtel de Toulouse was the family's residence in Paris. The duc de Penthièvre willed it to his daughter, Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon-Penthièvre. It was located opposite the Palais-Royal.[5]
Over the years, the duc de Penthièvre also acquired other estates:
- château de Chanteloup, a vast château[6] situated in the Touraine province of France. He received this after the death of the duc de Choiseul, in 1785,
- château d'Amboise, a castle in the Loire Valley,
- château at Châteauneuf-sur-Loire,
- château de La Ferté-Vidame, this château was home to the sharp-penned memorialist, Saint-Simon,
Because his male heir, the prince de Lamballe, predeceased him in 1768, his only surviving child, his daughter, became the sole heir to his fortune. In 1769, she had married the Duke of Chartres, future duc d'Orléans, known to history as Philippe Égalité. As a result, what she managed (after the Bourbon Restoration) to recuperate of her fortune confiscated during the French Revolution, passed, upon her death in 1821, into the possession of the House of Orléans.
The lands of the Comté de Dreux (County of Dreux), had been given to the duc de Penthièvre by his cousin Louis XVI. In November 1783, after having sold to Louis XVI the château de Rambouillet and the immense rich-game forest attached to the estate - the latter being the main reason of the sale - Penthièvre transferred the nine bodies of his family (his parents, his wife and six of his seven children) from the 12th century Saint-Lubin church in the village of Rambouillet to the Collégiale Saint-Étienne de Dreux, where he himself was buried in March 1793. On November 1793, a revolutionary mob desecrated the family crypt and threw the ten bodies in a mass grave in the Collégiale cemetery (cimetière des Chanoines). In 1816, his daughter, Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon, duchesse douairière d'Orléans, had a new chapel built on the site of that grave, as the final resting place for the members of the House of Bourbon-Toulouse-Penthièvre. After the accession to the throne of her son, Louis-Philippe, King of the French, the chapel was named Chapelle Royale de Dreux,[7] and became the necropolis of the royal Orléans family. It contains the remains of 75 members of the Bourbon-Penthièvre and Orléans families.
A street in Paris near the Avenue des Champs Élysées is named for the duc de Penthièvre.[8] At the site of n° 11 rue de Penthièvre, an hôtel particulier of the First French Empire period with a large garden, is believed to have once been the residence of the duc de Penthièvre's grandson, the future King of the French, Louis-Philippe, in his youth. In the late 19th century, n° 11 housed the American Embassy. This address became famous in the early 20th century as the salon de couture of the British designer, "Lucile".
Issue
- Louis Marie de Bourbon, duc de Rambouillet (1746–1749);
- Louis Alexandre Joseph Stanislas de Bourbon, prince de Lamballe (1747–1768), married Princess Marie Louise of Savoy (1749–1792) and had no issue;
- Jean Marie de Bourbon (1748–1755), duc de Châteauvillain ;
- Vincent Marie Louis de Bourbon (1750–1752), comte de Guingamp ;
- Marie Louise de Bourbon (1751–1753) ;
- Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon, Mademoiselle de Penthièvre (1753–1821), married Philippe d'Orléans and had issue;
- Louis Marie Félicité de Bourbon (1754), died at birth.
Ancestry
Ancestors of Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre 16. Henry IV of France 8. Louis XIII of France 17. Marie de' Medici 4. Louis XIV of France 18. Philip III of Spain 9. Anne of Austria 19. Margaret of Austria 2. Louis Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of Toulouse 20. Gaspard de Rochechouart, Marquess of Mortemart 10. Gabriel de Rochechouart de Mortemart, Duke of Mortemart 21. Louise de Maure, Countess of Maure 5. Françoise-Athénaïs de Rochechouart de Mortemart, Marchioness of Montespan 22. Jean de Grandseigne, Marquis of Marsillac 11. Diane de Grandseigne 23. Catherine de La Béraudière, Lady of Villenon 1. Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, duc de Penthièvre 24. François de Noailles, Count of Ayen 12. Anne de Noailles, Duke of Noailles 25. Rose de Roquelaure 6. Anne Jules de Noailles, Duke of Noailles 26. Antoine Boyer, Lord of Sainte-Geneviève-aux-Bois 13. Louise Boyer 27. Françoise de Wignacourt 3. Marie Victoire de Noailles 28. Alexandre I, Duke of Bournonville 14. Ambroise-François, Duke of Bournonville 29. Anne de Melun 7. Marie-Françoise de Bournonville 30. Charles, Duke of La Vieuville 15. Lucrèce Françoise de La Vieuville 31. Marie Bouhier de Sainte-Geneviève, Lady of Beaumarchais Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles and Styles
- 16 November 1725 – 4 March 1793 His Serene Highness the Duke of Penthièvre
References
- ^ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ch%C3%A2teau_de_Bizy
- ^ vernon visite château patrimoine 6
- ^ Erlanger, Philippe, Louis XIV, translated from the French by Stephen Cox, Praeger Publishers, New York, 1970, pp. 192-193.
- ^ Mémoires de La Grande Mademoiselle, Troisième partie, chapitre 3, http://penelope.uchicago.edu/mlle/partie3/chap303.html
- ^ The former Hôtel de Toulouse is now the seat of the Banque de France.
- ^ The château de Chanteloup was demolished in the 19th century.
- ^ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapelle_royale_de_Dreux
- ^ de Rochegude, Félix, Promenades dans toutes les rues de Paris par arrondissements, Hachette, Paris, 1910, p. 30.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Titles
Titles and Succession Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of PenthièvreCadet branch of the House of BourbonBorn: 1725 4 MarchFrench nobility Preceded by
Louis Charles de BourbonCount of Eu
1775–1793Succeeded by
Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon-Penthièvrewith Philippe d'OrléansPreceded by
New CreationCount of Guingamp
- –1793Succeeded by
Vincent Marie Louis de BourbonPreceded by
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of ToulouseCount of Toulouse
1737–1793Succeeded by
House of OrléansPreceded by
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of ToulouseDuke of Penthièvre
1725–1793Succeeded by
House of OrléansPreceded by
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of ToulouseDuke of Châteauvillain
1737–1748Succeeded by
Jean Marie de BourbonPreceded by
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of ToulouseDuke of Damville
1737–1793Succeeded by
House of OrléansPreceded by
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of ToulouseDuke of Rambouillet
1737–1776Succeeded by
House of OrléansPreceded by
Choiseul familyDuke of Amboise
1786–1793Succeeded by
extinctPreceded by
new creationDuke of Gisors
1775–1793Succeeded by
House of OrléansPreceded by
New CreationDuke of Arc
1737–1793Succeeded by
extinctPreceded by
New CreationPrince of Lamballe
-–1747Succeeded by
Louis Alexandre Stanislas de BourbonItalian royalty Preceded by
Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia, Duke of SavoyPrince of Carignano
1751–1793Succeeded by
Louise Marie Adélaïde de BourbonPolitical offices Preceded by
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of ToulouseMinister of the Navy
1737–1793Succeeded by
RevolutionPreceded by
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of ToulouseAdmiral of France
1737–1793Succeeded by
RevolutionHouse of Bourbon Henry IV of France Spouse(s)ChildrenSiblingsHenri, Duke of Beaumont (1551–1553) · Louis, Count of Marle (1555–1557) · Madeleine (1556) · Catherine, Duchess of LorraineIllegitimate childrenCésar, Duke of Vendôme · Catherine Henriette, Duchess of Elbeuf · Alexandre, Chevalier de Vendôme · Henri, Duke of Verneuil · Gabrielle Angelique, Duchess of La Valette and Epernon · Antoine, Count of Moret · Jeanne Baptiste, Abess of Fontevraud · Marie Henriette, Abess of ChellesGrandchildrenAnne Marie Louise, Duchess of Montpensier · Marguerite Louise, Grand Duchess of Tuscany · Élisabeth Marguerite, Duchess of Alençon and Angoulême · Françoise Madeleine, Duchess of Savoy · Princess Marie Anne · Jean Gaston, Duke of Valois · Louis XIV of France · Philippe, Duke of OrléansLouis XIII of France Spouse(s)ChildrenGrandchildrenLouis, Dauphin of France · Princess Anne Élisabeth · Princess Marie Anne · Princess Marie Therèse, Madame Royale · Philippe Charles, Duke of Anjou · Louis François, Duke of Anjou · Marie Louise, Queen of Spain · Philippe Charles, Duke of Valois · Anne Marie, Queen of Sardinia · Alexandre Louis, Duke of Valois · Philippe Charles, Duke of Orléans · Élisabeth Charlotte, Duchess of LorraineGreat
grandchildrenLouis XIV of France Spouse(s)ChildrenLouis, Dauphin of France · Princess Anne Élisabeth · Princess Marie Anne · Princess Marie Therèse, Madame Royale · Philippe Charles, Duke of Anjou · Louis François, Duke of AnjouIllegitimate childrenMarie Anne, Princess of Conti · Louis, Count of Vermandois · Louis Auguste, Duke of Maine · Louis César, Count of Vexin · Louise Françoise, Duchess of Bourbon · Louise Marie Anne, Mademoiselle de Tours · Françoise Marie, Duchess of Orléans · Louis Alexandre, Count of Toulouse · Louise, Baroness of La QueueGrandchildrenLouis, Duke of Burgundy · King Felipe of Spain+ · Charles, Duke of Berry · Louis Auguste, Prince of Dombes · Louis Charles, Count of Eu · Louise Françoise, Mademoiselle du Maine · Louis Jean Marie, Duke of PenthièvreGreat
grandchildrenLouis, Duke of Brittany · Louis, Duke of Brittany · Louis XV of France · Louis I of Spain* · Felipe of Spain* · Felipe of Spain* · Ferdinand VI of Spain* · Charles III of Spain* · Francisco of Spain* · Mariana Víctoria, Queen of Portugal* · Philip, Duke of Parma* · Maria Teresa Rafaela, Dauphine of France* · Luis, Count of Chinchón* · Maria Antonietta, Queen of Sardinia* · Charles, Duke of Alençon · Marie Louise Élisabeth d'Alençon · Louis Alexandre, Prince of LamballeLouis XV of France Spouse(s)ChildrenLouise Élisabeth, Duchess of Parma · Princess Henriette · Princess Louise · Louis, Dauphin of France · Philippe, Duke of Anjou · Marie Adélaïde, Duchess of Louvois · Princess Victoire · Sophie, Duchess of Louvois · Princess Thérèse · Princess Louise MarieGrandchildrenPrincess Marie Therèse, Madame Royale · Princess Marie Zéphyrine · Louis, Duke of Burgundy · Xavier, Duke of Aquitaine · Louis XVI of France · Louis XVIII of France · Charles X of France · Clothilde, Queen of Sardinia · Princess ÉlisabethIllegitimate children
includedCharles de Vintimille · Agathe Louise de Saint-Antoine · Philippe, Duke of Narbonne-Lara · Louis, Count of Narbonne-LaraLouis XVI of France Spouse(s)ChildrenMarie Thérèse, Duchess of Angoulême · Louis Joseph, Dauphin of France · Louis XVII of France · Princess Sophie HélèneLouis XVII of France NoteLouis had no children; he died aged 10 in 1795. His uncle, the future Louis XVIII of France, proclaimed himself regent but both titles were disputed.
See Bourbon Restoration.Louis XVIII of France Spouse(s)Charles X of France Spouse(s)ChildrenLouis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême · Sophie, Mademoiselle · Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry · Marie Thérèse, Mademoiselle d'AngoulêmeGrandchildrenPrincess Louise Élisabeth · Prince Louis · Louise Marie Thérèse, Duchess of Parma · Henry, Count of ChambordNotes: *also an Infante or Infanta of Spain · **also an Archduchess of Austria · ***both · +Philip was the first Bourbon king of Spain, the country's present ruling house
Categories:- 1725 births
- 1793 deaths
- People from Rambouillet
- Admirals of France
- House of Bourbon-Penthièvre
- Princes of Lamballe
- Dukes of Penthièvre
- Dukes of Aumale
- Dukes of Rambouillet
- Dukes of Gisors
- Dukes of Châteauvillain
- Dukes of Amboise
- Dukes of Carignan
- Dukes of Arc-en-Barrois
- Counts of Eu
- Counts of Dreux
- Counts of Guingamp
- Burials at the Chapelle royale de Dreux
- Recipients of the Order of the Holy Spirit
- Grand Huntsman of France
- French nobility
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