Dorothea von Biron

Dorothea von Biron

Dorothea von Biron, self-styled Dorothée de Courlande (Berlin 21 August 1793Sagan 19 September 1862) was a German-Baltic noblewoman. She was the daughter of Dorothea von Medem and Alexander Batowski, though her mother's husband Peter von Biron, the last Duke of Courland, acknowledged her as his own. She married Edmond de Talleyrand-Périgord (1787-1872), nephew of the French statesman Talleyrand, and was later lover to the latter.

Life

Marriage

Looking for a wealthy heiress for his nephew Edmond, Talleyrand asked tsar Alexander I of Russia to intervene with Dorothea's mother in favour of Edmond's marrying her. The marriage occurred on 21 and 22 April 1809 at Frankfurt amidst the Napoleonic Wars, presided over by Talleyrand's friend prince-bishop Emmerich Joseph, duc de Dalberg, and Dorothea thus became comtesse Edmond de Périgord and great-niece of Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord, prince of Bénévent. Educated in Germany, she was plunged into French society, where she represented the enemy. Her 3 sisters, also very anti-French, did not help her marriage and (despite the birth of 3 children) it became unhappy, with Edmond more concerned with gaming, war and other women than with his wife.

The fall of the First French Empire and the Congress of Vienna (at which Talleyrand was designated to represent France) favoured an affair between Dorothea and Talleyrand. During his time in Vienna she kept her household in the palais Kaunitz and it was at this time that Dorothea began to play a major part in Charles-Maurice's life, accompanying him to the congress of Vienna and probably becoming his mistress sometime after 1815. On 31 August 1817, Talleyrand was made a duke and peer of France by Louis XVIII of France, and on 2 December was also granted the duchy of Dino (a 1.5km by 1.2km Calabrian island) by the king of Sicily in recognition of his services at Vienna. The duchy of Dino was immediately handed down to his nephew and his wife and so Dorothea also became duchess of Dino. On 24 March 1818 she and her husband separated, though this was only pronounced formally on 6 November 1824.

Her life with Talleyrand

On 3 July 1820 Talleyrand left Paris for Valençay accompanied by Dorothea, then pregnant with her third child, Pauline, whose paternity is sometimes attributed to Talleyrand. Despite his company (39 years her senior) she took several lovers, gaining a reputation as a formidable seductress and bearing three illegitimate daughters (one of whom, born in 1816, was perhaps Bozena Nemcova, the great Czech writer, fathered by Clam Martinic, her lover at the Congress of Vienna; the two others, Antonine and Julie Zulmé, were born in 1825 and 1827).

She became duchess of Talleyrand on 28 April 1838. On 6 January 1845, the king of Prussia invested Dorothea as duchess of Sagan (with the special privilege of the dukedom being able to descend via the female as well as the male line), with her son Louis-Napoléon, godson of Napoleon and Louis-Napoléon's grandson Boson de Talleyrand-Périgord immediately taking the title of prince of Sagan.

When Talleyrand became French ambassador in London in 1830, she accompanied him and felt more comfortable there than in Paris, which she detested and where the whole Faubourg Saint-Germain made her feel she was a foreigner. This was a theme throughout her life - in Prussia she was seen as too French, in Paris as too German.

After Talleyrand's death in 1838, she granted her château de Rochecotte to her daughter Pauline de Castellane in 1847, having chosen in 1843 to live in state at her castle at Sagan in Silesia (made up of 130 buildings on an estate of 1,200 hectares, bought by her father and then by her sister Pauline de Hohenzollern). She reigned over this immense and rich duchy alone, until she had a carriage accident in June 1861 and died on 19 September 1862 at Sagan.

Despite the wish she had expressed to her uncle and probable lover Talleyrand in a letter of April 1838 and in her will, that her heart should be placed in his grave at Valencay, she was buried in the Kreuzkirche at Sagan, with her sister Wilhelmine and son Louis.

Reception

The young writer Françoise Quoirez (1935 - 2004), in reading a passage of Marcel Proust evoking a duke of Sagan around 1950, was seduced by its sonority and chose "Sagan" as her "nom de plume".

“(..) With large dark blue eyes, very beautiful, so burning that they appeared black to some people. There was in her something bold, wild, dauntless and burning one which held the gaze". (Casimir Ensconce, "Talleyrand amoureux", edition France-Empire, 1975).

The opinions she inspired are various; those of men, admiring her beauty and intelligence, praise her, but those of women, jealous of her position and wealth, are more venomous. It is strange that she had no close female friends but instead was a solitary figure, despite keeping up a wide correspondence with many personalities of her era. She was a true European, in an era where that word was unknown. Born between two cultures, speaking three languages, in contact with all the political personalities of Europe, she could have been, in another era, thanks to her intelligence, a scholar or politician. But in that era, only men had a career, and so she was unable to realize her numerous talents. As Guizot said of her: "une personne rare et grande".

The duchess of Dino also has a descendant in Touraine, a "calm and human region, of a pure, very poetic beauty", in the person of Béatrice of Andia, one of her great-great-great grand-daughters, president of the association of the "Friends of château d'Azay-le-Rideau", owner of château de La Chatonnière (37).

tyles

She was successively comtesse Edmond de Périgord (1809), duchesse de Dino (1817, the title under which she is remembered), duchesse de Talleyrand (1838) and duchesse de Sagan, now Żagań, Poland (1845).

Her properties

* Château de Bouges (Indre), bought for her in 1818 by Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord
* Château de Rochecotte (Indre-et-Loire), overlooking the Loire valley, bought by her 30 April 1828, rebuilt by her. She wrote of it "He took me away from these deep and melancholy regrets to this soft and tranquil Rochecotte" ("Il me prend des profonds et mélancoliques regrets pour ce doux et tranquille Rochecotte..." - letter of 1862)
* Château de Sagan (Lower Silesia, now "Żagań" in Poland), bought in 1843 by her elder sister, Pauline, princess of Hohenzollern-Hechingen
* Château de Günthersdorf (Lower Silesia, today "Zatonie" in Poland), bought in 1840

Her memoirs

*Dorothée, princesse de Courlande, duchesse de Dino, "Mémoires . Tome I, 1794-1808 : souvenirs d'enfance de la princesse de Courlande" (texte établi par Clémence Muller). – Clermont-Ferrand : Paleo, coll. « Sources de l'histoire de France », 2003. – 173 p., 21 cm. – ISBN 2-84909-022-0.

Chronologically:

** "Mémoires. Tome II, 1831-1834" (texte établi par Clémence Muller). – Clermont-Ferrand : Paleo, coll. « Sources de l'histoire de France », 2003. – 258 p., 21 cm. – ISBN 2-84909-039-5.
** "Mémoires . Tome III, 1835-1837" (texte établi par Clémence Muller). – Clermont-Ferrand : Paleo, coll. « Sources de l'histoire de France », 2004. – 228 p., 21 cm. – ISBN 2-84909-065-4.
** "Mémoires . Tome IV, 1838-1840" (texte établi par Clémence Muller). – Clermont-Ferrand : Paleo, coll. « Sources de l'histoire de France », 2004. – 243 p., 21 cm. – ISBN 2-84909-071-9.
** "Mémoires . Tome V, 1840-1843" (texte établi par Clémence Muller). – Clermont-Ferrand : Paleo, coll. « Sources de l'histoire de France », 2004. – 244 p., 21 cm. – ISBN 2-84909-092-1.
** "Mémoires . Tome VI, 1844-1853" (texte établi par Clémence Muller). – Clermont-Ferrand : Paleo, coll. « Sources de l'histoire de France », 2004. – 220 p., 21 cm. – ISBN 2-84909-109-X.
** "Mémoires . Tome VII, 1854-1862" (texte établi par Clémence Muller). – Clermont-Ferrand : Paleo, coll. « Sources de l'histoire de France », 2004. – 203 p., 21 cm. – ISBN 2-84909-112-X.

ee also

*De Talleyrand-Périgord

External links

*http://perso.orange.fr/courlande
*http://www.amis-talleyrand.asso.fr/


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