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Charles X

Charles X (born Charles Philippe, Count of Artois; 9 October 1757 – 6 November 1836) was King of France from 16 September 1824 until 2 August 1830.[1] An uncle of the uncrowned Louis XVII and younger brother to reigning kings Louis XVI and Louis XVIII, he supported the latter in exile. After the Bourbon Restoration in 1814, Charles (as heir-presumptive) became the leader of the ultra-royalists, a radical monarchist faction within the French court that affirmed rule by divine right and opposed the concessions towards liberals and guarantees of civil liberties granted by the Charter of 1814.[2] Charles gained influence within the French court after the assassination of his son Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry, in 1820 and succeeded his brother Louis XVIII in 1824.[3][4]

Charles X
Portrait by François Gérard, c. 1825
King of France
Reign16 September 1824 – 2 August 1830
Coronation29 May 1825
Reims Cathedral
PredecessorLouis XVIII
SuccessorLouis Philippe I (as King of the French)
Prime Ministers
Born(1757-10-09)9 October 1757
Palace of Versailles, France
Died6 November 1836(1836-11-06) (aged 79)
Görz, Austrian Empire
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1773)
Issue
Detail
Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême
Sophie, Mademoiselle d'Artois
Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry
Marie Thérèse, Mademoiselle d'Angoulême
Names
Charles Philippe de Bourbon
HouseBourbon
FatherLouis, Dauphin of France
MotherMarie-Josèphe of Saxony
ReligionCatholicism
Signature

His reign of almost six years proved to be deeply unpopular amongst the liberals in France from the moment of his coronation in 1825, in which he tried to revive the practice of the royal touch. The governments appointed under his reign reimbursed former landowners for the abolition of feudalism at the expense of bondholders, increased the power of the Catholic Church, and reimposed capital punishment for sacrilege, leading to conflict with the liberal-majority Chamber of Deputies.[4] Charles also approved the French conquest of Algeria as a way to distract his citizens from domestic problems, and forced Haiti to pay a hefty indemnity in return for lifting a blockade and recognizing Haiti's independence. He eventually appointed a conservative government under the premiership of Prince Jules de Polignac, who was defeated in the 1830 French legislative election. He responded with the July Ordinances disbanding the Chamber of Deputies, limiting franchise, and reimposing press censorship.[5] Within a week France faced urban riots which led to the July Revolution of 1830, which resulted in his abdication and the election of Louis Philippe I as King of the French. Exiled once again, Charles died in 1836 in Gorizia, then part of the Austrian Empire.[3] He was the last of the French rulers from the senior branch of the House of Bourbon.

Childhood and adolescence

 
Charles Philippe with his younger sister Clotilde on a goat

Charles Philippe of France was born in 1757, the youngest son of the Dauphin Louis and his wife, the Dauphine Marie Josèphe, at the Palace of Versailles. Charles was created Count of Artois at birth by his grandfather, the reigning King Louis XV.[citation needed] As the youngest male in the family, Charles seemed unlikely ever to become king. His eldest brother, Louis, Duke of Burgundy, died unexpectedly in 1761, which moved Charles up one place in the line of succession. He was raised in early childhood by Madame de Marsan, the Governess of the Children of France.[citation needed] At the death of his father in 1765, Charles's oldest surviving brother, Louis Auguste, became the new Dauphin (the heir apparent to the French throne). Their mother Marie Josèphe, who never recovered from the loss of her husband, died in March 1767 from tuberculosis.[6] This left Charles an orphan at the age of nine, along with his siblings Louis Auguste, Louis Stanislas, Count of Provence, Clotilde ("Madame Clotilde"), and Élisabeth ("Madame Élisabeth").

Louis XV fell ill on 27 April 1774 and died on 10 May of smallpox at the age of 64.[7] His grandson Louis-Auguste succeeded him as King Louis XVI.[8]

Marriage and private life

 
Charles as Count of Artois in 1798. Portrait by Henri-Pierre Danloux

In November 1773, Charles married Marie Thérèse of Savoy.

In 1775, Marie Thérèse gave birth to a boy, Louis Antoine, who was created Duke of Angoulême by Louis XVI. Louis-Antoine was the first of the next generation of Bourbons, as the king and the Count of Provence had not fathered any children yet, causing the Parisian libellistes (pamphleteers who published scandalous leaflets about important figures in court and politics) to lampoon Louis XVI's alleged impotence.[9] Three years later, in 1778, Charles' second son, Charles Ferdinand, was born and given the title of Duke of Berry.[10] In the same year Queen Marie Antoinette gave birth to her first child, Marie Thérèse, quelling all rumours that she could not bear children.

Charles was thought of as the most attractive member of his family, bearing a strong resemblance to his grandfather Louis XV.[11] His wife was considered quite ugly by most contemporaries, and he looked for company in numerous extramarital affairs. According to the Count of Hézecques, "few beauties were cruel to him." Among his lovers was notably Anne Victoire Dervieux. Later, he embarked upon a lifelong love affair with the beautiful Louise de Polastron, the sister-in-law of Marie Antoinette's closest companion, the Duchess of Polignac.

Charles also struck up a firm friendship with Marie Antoinette herself, whom he had first met upon her arrival in France in April 1770 when he was twelve.[11] The closeness of the relationship was such that he was falsely accused by Parisian rumour mongers of having seduced her. As part of Marie Antoinette's social set, Charles often appeared opposite her in the private theatre of her favourite royal retreat, the Petit Trianon. They were both said to be very talented amateur actors. Marie Antoinette played milkmaids, shepherdesses, and country ladies, whereas Charles played lovers, valets, and farmers.

A famous story concerning the two involves the construction of the Château de Bagatelle. In 1775, Charles purchased a small hunting lodge in the Bois de Boulogne. He soon had the existing house torn down with plans to rebuild. Marie Antoinette wagered her brother-in-law that the new château could not be completed within three months. Charles engaged the neoclassical architect François-Joseph Bélanger to design the building.[12]

He won his bet, with Bélanger completing the house in sixty-three days. It is estimated that the project, which came to include manicured gardens, cost over two million livres. Throughout the 1770s, Charles spent lavishly. He accumulated enormous debts, totalling 21 million livres. In the 1780s, King Louis XVI paid off the debts of both his brothers, the Counts of Provence and Artois.[12]

In 1781, Charles acted as a proxy for Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II at the christening of his godson, the Dauphin Louis Joseph.[13]

Crisis and French Revolution

Charles's political awakening started with the first great crisis of the monarchy in 1786, when it became apparent that the kingdom was bankrupt from previous military endeavours (in particular the Seven Years' War and the American War of Independence) and needed fiscal reform to survive. Charles supported the removal of the aristocracy's financial privileges, but was opposed to any reduction in the social privileges enjoyed by either the Roman Catholic Church or the nobility. He believed that France's finances should be reformed without the monarchy being overthrown. In his own words, it was "time for repair, not demolition."[This quote needs a citation]

King Louis XVI eventually convened the Estates General, which had not been assembled for over 150 years, to meet in May 1789 to ratify financial reforms. Along with his sister Élisabeth, Charles was the most conservative member of the family[14] and opposed the demands of the Third Estate (representing the commoners) to increase their voting power. This prompted criticism from his brother, who accused him of being "plus royaliste que le roi" ("more royalist than the king"). In June 1789, the representatives of the Third Estate declared themselves a National Assembly intent on providing France with a new constitution.[15]

In conjunction with the Baron de Breteuil, Charles had political alliances arranged to depose the liberal minister of finance, Jacques Necker. These plans backfired when Charles attempted to secure Necker's dismissal on 11 July without Breteuil's knowledge, much earlier than they had originally intended. It was the beginning of a decline in his political alliance with Breteuil, which ended in mutual loathing.[citation needed]

Necker's dismissal provoked the storming of the Bastille on 14 July. With the concurrence of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette Charles and his family left France three days later, on 17 July, along with several other courtiers. These included the Duchess of Polignac, the queen's favourite.[16] His flight was historically attributed to personal fears for his own safety. However recent research indicates that the King had approved his brother's departure in advance, seeing it as a means of ensuring that one close relative would be free to act as a spokesman for the monarchy, after Louis himself had been moved from Versailles to Paris.[17]

Life in exile

 
A Blue plaque at 72 South Audley Street, Mayfair, London, his home between 1805 and 1814

Charles and his family decided to seek refuge in Savoy, his wife's native country,[18] where they were joined by some members of the Condé family.[19] Meanwhile, in Paris, Louis XVI was struggling with the National Assembly, which was committed to radical reforms and had enacted the Constitution of 1791. In March 1791, the Assembly also enacted a regency bill that provided for the case of the king's premature death. While his heir Louis-Charles was still a minor, the Count of Provence, the Duke of Orléans or, if either was unavailable, someone chosen by election should become regent, completely passing over the rights of Charles who, in the royal lineage, stood between the Count of Provence and the Duke of Orléans.[20]

Charles meanwhile left Turin (in Italy) and moved to Trier in Germany, where his uncle, Clemens Wenceslaus of Saxony, was the incumbent Archbishop-Elector. Charles prepared for a counter-revolutionary invasion of France, but a letter by Marie Antoinette postponed it until after the royal family had escaped from Paris and joined a concentration of regular troops under François Claude Amour, marquis de Bouillé at Montmédy.[21][22]

After the attempted flight was stopped at Varennes, Charles moved on to Koblenz, where he, the recently escaped Count of Provence and the Princes of Condé jointly declared their intention to invade France. The Count of Provence was sending dispatches to various European sovereigns for assistance, while Charles set up a court-in-exile in the Electorate of Trier. On 25 August, the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire and Prussia issued the Declaration of Pillnitz, which called on other European powers to intervene in France.[23]

On New Year's Day 1792, the National Assembly declared all emigrants traitors, repudiated their titles and confiscated their lands.[24] This measure was followed by the suspension and eventually the abolition of the monarchy in September 1792. The royal family was imprisoned, and the former king and former queen were eventually executed in 1793.[25] The young former dauphin died of illnesses and neglect in 1795.[26]

When the French Revolutionary Wars broke out in 1792, Charles escaped to Great Britain, where King George III of Great Britain gave him a generous allowance. Charles lived in Edinburgh and London with his mistress Louise de Polastron.[27] His older brother, dubbed Louis XVIII after the death of his nephew in June 1795, relocated to Verona and then to Jelgava Palace, Mitau, where Charles' son Louis Antoine married Louis XVI's only surviving child, Marie Thérèse, on 10 June 1799. In 1802, Charles supported his brother with several thousand pounds. In 1807, Louis XVIII moved to the United Kingdom.[28]

Bourbon Restoration

 
The Return of Charles X by Pauline Auzou

In January 1814, Charles covertly left his home in London to join the Coalition forces in southern France. Louis XVIII, by then reliant on a wheelchair, supplied Charles with letters patent creating him Lieutenant General of the Kingdom of France. On 31 March, the Allies captured Paris. A week later, Napoleon I abdicated. The Senate declared the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy, with Louis XVIII as King of France. Charles (now heir-presumptive) arrived in the capital on 12 April[29] and acted as Lieutenant General of the realm until Louis XVIII arrived from the United Kingdom. During his brief tenure as regent, Charles created an ultra-royalist secret police that reported directly back to him without Louis XVIII's knowledge. It operated for over five years.[30]

Louis XVIII was greeted with great rejoicing from the Parisians and proceeded to occupy the Tuileries Palace.[31] The Count of Artois lived in the Pavillon de Mars, and the Duke of Angoulême in the Pavillon de Flore, which overlooked the River Seine.[32] The Duchess of Angoulême fainted upon arriving at the palace, as it brought back terrible memories of her family's incarceration there, and of the storming of the palace and the massacre of the Swiss Guards on 10 August 1792.[31]

Following the advice of the occupying allied army, Louis XVIII promulgated a liberal constitution, the Charter of 1814, which provided for a bicameral legislature, an electorate of 90,000 men and freedom of religion.[33]

After the Hundred Days, Napoleon's brief return to power in 1815,[34] the White Terror focused mainly on the purging of a civilian administration which had almost completely turned against the Bourbon monarchy. About 70,000 officials were dismissed from their positions. The remnants of the Napoleonic army were disbanded after the Battle of Waterloo and its senior officers cashiered. Marshal Ney was executed for treason, and Marshal Brune was murdered by a crowd.[35] Approximately 6,000 individuals who had rallied to Napoleon were brought to trial. There were about 300 mob lynchings in the south of France, notably in Marseilles where a number of Napoleon's Mamluks preparing to return to Egypt, were massacred in their barracks.

King's brother and heir presumptive

While the king retained the liberal charter, Charles patronised members of the ultra-royalists in parliament, such as Jules de Polignac, the writer François-René de Chateaubriand and Jean-Baptiste de Villèle.[36] On several occasions, Charles voiced his disapproval of his brother's liberal ministers and threatened to leave the country unless Louis XVIII dismissed them.[37] Louis, in turn, feared that his brother's and heir presumptive's ultra-royalist tendencies would send the family into exile once more (which they eventually did).

On 14 February 1820, Charles's younger son, the Duke of Berry, was assassinated at the Paris Opera. This loss not only plunged the family into grief but also put the succession in jeopardy, as Charles's elder son, the Duke of Angoulême, was childless. The lack of male heirs in the Bourbon main line raised the prospect of the throne passing to the Duke of Orléans and his heirs, which horrified the more conservative ultras. Parliament debated the abolition of the Salic law, which excluded females from the succession and was long held inviolable. However, the Duke of Berry's widow, Caroline of Naples and Sicily, was found to be pregnant and on 29 September 1820 gave birth to a son, Henry, Duke of Bordeaux.[38] His birth was hailed as "God-given", and the people of France purchased for him the Château de Chambord in celebration of his birth.[39] As a result, his granduncle, Louis XVIII, added the title Count of Chambord, hence Henri, Count of Chambord, the name by which he is usually known.

Reign

Ascension and Coronation

Charles' brother King Louis XVIII's health had been worsening since the beginning of 1824.[40] Having both dry and wet gangrene in his legs and spine, he died on 16 September of that year, aged almost 69. Charles, by now aged 66, succeeded him to the throne as King Charles X.[41] On 29 May 1825, King Charles was anointed at the cathedral of Reims, the traditional site of consecration of French kings; it had been unused since 1775, as Louis XVIII had forgone the ceremony to avoid controversy and because his health was too precarious.[42] It was in the venerable cathedral of Notre-Dame at Paris that Napoleon had consecrated his revolutionary empire; but in ascending the throne of his ancestors, Charles reverted to the old place of coronation used by the kings of France from the early ages of the monarchy.[43]

 
Consecration of Charles X as King of France in the Cathedral of Reims, by François Gérard
 
Coronation robe of the king Charles X. Preserved in the palais du Tau in Reims (Marne, France).

Like the regime of the Restoration itself, the coronation was conceived as a compromise between the monarchical tradition and the charter of 1814: it took up the main phases of traditional ceremonial such as the seven anointings or the oaths on the Gospels, all by associating with it the oath of fidelity taken by the King to the Charter of 1814 or the participation of the great princes in the ceremonial as assistants of the Archbishop of Reims .

A commission was charged with simplifying and modernizing the ceremony and making it compatible with the principles of the monarchy according to the Charter (deletion of the promises of struggle against heretics and infidels, of the twelve peers, of references to Hebrew royalty, etc.) - it lasted three and a half hours.

In fact, the choice of the coronation was applauded by the royalists in favor of a constitutional and parliamentary monarchy and not only by those nostalgic for the Ancien Régime; the fact that the ceremony was modernized and adapted to new times encouraged Chateaubriand, a non-absolutist royalist and enthusiastic supporter of the Charter of 1814, to invite the king to be crowned. In the brochure The King is Dead! Long live the king! Chateaubriand explains that a coronation would have being the "link in the chain which united the oath of the new monarchy to the oath of the old monarchy"; it is continuity with the Ancien Régime more than its return that the royalists extol, Charles X having inherited the qualities of his ancestors: "pious like Saint Louis, affable, compassionate and vigilant like Louis XII, courteous like Francis I, frank as Henry IV".

The coronation showed that dynastic continuity went hand in hand with political continuity; for Chateaubriand: "The current constitution is only the rejuvenated text of the code of our old franchises" .

This coronation took several days: the May 28, vespers ceremony;  May 29, ceremony of the coronation itself, chaired by the Archbishop of Reims, Mgr. Jean-Baptiste de Latil, in the presence in particular of Chateaubriand, Lamartine, Victor Hugo, and a large audience; May 30, award ceremony for the Knights of the Order of the Holy Spirit and finally, May 31, the Royal touch of scrofula.

 
Charles X, King of France - Lawrence 1825

The coronation of Charles X therefore appeared to be a compromise between the tradition of the Ancien Régime and the political changes that had taken place since the Revolution. The coronation nevertheless had a limited influence on the population, mentalities no longer being those of yesteryear. From then on, the coronation caused incomprehension in certain sectors of public opinion.

It was Luigi Cherubini who composed the music for the Coronation Mass. For the occasion, the composer Gioachino Rossini composed the Opera Il Viaggio a Reims.

Domestic policies

 
Medal engraved by Alexis-Joseph Depaulis with, on the reverse, Charles X's oath on the Constitutional Charter, September 17, 1824.

Like Napoleon and then Louis XVIII before him, Charles X resided mainly at the Tuileries Palace and, in summer, at the Château de Saint-Cloud, two monuments that no longer exist today. Occasionally he stayed at the Château de Compiègne and the Château de Fontainebleau, while the Palace of Versailles, where he was born, remained uninhabited.

The reign of Charles X began with some liberal measures such as the abolition of press censorship, but the king renewed the term of Joseph de Villèlle, president of the council since 1822, and gave the reins of government to the ultraroyalists.

He got closer to the population by the trip he made to the north of France in September 1827,[44] then to the east of France in September 1828.[45] He was accompanied by his eldest son and heir-apparent, the Duke of Angoulême, now Dauphin of France.

In his first act as king, Charles attempted to bring comity to the House of Bourbon by granting the style of Royal Highness to his cousins of the House of Orléans, a title denied by Louis XVIII because of the former Duke of Orléans' vote for the death of Louis XVI.

Charles gave his prime minister, Villèlle lists of laws to be ratified in each parliament. In April 1825, the government approved legislation originally proposed by Louis XVIII to pay an indemnity (the biens nationaux) to nobles whose estates had been confiscated during the Revolution.[46] The law gave approximately 988 million francs worth of government bonds to those who had lost their lands, in exchange for their renunciation of their ownership. In the same month, the Anti-Sacrilege Act was passed. Charles's government attempted to re-establish male-only primogeniture for families paying over 300 francs in tax, but this was voted down in the Chamber of Deputies.[46]

That Charles was not a popular ruler in the mostly-liberal minded urban Paris became apparent in April 1827, when chaos ensued during the king's review of the National Guard in Paris. In retaliation, the National Guard was disbanded but, as its members were not disarmed, it remained a potential threat.[42] After losing his parliamentary majority in a general election in November 1827, Charles dismissed Prime Minister Villèle on 5 January 1828 and appointed Jean-Baptise de Martignac, a man the king disliked and thought of only as provisional. On 5 August 1829, Charles dismissed Martignac and appointed Jules de Polignac, who, however, lost his majority in parliament at the end of August, when the Chateaubriand faction defected. Regardless, Polignac retained power and refused to recall the Chambers until March 1830.[47]

Conquest of Algeria

On 31 January 1830, the Polignac government decided to send a military expedition to Algeria to end the threat of Algerian pirates to Mediterranean trade, hoping also to increase his government's popularity through a military victory. The pretext for the war was an outrage by the Viceroy of Algeria, who had struck the French consul with the handle of his fly swat in a rage over French failure to pay debts from Napoleon's invasion of Egypt.[47] French troops occupied Algiers on 5 July.[48]

July Revolution

 
THE GREAT NUTCRACKER OF JULY 25th. In this caricature Charles X attempts to break a billiard ball marked "charter" with his teeth, but finds the nut too hard to crack.

The Chambers convened on 2 March 1830, but Charles's opening speech was greeted by negative reactions from many deputies. Some introduced a bill requiring the King's minister to obtain the support of the Chambers, and on 18 March, 221 deputies, a majority of 30, voted in favor. However, the King had already decided to hold general elections, and the chamber was suspended on 19 March.[49]

The elections of 23 June did not produce a majority favorable to the government. On 6 July, the king and his ministers decided to suspend the constitution, as provided for in Article 14 of the Charter in case of emergency. On 25 July, at the royal residence in Saint-Cloud, Charles issued four ordinances that censored the press, dissolved the newly elected chamber, altered the electoral system, and called for elections under the new system in September.[48]

The Ordinances were intended to quell the popular discontent but had the opposite effect. Journalists gathered in protest at the headquarters of the National daily, founded in January 1830 by Adolphe Thiers, Armand Carrel, and others. On Monday, 26 July, the government newspaper Le Moniteur Universel published the ordinances, and Thiers published a call to revolt signed by forty-three journalists:[50] "The legal regime has been interrupted: that of force has begun... Obedience ceases to be a duty!"[51] In the evening, crowds assembled in the gardens of the Palais-Royal, shouting "Down with the Bourbons!" and "Long live the Charter!". As the police closed off the gardens, the crowd regrouped in a nearby street where they shattered streetlamps.[52]

The next morning of 27 July, police raided and shut down newspapers including Le National. When the protesters, who had re-entered the Palais-Royal gardens, heard of this, they threw stones at the soldiers, prompting them to shoot. By evening, the city was in chaos and shops were looted. On 28 July, the rioters began to erect barricades in the streets. Marshal Marmont, who had been called in the day before to remedy the situation, took the offensive, but some of his men defected to the rioters, and by afternoon he had to retreat to the Tuileries Palace.[53]

The members of the Chamber of Deputies sent a five-man delegation to Marmont, urging him to advise the king to assuage the protesters by revoking the four Ordinances. On Marmont's request, the prime minister applied to the king, but Charles refused all compromise and dismissed his ministers that afternoon, realizing the precariousness of the situation. That evening, the members of the Chamber assembled at Jacques Laffitte's house and elected Louis Philippe d'Orléans to take the throne from King Charles, proclaiming their decision on posters throughout the city. By the end of the day, the authority of Charles' government had evaporated.[54]

A few minutes after midnight on 31 July, warned by General Gresseau that Parisians were planning to attack the Saint-Cloud residence, Charles X decided to seek refuge in Versailles with his family and the court, with the exception of the Duke of Angoulême, who stayed behind with the troops, and the Duchess of Angoulême, who was taking the waters at Vichy. Meanwhile, in Paris, Louis Philippe assumed the post of Lieutenant General of the Kingdom.[55] Charles' road to Versailles was filled with disorganized troops and deserters. The Marquis de Vérac, governor of the Palace of Versailles, came to meet the king before the royal cortège entered the town, to tell him that the palace was not safe, as the Versailles national guards wearing the revolutionary tricolor were occupying the Place d'Armes. Charles then set out for the Trianon at five in the morning.[56] Later that day, after the arrival of the Duke of Angoulême from Saint-Cloud with his troops, Charles ordered a departure for Rambouillet, where they arrived shortly before midnight. On the morning of 1 August, the Duchess of Angoulême, who had rushed from Vichy after learning of events, arrived at Rambouillet.

The following day, 2 August, King Charles X abdicated, bypassing his son the Dauphin in favor of his grandson Henry, Duke of Bordeaux, who was not yet ten years old. At first, the Duke of Angoulême (the Dauphin) refused to countersign the document renouncing his rights to the throne of France. According to the Duchess of Maillé, "there was a strong altercation between the father and the son. We could hear their voices in the next room." Finally, after twenty minutes, the Duke of Angoulême reluctantly countersigned his father's declaration:[57]

"My cousin, I am too deeply pained by the ills that afflict or could threaten my people, not to seek means of avoiding them. Therefore, I have made the resolution to abdicate the crown in favor of my grandson, the Duke of Bordeaux. The Dauphin, who shares my feelings, also renounces his rights in favor of his nephew. It will thus fall to you, in your capacity as Lieutenant General of the Kingdom, to proclaim the accession of Henri V to the throne. Furthermore, you will take all pertinent measures to regulate the forms of government during the new king's minority. Here, I limit myself to stating these arrangements, as a means of avoiding further evils. You will communicate my intentions to the diplomatic corps, and you will let me know as soon as possible the proclamation by which my grandson will be recognized as king under the name of Henri V."[58]

Louis Philippe ignored the document and on 9 August had himself proclaimed King of the French by the members of the Chamber.[59]

Second exile and death

 
The Coronini Cronberg Palace in Gorizia, where Charles X spent the last month of his life
 
Tombs of Charles X and his son Louis at the Kostanjevica Monastery in the Slovenian town of Nova Gorica

When it became apparent that a mob 14,000 strong was preparing to attack, the royal family left Rambouillet and, on 16 August embarked for the United Kingdom on packet steamers provided by Louis Philippe. Informed by the British prime minister, the Duke of Wellington, that they needed to arrive in Britain as private citizens, all family members adopted pseudonyms; Charles X styled himself "Count of Ponthieu". The Bourbons were greeted coldly by the British, who upon their arrival mockingly waved the newly adopted tri-colour flags at them.[60]

Charles X was quickly followed to Britain by his creditors, who had lent him vast sums during his first exile and were yet to be repaid in full. However, the family was able to use money Charles's wife had deposited in London.[60]

The Bourbons were allowed to reside in Lulworth Castle in Dorset, but quickly moved to Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh,[60] near the Duchess of Berry at Regent Terrace.[61][page needed]

Charles' relationship with his daughter-in-law proved uneasy, as the Duchess declared herself regent for her son Henry, Duke of Bordeaux, who was now the legitimist pretender to the French throne. Charles at first denied her this role, but in December agreed to support her claim[62] once she had landed in France.[61][page needed] In 1831 the Duchess made her way from Britain by way of the Netherlands, Prussia and Austria to her family in Naples.[61][page needed]

Having gained little support, she arrived in Marseilles in April 1832,[61][page needed] and made her way to the Vendée, where she tried to instigate an uprising against the new regime. There she was imprisoned, much to the embarrassment of her father-in-law Charles.[62] He was further dismayed when after her release the Duchess married the Count of Lucchesi Palli, a minor Neapolitan noble. In response to this morganatic match, Charles banned her from seeing her children.[63]

At the invitation of Emperor Francis I of Austria, the Bourbons moved to Prague in winter 1832/33 and were given lodging at the Hradschin Palace.[62] In September 1833, Bourbon legitimists gathered in Prague to celebrate the Duke of Bordeaux's thirteenth birthday. They expected grand celebrations, but Charles X merely proclaimed his grandson's majority.[64]

On the same day, after much cajoling by Chateaubriand, Charles agreed to a meeting with his daughter-in-law, which took place in Leoben on 13 October 1833. The children of the Duchess refused to meet her after they learned of her second marriage. Charles refused the Duchess' demands, but after protests from his other daughter-in-law, the Duchess of Angoulême, he acquiesced. In the summer of 1834, he again allowed the Duchess of Berry to see her children.[64]

Upon the death of the Austrian emperor Francis in March 1835, the Bourbons left Prague Castle, as the new emperor Ferdinand wished to use it for coronation ceremonies. The Bourbons moved initially to Teplitz. Then, as Ferdinand continued his use of Prague Castle, Kirchberg Castle was purchased for them. Moving there was postponed due to an outbreak of cholera in the locality.[65]

In the meantime, Charles left for the warmer climate on Austria's Mediterranean coast in October 1835. Upon his arrival at Görz (Gorizia) in the Kingdom of Illyria, he caught cholera and died on 6 November 1836. The townspeople draped their windows in black mourning. Charles was interred in the Church of the Annunciation of Our Lady, in the Franciscan Kostanjevica Monastery (now in Nova Gorica, Slovenia), where his remains lie in a crypt with those of his family.[65] He is the only King of France to be buried outside the country.[66][67]

A movement reportedly began in 2016 advocating for Charles X's remains to be buried along with other French monarchs in the Basilica of St Denis,[66][67] although Louis Alphonse, current head of the House of Bourbon, stated in 2017 that he wished the remains of his ancestors to lie undisturbed.[68]

Honours

Ancestry

Marriage and issue

Charles X married Princess Maria Teresa of Savoy, the daughter of Victor Amadeus III, King of Sardinia, and Maria Antonietta of Spain, on 16 November 1773. The couple had four children – two sons and two daughters – but the daughters did not survive childhood. Only the oldest son survived his father. The children were:

  1. Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême (6 August 1775 – 3 June 1844), sometimes called Louis XIX. Married first cousin Marie Thérèse of France, no issue.
  2. Sophie, Mademoiselle d'Artois (5 August 1776 – 5 December 1783), died in childhood.
  3. Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry (24 January 1778 – 13 February 1820), married Marie-Caroline de Bourbon-Sicile, had issue.
  4. Marie Thérèse, Mademoiselle d'Angoulême (6 January 1783 – 22 June 1783), died in childhood.

In fiction and film

The Count of Artois is portrayed by Al Weaver in Sofia Coppola's motion picture Marie Antoinette.

References

  1. ^ Parmele, Mary Platt (1908). A Short History of France. Scribner. p. 221.
  2. ^ "Charles X | Biography, Reign, Abdication, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  3. ^ a b Munro Price, The Perilous Crown: France between Revolutions, Macmillan, pp. 185–187.
  4. ^ a b Merriman, John M.; Winter, J. M. (2006). Europe 1789 to 1914: encyclopedia of the age of industry and empire. Detroit, Mich.: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0684314969. OCLC 76769541.
  5. ^ Brown, Bradford C. (2009), "France, 1830 Revolution", The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest, American Cancer Society, pp. 1–8, doi:10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp0573, ISBN 9781405198073
  6. ^ Évelyne Lever, Louis XVI, Librairie Arthème Fayard, Paris (1985), p. 43.
  7. ^ Antonia Fraser, Marie Antoinette: the Journey, pp. 113–116.
  8. ^ Charles Porset, Hiram sans-culotte? Franc-maçonnerie, lumières et révolution: trente ans d'études et de recherches, Paris: Honoré Champion, 1998, p. 207.
  9. ^ Fraser, pp. 137–139.
  10. ^ Fraser, p. 189.
  11. ^ a b Fraser, pp. 80–81.
  12. ^ a b Fraser, p. 178.
  13. ^ Fraser, p. 221.
  14. ^ Fraser, p. 326.
  15. ^ Fraser, pp. 274–278.
  16. ^ Fraser, p. 338.
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  18. ^ Fraser, p. 340.
  19. ^ Nagel, p. 65.
  20. ^ Fraser, p. 383.
  21. ^ Price, Monro (2003). The Fall of the French Monarchy. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-330-48827-3.
  22. ^ Nagel, p. 103.
  23. ^ Nagel, p. 113.
  24. ^ Nagel, p. 118.
  25. ^ Fraser, pp. 399, 440, 456; Nagel, p. 143.
  26. ^ Nagel, p. 152-153.
  27. ^ Nagel, p. 207.
  28. ^ Nagel, pp. 210, 222, 233–235.
  29. ^ Nagel, p. 153.
  30. ^ Price, pp. 11–12.
  31. ^ a b Nagel, pp. 253–254.
  32. ^ Price, p. 50.
  33. ^ Price, pp. 52–54.
  34. ^ Price, pp. 72, 80–83.
  35. ^ Price, p. 84.
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  37. ^ Price, pp. 94–95.
  38. ^ Price, p. 109.
  39. ^ McConnachie, James (2004). Rough Guide to the Loire. London: Rough Guides. p. 144. ISBN 978-1843532576.
  40. ^ Lever, Évelyne, Louis XVIII, Librairie Arthème Fayard, Paris, 1988, p. 553. (French).
  41. ^ Price, pp. 113–115.
  42. ^ a b Price, pp. 119–121.
  43. ^ T. W. Redhead (January 2012). The French Revolutions. BoD – Books on Demand. p. 176. ISBN 978-3-86403-428-2. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  44. ^ "King's journey to the Saint-Omer camp and in the northern departments , Paris, Imprimerie Royale, 1827, p. 237". Imprimerie Royale. 1827.
  45. ^ "King's trip to the eastern departments and to the Lunéville maneuver camp , Paris, Imprimerie Royale,1828, III + 213 p." Imprimerie Royale,1828. 1828.
  46. ^ a b Price, pp. 116–118.
  47. ^ a b Price, pp. 122–128.
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  50. ^ Castelot, André, Charles X, Librairie Académique Perrin, Paris, 1988, p. 454 ISBN 2-262-00545-1
  51. ^ Le régime légal est interrompu; celui de la force a commencé... L'obéissance cesse d'être un devoir!
  52. ^ Price, pp. 141–142.
  53. ^ Price, pp. 151–154, 157.
  54. ^ Price, pp. 158, 161–163.
  55. ^ Price, pp. 173–176.
  56. ^ Castelot, Charles X, p. 482.
  57. ^ Castelot, Charles X, p. 491.
  58. ^ Charles X's abdication: "Mon cousin, je suis trop profondément peiné des maux qui affligent ou qui pourraient menacer mes peuples pour n'avoir pas cherché un moyen de les prévenir. J'ai donc pris la résolution d'abdiquer la couronne en faveur de mon petit-fils, le duc de Bordeaux. Le dauphin, qui partage mes sentiments, renonce aussi à ses droits en faveur de son neveu. Vous aurez donc, en votre qualité de lieutenant général du royaume, à faire proclamer l'avènement de Henri V à la couronne. Vous prendrez d'ailleurs toutes les mesures qui vous concernent pour régler les formes du gouvernement pendant la minorité du nouveau roi. Ici, je me borne à faire connaître ces dispositions : c'est un moyen d'éviter encore bien des maux. Vous communiquerez mes intentions au corps diplomatique, et vous me ferez connaître le plus tôt possible la proclamation par laquelle mon petit-fils sera reconnu roi sous le nom de Henri V."
  59. ^ Price, pp. 177, 181–182, 185.
  60. ^ a b c Nagel, pp. 318–325.
  61. ^ a b c d A. J. Mackenzie-Stuart, A French King at Holyrood, Edinburgh (1995). ISBN 0-85976-413-3.
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  64. ^ a b Nagel, pp. 340–342.
  65. ^ a b Nagel, pp. 349–350.
  66. ^ a b Hélène Haus (25 September 2016). "Et si les cendres du roi Charles X étaient transférées à la basilique Saint-Denis?" [Are the remains of Charles X to be transferred to Basilica of St Denis?]. Le Parisien (in French). Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  67. ^ a b A. K. (28 September 2016). "Francozi želijo ostanke Karla X. in družine iz Slovenije: "Pripadajo naši domovini"" [The French wish the remains of Charles X and family to be brought from Slovenia: "They belong to our homeland"] (in Slovenian). RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  68. ^ Al. Ma. (19 February 2017). "Francoski princ Burbonski želi, da njegovi predniki ostanejo pokopani na Kostanjevici" [A French prince of Bourbon wishes the remains of his ancestors to remain at Kostanjevica] (in Slovenian). RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  69. ^ Teulet, Alexandre (1863). "Liste chronologique des chevaliers de l'ordre du Saint-Esprit depuis son origine jusqu'à son extinction (1578–1830)" [Chronological List of Knights of the Order of the Holy Spirit from its origin to its extinction (1578–1830)]. Annuaire-bulletin de la Société de l'histoire de France (in French) (2): 100. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
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  73. ^ Johann Heinrich Friedrich Berlien (1846). Der Elephanten-Orden und seine Ritter. Kopenhagen: Berling. p. 159.
  74. ^ "Militaire Willems-Orde: Bourbon, Charles Philippe prince de" [Military William Order: Bourbon, Charles Philip, Prince of]. Ministerie van Defensie (in Dutch). 13 May 1825. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  75. ^ Liste der Ritter des Königlich Preußischen Hohen Ordens vom Schwarzen Adler (1851), "Von Seiner Majestät dem Könige Friedrich Wilhelm III. ernannte Ritter" p. 18
  76. ^ Almanach de la cour: pour l'année 1817. l'Académie Imp. des Sciences. 1817. pp. 63, 78.
  77. ^ Königlich Sächsischer Hof-Civil-und MilitärStaat im Jahre 1828 (in German). 1828. p. 53.
  78. ^ Guerra, Francisco (1819), "Caballeros Existentes en la Insignie Orden del Toison de Oro", Calendario manual y guía de forasteros en Madrid (in Spanish): 41, retrieved 17 March 2020
  79. ^ "Capitolo XIV: Ordini cavallereschi", Almanacco Reale del Regno Delle Due Sicilie (in Italian), 1829, pp. 415, 419, retrieved 8 October 2020
  80. ^ Shaw, Wm. A. (1906) The Knights of England, I, London, p. 53
  81. ^ Genealogie ascendante jusqu'au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l'Europe actuellement vivans [Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living] (in French). Bourdeaux: Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel. 1768. p. 11.

Further reading

  • Artz, Frederick Binkerd. France Under the Bourbon Restoration, 1814–1830 (1931). online free
  • Artz, Frederick B. Reaction and Revolution 1814–1832 (1938), covers Europe. online
  • Brown, Bradford C. "France, 1830 Revolution." in by Immanuel Ness, ed., The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest (2009): 1–8.
  • Frederking, Bettina. "'Il ne faut pas être le roi de deux peuples': strategies of national reconciliation in Restoration France." French History 22.4 (2008): 446–468. in English
  • Rader, Daniel L. The Journalists and the July Revolution in France: The Role of the Political Press in the Overthrow of the Bourbon Restoration, 1827–1830 (Springer, 2013).
  • Weiner, Margery. The French Exiles, 1789–1815 (Morrow, 1961).
  • Wolf, John B. France 1814–1919: the Rise of a Liberal Democratic Society (1940) pp 1–58.

Historiography

  • Sauvigny, G. de Bertier de (Spring 1981). "The Bourbon Restoration: One Century of French Historiography". French Historical Studies. 12 (1): 41–67. doi:10.2307/286306. JSTOR 286306.

External links

  •   Media related to Charles X of France at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Charles X" . The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.
Charles X
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 9 October 1757 Died: 6 November 1836
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of France
16 September 1824 – 2 August 1830
Vacant
Title next held by
Louis Philippe
as King of the French
Titles in pretence
Vacant
Title last held by
Louis XVIII
— TITULAR —
King of France
2 August 1830 – 6 November 1836
Reason for succession failure:
July Revolution
Succeeded by

charles, other, uses, disambiguation, born, charles, philippe, count, artois, october, 1757, november, 1836, king, france, from, september, 1824, until, august, 1830, uncle, uncrowned, louis, xvii, younger, brother, reigning, kings, louis, louis, xviii, suppor. For other uses see Charles X disambiguation Charles X born Charles Philippe Count of Artois 9 October 1757 6 November 1836 was King of France from 16 September 1824 until 2 August 1830 1 An uncle of the uncrowned Louis XVII and younger brother to reigning kings Louis XVI and Louis XVIII he supported the latter in exile After the Bourbon Restoration in 1814 Charles as heir presumptive became the leader of the ultra royalists a radical monarchist faction within the French court that affirmed rule by divine right and opposed the concessions towards liberals and guarantees of civil liberties granted by the Charter of 1814 2 Charles gained influence within the French court after the assassination of his son Charles Ferdinand Duke of Berry in 1820 and succeeded his brother Louis XVIII in 1824 3 4 Charles XPortrait by Francois Gerard c 1825King of France more Reign16 September 1824 2 August 1830Coronation29 May 1825Reims CathedralPredecessorLouis XVIIISuccessorLouis Philippe I as King of the French Prime MinistersSee list Count of VilleleViscount of MartignacDuke of PolignacBorn 1757 10 09 9 October 1757Palace of Versailles FranceDied6 November 1836 1836 11 06 aged 79 Gorz Austrian EmpireBurialKostanjevica Monastery SloveniaSpouseMarie Therese of Savoy m 1773 wbr IssueDetailLouis Antoine Duke of AngoulemeSophie Mademoiselle d ArtoisCharles Ferdinand Duke of BerryMarie Therese Mademoiselle d AngoulemeNamesCharles Philippe de BourbonHouseBourbonFatherLouis Dauphin of FranceMotherMarie Josephe of SaxonyReligionCatholicismSignatureHis reign of almost six years proved to be deeply unpopular amongst the liberals in France from the moment of his coronation in 1825 in which he tried to revive the practice of the royal touch The governments appointed under his reign reimbursed former landowners for the abolition of feudalism at the expense of bondholders increased the power of the Catholic Church and reimposed capital punishment for sacrilege leading to conflict with the liberal majority Chamber of Deputies 4 Charles also approved the French conquest of Algeria as a way to distract his citizens from domestic problems and forced Haiti to pay a hefty indemnity in return for lifting a blockade and recognizing Haiti s independence He eventually appointed a conservative government under the premiership of Prince Jules de Polignac who was defeated in the 1830 French legislative election He responded with the July Ordinances disbanding the Chamber of Deputies limiting franchise and reimposing press censorship 5 Within a week France faced urban riots which led to the July Revolution of 1830 which resulted in his abdication and the election of Louis Philippe I as King of the French Exiled once again Charles died in 1836 in Gorizia then part of the Austrian Empire 3 He was the last of the French rulers from the senior branch of the House of Bourbon Contents 1 Childhood and adolescence 2 Marriage and private life 3 Crisis and French Revolution 4 Life in exile 5 Bourbon Restoration 6 King s brother and heir presumptive 7 Reign 7 1 Ascension and Coronation 7 2 Domestic policies 7 3 Conquest of Algeria 7 4 July Revolution 8 Second exile and death 9 Honours 10 Ancestry 11 Marriage and issue 12 In fiction and film 13 References 14 Further reading 14 1 Historiography 15 External linksChildhood and adolescence Charles Philippe with his younger sister Clotilde on a goat Charles Philippe of France was born in 1757 the youngest son of the Dauphin Louis and his wife the Dauphine Marie Josephe at the Palace of Versailles Charles was created Count of Artois at birth by his grandfather the reigning King Louis XV citation needed As the youngest male in the family Charles seemed unlikely ever to become king His eldest brother Louis Duke of Burgundy died unexpectedly in 1761 which moved Charles up one place in the line of succession He was raised in early childhood by Madame de Marsan the Governess of the Children of France citation needed At the death of his father in 1765 Charles s oldest surviving brother Louis Auguste became the new Dauphin the heir apparent to the French throne Their mother Marie Josephe who never recovered from the loss of her husband died in March 1767 from tuberculosis 6 This left Charles an orphan at the age of nine along with his siblings Louis Auguste Louis Stanislas Count of Provence Clotilde Madame Clotilde and Elisabeth Madame Elisabeth Louis XV fell ill on 27 April 1774 and died on 10 May of smallpox at the age of 64 7 His grandson Louis Auguste succeeded him as King Louis XVI 8 Marriage and private life Charles as Count of Artois in 1798 Portrait by Henri Pierre Danloux In November 1773 Charles married Marie Therese of Savoy In 1775 Marie Therese gave birth to a boy Louis Antoine who was created Duke of Angouleme by Louis XVI Louis Antoine was the first of the next generation of Bourbons as the king and the Count of Provence had not fathered any children yet causing the Parisian libellistes pamphleteers who published scandalous leaflets about important figures in court and politics to lampoon Louis XVI s alleged impotence 9 Three years later in 1778 Charles second son Charles Ferdinand was born and given the title of Duke of Berry 10 In the same year Queen Marie Antoinette gave birth to her first child Marie Therese quelling all rumours that she could not bear children Charles was thought of as the most attractive member of his family bearing a strong resemblance to his grandfather Louis XV 11 His wife was considered quite ugly by most contemporaries and he looked for company in numerous extramarital affairs According to the Count of Hezecques few beauties were cruel to him Among his lovers was notably Anne Victoire Dervieux Later he embarked upon a lifelong love affair with the beautiful Louise de Polastron the sister in law of Marie Antoinette s closest companion the Duchess of Polignac Charles also struck up a firm friendship with Marie Antoinette herself whom he had first met upon her arrival in France in April 1770 when he was twelve 11 The closeness of the relationship was such that he was falsely accused by Parisian rumour mongers of having seduced her As part of Marie Antoinette s social set Charles often appeared opposite her in the private theatre of her favourite royal retreat the Petit Trianon They were both said to be very talented amateur actors Marie Antoinette played milkmaids shepherdesses and country ladies whereas Charles played lovers valets and farmers A famous story concerning the two involves the construction of the Chateau de Bagatelle In 1775 Charles purchased a small hunting lodge in the Bois de Boulogne He soon had the existing house torn down with plans to rebuild Marie Antoinette wagered her brother in law that the new chateau could not be completed within three months Charles engaged the neoclassical architect Francois Joseph Belanger to design the building 12 He won his bet with Belanger completing the house in sixty three days It is estimated that the project which came to include manicured gardens cost over two million livres Throughout the 1770s Charles spent lavishly He accumulated enormous debts totalling 21 million livres In the 1780s King Louis XVI paid off the debts of both his brothers the Counts of Provence and Artois 12 In 1781 Charles acted as a proxy for Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II at the christening of his godson the Dauphin Louis Joseph 13 Crisis and French RevolutionCharles s political awakening started with the first great crisis of the monarchy in 1786 when it became apparent that the kingdom was bankrupt from previous military endeavours in particular the Seven Years War and the American War of Independence and needed fiscal reform to survive Charles supported the removal of the aristocracy s financial privileges but was opposed to any reduction in the social privileges enjoyed by either the Roman Catholic Church or the nobility He believed that France s finances should be reformed without the monarchy being overthrown In his own words it was time for repair not demolition This quote needs a citation King Louis XVI eventually convened the Estates General which had not been assembled for over 150 years to meet in May 1789 to ratify financial reforms Along with his sister Elisabeth Charles was the most conservative member of the family 14 and opposed the demands of the Third Estate representing the commoners to increase their voting power This prompted criticism from his brother who accused him of being plus royaliste que le roi more royalist than the king In June 1789 the representatives of the Third Estate declared themselves a National Assembly intent on providing France with a new constitution 15 In conjunction with the Baron de Breteuil Charles had political alliances arranged to depose the liberal minister of finance Jacques Necker These plans backfired when Charles attempted to secure Necker s dismissal on 11 July without Breteuil s knowledge much earlier than they had originally intended It was the beginning of a decline in his political alliance with Breteuil which ended in mutual loathing citation needed Necker s dismissal provoked the storming of the Bastille on 14 July With the concurrence of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette Charles and his family left France three days later on 17 July along with several other courtiers These included the Duchess of Polignac the queen s favourite 16 His flight was historically attributed to personal fears for his own safety However recent research indicates that the King had approved his brother s departure in advance seeing it as a means of ensuring that one close relative would be free to act as a spokesman for the monarchy after Louis himself had been moved from Versailles to Paris 17 Life in exile A Blue plaque at 72 South Audley Street Mayfair London his home between 1805 and 1814 Charles and his family decided to seek refuge in Savoy his wife s native country 18 where they were joined by some members of the Conde family 19 Meanwhile in Paris Louis XVI was struggling with the National Assembly which was committed to radical reforms and had enacted the Constitution of 1791 In March 1791 the Assembly also enacted a regency bill that provided for the case of the king s premature death While his heir Louis Charles was still a minor the Count of Provence the Duke of Orleans or if either was unavailable someone chosen by election should become regent completely passing over the rights of Charles who in the royal lineage stood between the Count of Provence and the Duke of Orleans 20 Charles meanwhile left Turin in Italy and moved to Trier in Germany where his uncle Clemens Wenceslaus of Saxony was the incumbent Archbishop Elector Charles prepared for a counter revolutionary invasion of France but a letter by Marie Antoinette postponed it until after the royal family had escaped from Paris and joined a concentration of regular troops under Francois Claude Amour marquis de Bouille at Montmedy 21 22 After the attempted flight was stopped at Varennes Charles moved on to Koblenz where he the recently escaped Count of Provence and the Princes of Conde jointly declared their intention to invade France The Count of Provence was sending dispatches to various European sovereigns for assistance while Charles set up a court in exile in the Electorate of Trier On 25 August the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire and Prussia issued the Declaration of Pillnitz which called on other European powers to intervene in France 23 On New Year s Day 1792 the National Assembly declared all emigrants traitors repudiated their titles and confiscated their lands 24 This measure was followed by the suspension and eventually the abolition of the monarchy in September 1792 The royal family was imprisoned and the former king and former queen were eventually executed in 1793 25 The young former dauphin died of illnesses and neglect in 1795 26 When the French Revolutionary Wars broke out in 1792 Charles escaped to Great Britain where King George III of Great Britain gave him a generous allowance Charles lived in Edinburgh and London with his mistress Louise de Polastron 27 His older brother dubbed Louis XVIII after the death of his nephew in June 1795 relocated to Verona and then to Jelgava Palace Mitau where Charles son Louis Antoine married Louis XVI s only surviving child Marie Therese on 10 June 1799 In 1802 Charles supported his brother with several thousand pounds In 1807 Louis XVIII moved to the United Kingdom 28 Bourbon RestorationMain article Bourbon Restoration in France The Return of Charles X by Pauline Auzou In January 1814 Charles covertly left his home in London to join the Coalition forces in southern France Louis XVIII by then reliant on a wheelchair supplied Charles with letters patent creating him Lieutenant General of the Kingdom of France On 31 March the Allies captured Paris A week later Napoleon I abdicated The Senate declared the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy with Louis XVIII as King of France Charles now heir presumptive arrived in the capital on 12 April 29 and acted as Lieutenant General of the realm until Louis XVIII arrived from the United Kingdom During his brief tenure as regent Charles created an ultra royalist secret police that reported directly back to him without Louis XVIII s knowledge It operated for over five years 30 Louis XVIII was greeted with great rejoicing from the Parisians and proceeded to occupy the Tuileries Palace 31 The Count of Artois lived in the Pavillon de Mars and the Duke of Angouleme in the Pavillon de Flore which overlooked the River Seine 32 The Duchess of Angouleme fainted upon arriving at the palace as it brought back terrible memories of her family s incarceration there and of the storming of the palace and the massacre of the Swiss Guards on 10 August 1792 31 Following the advice of the occupying allied army Louis XVIII promulgated a liberal constitution the Charter of 1814 which provided for a bicameral legislature an electorate of 90 000 men and freedom of religion 33 After the Hundred Days Napoleon s brief return to power in 1815 34 the White Terror focused mainly on the purging of a civilian administration which had almost completely turned against the Bourbon monarchy About 70 000 officials were dismissed from their positions The remnants of the Napoleonic army were disbanded after the Battle of Waterloo and its senior officers cashiered Marshal Ney was executed for treason and Marshal Brune was murdered by a crowd 35 Approximately 6 000 individuals who had rallied to Napoleon were brought to trial There were about 300 mob lynchings in the south of France notably in Marseilles where a number of Napoleon s Mamluks preparing to return to Egypt were massacred in their barracks King s brother and heir presumptiveWhile the king retained the liberal charter Charles patronised members of the ultra royalists in parliament such as Jules de Polignac the writer Francois Rene de Chateaubriand and Jean Baptiste de Villele 36 On several occasions Charles voiced his disapproval of his brother s liberal ministers and threatened to leave the country unless Louis XVIII dismissed them 37 Louis in turn feared that his brother s and heir presumptive s ultra royalist tendencies would send the family into exile once more which they eventually did On 14 February 1820 Charles s younger son the Duke of Berry was assassinated at the Paris Opera This loss not only plunged the family into grief but also put the succession in jeopardy as Charles s elder son the Duke of Angouleme was childless The lack of male heirs in the Bourbon main line raised the prospect of the throne passing to the Duke of Orleans and his heirs which horrified the more conservative ultras Parliament debated the abolition of the Salic law which excluded females from the succession and was long held inviolable However the Duke of Berry s widow Caroline of Naples and Sicily was found to be pregnant and on 29 September 1820 gave birth to a son Henry Duke of Bordeaux 38 His birth was hailed as God given and the people of France purchased for him the Chateau de Chambord in celebration of his birth 39 As a result his granduncle Louis XVIII added the title Count of Chambord hence Henri Count of Chambord the name by which he is usually known ReignAscension and Coronation This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charles brother King Louis XVIII s health had been worsening since the beginning of 1824 40 Having both dry and wet gangrene in his legs and spine he died on 16 September of that year aged almost 69 Charles by now aged 66 succeeded him to the throne as King Charles X 41 On 29 May 1825 King Charles was anointed at the cathedral of Reims the traditional site of consecration of French kings it had been unused since 1775 as Louis XVIII had forgone the ceremony to avoid controversy and because his health was too precarious 42 It was in the venerable cathedral of Notre Dame at Paris that Napoleon had consecrated his revolutionary empire but in ascending the throne of his ancestors Charles reverted to the old place of coronation used by the kings of France from the early ages of the monarchy 43 Consecration of Charles X as King of France in the Cathedral of Reims by Francois Gerard Coronation robe of the king Charles X Preserved in the palais du Tau in Reims Marne France Like the regime of the Restoration itself the coronation was conceived as a compromise between the monarchical tradition and the charter of 1814 it took up the main phases of traditional ceremonial such as the seven anointings or the oaths on the Gospels all by associating with it the oath of fidelity taken by the King to the Charter of 1814 or the participation of the great princes in the ceremonial as assistants of the Archbishop of Reims A commission was charged with simplifying and modernizing the ceremony and making it compatible with the principles of the monarchy according to the Charter deletion of the promises of struggle against heretics and infidels of the twelve peers of references to Hebrew royalty etc it lasted three and a half hours In fact the choice of the coronation was applauded by the royalists in favor of a constitutional and parliamentary monarchy and not only by those nostalgic for the Ancien Regime the fact that the ceremony was modernized and adapted to new times encouraged Chateaubriand a non absolutist royalist and enthusiastic supporter of the Charter of 1814 to invite the king to be crowned In the brochure The King is Dead Long live the king Chateaubriand explains that a coronation would have being the link in the chain which united the oath of the new monarchy to the oath of the old monarchy it is continuity with the Ancien Regime more than its return that the royalists extol Charles X having inherited the qualities of his ancestors pious like Saint Louis affable compassionate and vigilant like Louis XII courteous like Francis I frank as Henry IV The coronation showed that dynastic continuity went hand in hand with political continuity for Chateaubriand The current constitution is only the rejuvenated text of the code of our old franchises This coronation took several days the May 28 vespers ceremony May 29 ceremony of the coronation itself chaired by the Archbishop of Reims Mgr Jean Baptiste de Latil in the presence in particular of Chateaubriand Lamartine Victor Hugo and a large audience May 30 award ceremony for the Knights of the Order of the Holy Spirit and finally May 31 the Royal touch of scrofula Charles X King of France Lawrence 1825 The coronation of Charles X therefore appeared to be a compromise between the tradition of the Ancien Regime and the political changes that had taken place since the Revolution The coronation nevertheless had a limited influence on the population mentalities no longer being those of yesteryear From then on the coronation caused incomprehension in certain sectors of public opinion It was Luigi Cherubini who composed the music for the Coronation Mass For the occasion the composer Gioachino Rossini composed the Opera Il Viaggio a Reims Domestic policies Medal engraved by Alexis Joseph Depaulis with on the reverse Charles X s oath on the Constitutional Charter September 17 1824 Like Napoleon and then Louis XVIII before him Charles X resided mainly at the Tuileries Palace and in summer at the Chateau de Saint Cloud two monuments that no longer exist today Occasionally he stayed at the Chateau de Compiegne and the Chateau de Fontainebleau while the Palace of Versailles where he was born remained uninhabited The reign of Charles X began with some liberal measures such as the abolition of press censorship but the king renewed the term of Joseph de Villelle president of the council since 1822 and gave the reins of government to the ultraroyalists He got closer to the population by the trip he made to the north of France in September 1827 44 then to the east of France in September 1828 45 He was accompanied by his eldest son and heir apparent the Duke of Angouleme now Dauphin of France In his first act as king Charles attempted to bring comity to the House of Bourbon by granting the style of Royal Highness to his cousins of the House of Orleans a title denied by Louis XVIII because of the former Duke of Orleans vote for the death of Louis XVI Charles gave his prime minister Villelle lists of laws to be ratified in each parliament In April 1825 the government approved legislation originally proposed by Louis XVIII to pay an indemnity the biens nationaux to nobles whose estates had been confiscated during the Revolution 46 The law gave approximately 988 million francs worth of government bonds to those who had lost their lands in exchange for their renunciation of their ownership In the same month the Anti Sacrilege Act was passed Charles s government attempted to re establish male only primogeniture for families paying over 300 francs in tax but this was voted down in the Chamber of Deputies 46 That Charles was not a popular ruler in the mostly liberal minded urban Paris became apparent in April 1827 when chaos ensued during the king s review of the National Guard in Paris In retaliation the National Guard was disbanded but as its members were not disarmed it remained a potential threat 42 After losing his parliamentary majority in a general election in November 1827 Charles dismissed Prime Minister Villele on 5 January 1828 and appointed Jean Baptise de Martignac a man the king disliked and thought of only as provisional On 5 August 1829 Charles dismissed Martignac and appointed Jules de Polignac who however lost his majority in parliament at the end of August when the Chateaubriand faction defected Regardless Polignac retained power and refused to recall the Chambers until March 1830 47 Conquest of Algeria Main article Invasion of Algiers in 1830 See also Shipwreck of Dellys On 31 January 1830 the Polignac government decided to send a military expedition to Algeria to end the threat of Algerian pirates to Mediterranean trade hoping also to increase his government s popularity through a military victory The pretext for the war was an outrage by the Viceroy of Algeria who had struck the French consul with the handle of his fly swat in a rage over French failure to pay debts from Napoleon s invasion of Egypt 47 French troops occupied Algiers on 5 July 48 July Revolution Main article July Revolution THE GREAT NUTCRACKER OF JULY 25th In this caricature Charles X attempts to break a billiard ball marked charter with his teeth but finds the nut too hard to crack The Chambers convened on 2 March 1830 but Charles s opening speech was greeted by negative reactions from many deputies Some introduced a bill requiring the King s minister to obtain the support of the Chambers and on 18 March 221 deputies a majority of 30 voted in favor However the King had already decided to hold general elections and the chamber was suspended on 19 March 49 The elections of 23 June did not produce a majority favorable to the government On 6 July the king and his ministers decided to suspend the constitution as provided for in Article 14 of the Charter in case of emergency On 25 July at the royal residence in Saint Cloud Charles issued four ordinances that censored the press dissolved the newly elected chamber altered the electoral system and called for elections under the new system in September 48 The Ordinances were intended to quell the popular discontent but had the opposite effect Journalists gathered in protest at the headquarters of the National daily founded in January 1830 by Adolphe Thiers Armand Carrel and others On Monday 26 July the government newspaper Le Moniteur Universel published the ordinances and Thiers published a call to revolt signed by forty three journalists 50 The legal regime has been interrupted that of force has begun Obedience ceases to be a duty 51 In the evening crowds assembled in the gardens of the Palais Royal shouting Down with the Bourbons and Long live the Charter As the police closed off the gardens the crowd regrouped in a nearby street where they shattered streetlamps 52 The next morning of 27 July police raided and shut down newspapers including Le National When the protesters who had re entered the Palais Royal gardens heard of this they threw stones at the soldiers prompting them to shoot By evening the city was in chaos and shops were looted On 28 July the rioters began to erect barricades in the streets Marshal Marmont who had been called in the day before to remedy the situation took the offensive but some of his men defected to the rioters and by afternoon he had to retreat to the Tuileries Palace 53 The members of the Chamber of Deputies sent a five man delegation to Marmont urging him to advise the king to assuage the protesters by revoking the four Ordinances On Marmont s request the prime minister applied to the king but Charles refused all compromise and dismissed his ministers that afternoon realizing the precariousness of the situation That evening the members of the Chamber assembled at Jacques Laffitte s house and elected Louis Philippe d Orleans to take the throne from King Charles proclaiming their decision on posters throughout the city By the end of the day the authority of Charles government had evaporated 54 A few minutes after midnight on 31 July warned by General Gresseau that Parisians were planning to attack the Saint Cloud residence Charles X decided to seek refuge in Versailles with his family and the court with the exception of the Duke of Angouleme who stayed behind with the troops and the Duchess of Angouleme who was taking the waters at Vichy Meanwhile in Paris Louis Philippe assumed the post of Lieutenant General of the Kingdom 55 Charles road to Versailles was filled with disorganized troops and deserters The Marquis de Verac governor of the Palace of Versailles came to meet the king before the royal cortege entered the town to tell him that the palace was not safe as the Versailles national guards wearing the revolutionary tricolor were occupying the Place d Armes Charles then set out for the Trianon at five in the morning 56 Later that day after the arrival of the Duke of Angouleme from Saint Cloud with his troops Charles ordered a departure for Rambouillet where they arrived shortly before midnight On the morning of 1 August the Duchess of Angouleme who had rushed from Vichy after learning of events arrived at Rambouillet The following day 2 August King Charles X abdicated bypassing his son the Dauphin in favor of his grandson Henry Duke of Bordeaux who was not yet ten years old At first the Duke of Angouleme the Dauphin refused to countersign the document renouncing his rights to the throne of France According to the Duchess of Maille there was a strong altercation between the father and the son We could hear their voices in the next room Finally after twenty minutes the Duke of Angouleme reluctantly countersigned his father s declaration 57 My cousin I am too deeply pained by the ills that afflict or could threaten my people not to seek means of avoiding them Therefore I have made the resolution to abdicate the crown in favor of my grandson the Duke of Bordeaux The Dauphin who shares my feelings also renounces his rights in favor of his nephew It will thus fall to you in your capacity as Lieutenant General of the Kingdom to proclaim the accession of Henri V to the throne Furthermore you will take all pertinent measures to regulate the forms of government during the new king s minority Here I limit myself to stating these arrangements as a means of avoiding further evils You will communicate my intentions to the diplomatic corps and you will let me know as soon as possible the proclamation by which my grandson will be recognized as king under the name of Henri V 58 Louis Philippe ignored the document and on 9 August had himself proclaimed King of the French by the members of the Chamber 59 Second exile and death The Coronini Cronberg Palace in Gorizia where Charles X spent the last month of his life Tombs of Charles X and his son Louis at the Kostanjevica Monastery in the Slovenian town of Nova Gorica When it became apparent that a mob 14 000 strong was preparing to attack the royal family left Rambouillet and on 16 August embarked for the United Kingdom on packet steamers provided by Louis Philippe Informed by the British prime minister the Duke of Wellington that they needed to arrive in Britain as private citizens all family members adopted pseudonyms Charles X styled himself Count of Ponthieu The Bourbons were greeted coldly by the British who upon their arrival mockingly waved the newly adopted tri colour flags at them 60 Charles X was quickly followed to Britain by his creditors who had lent him vast sums during his first exile and were yet to be repaid in full However the family was able to use money Charles s wife had deposited in London 60 The Bourbons were allowed to reside in Lulworth Castle in Dorset but quickly moved to Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh 60 near the Duchess of Berry at Regent Terrace 61 page needed Charles relationship with his daughter in law proved uneasy as the Duchess declared herself regent for her son Henry Duke of Bordeaux who was now the legitimist pretender to the French throne Charles at first denied her this role but in December agreed to support her claim 62 once she had landed in France 61 page needed In 1831 the Duchess made her way from Britain by way of the Netherlands Prussia and Austria to her family in Naples 61 page needed Having gained little support she arrived in Marseilles in April 1832 61 page needed and made her way to the Vendee where she tried to instigate an uprising against the new regime There she was imprisoned much to the embarrassment of her father in law Charles 62 He was further dismayed when after her release the Duchess married the Count of Lucchesi Palli a minor Neapolitan noble In response to this morganatic match Charles banned her from seeing her children 63 At the invitation of Emperor Francis I of Austria the Bourbons moved to Prague in winter 1832 33 and were given lodging at the Hradschin Palace 62 In September 1833 Bourbon legitimists gathered in Prague to celebrate the Duke of Bordeaux s thirteenth birthday They expected grand celebrations but Charles X merely proclaimed his grandson s majority 64 On the same day after much cajoling by Chateaubriand Charles agreed to a meeting with his daughter in law which took place in Leoben on 13 October 1833 The children of the Duchess refused to meet her after they learned of her second marriage Charles refused the Duchess demands but after protests from his other daughter in law the Duchess of Angouleme he acquiesced In the summer of 1834 he again allowed the Duchess of Berry to see her children 64 Upon the death of the Austrian emperor Francis in March 1835 the Bourbons left Prague Castle as the new emperor Ferdinand wished to use it for coronation ceremonies The Bourbons moved initially to Teplitz Then as Ferdinand continued his use of Prague Castle Kirchberg Castle was purchased for them Moving there was postponed due to an outbreak of cholera in the locality 65 In the meantime Charles left for the warmer climate on Austria s Mediterranean coast in October 1835 Upon his arrival at Gorz Gorizia in the Kingdom of Illyria he caught cholera and died on 6 November 1836 The townspeople draped their windows in black mourning Charles was interred in the Church of the Annunciation of Our Lady in the Franciscan Kostanjevica Monastery now in Nova Gorica Slovenia where his remains lie in a crypt with those of his family 65 He is the only King of France to be buried outside the country 66 67 A movement reportedly began in 2016 advocating for Charles X s remains to be buried along with other French monarchs in the Basilica of St Denis 66 67 although Louis Alphonse current head of the House of Bourbon stated in 2017 that he wished the remains of his ancestors to lie undisturbed 68 Honours Kingdom of France Knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit 1 January 1771 69 Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 3 July 1816 70 Grand Cross of the Military Order of St Louis 10 July 1816 71 Grand Master and Knight of the Order of St Michael Grand Master and Grand Cross of the Order of St Lazarus Decoration de la Fidelite Decoration of The Lily Austrian Empire Grand Cross of the Order of St Stephen 1825 72 Denmark Knight of the Order of the Elephant 2 October 1824 73 Netherlands Grand Cross of the Military William Order 13 May 1825 74 Kingdom of Prussia Knight of the Order of the Black Eagle 4 October 1824 75 Russian Empire 76 Knight of the Order of St Andrew June 1815 Knight of the Order of St Alexander Nevsky June 1815 Kingdom of Saxony Knight of the Order of the Rue Crown 1827 77 Spain Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece 6 October 1761 78 Two Sicilies 79 Knight of the Order of St Januarius Grand Cross of the Order of St Ferdinand and Merit United Kingdom Stranger Knight of the Order of the Garter 9 March 1825 80 AncestryAncestors of Charles X 81 8 Louis Duke of Burgundy4 Louis XV of France9 Marie Adelaide of Savoy2 Louis Dauphin of France10 Stanislaw I of Poland5 Maria of Poland11 Katarzyna Opalinska1 Charles X of France12 Augustus II of Poland6 Augustus III of Poland13 Christiane Eberhardine of Bayreuth3 Maria Josepha of Saxony14 Joseph I Holy Roman Emperor7 Maria Josepha of Austria15 Wilhelmine Amalia of BrunswickMarriage and issueThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charles X married Princess Maria Teresa of Savoy the daughter of Victor Amadeus III King of Sardinia and Maria Antonietta of Spain on 16 November 1773 The couple had four children two sons and two daughters but the daughters did not survive childhood Only the oldest son survived his father The children were Louis Antoine Duke of Angouleme 6 August 1775 3 June 1844 sometimes called Louis XIX Married first cousin Marie Therese of France no issue Sophie Mademoiselle d Artois 5 August 1776 5 December 1783 died in childhood Charles Ferdinand Duke of Berry 24 January 1778 13 February 1820 married Marie Caroline de Bourbon Sicile had issue Marie Therese Mademoiselle d Angouleme 6 January 1783 22 June 1783 died in childhood In fiction and filmThe Count of Artois is portrayed by Al Weaver in Sofia Coppola s motion picture Marie Antoinette References Parmele Mary Platt 1908 A Short History of France Scribner p 221 Charles X Biography Reign Abdication amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 24 February 2019 a b Munro Price The Perilous Crown France between Revolutions Macmillan pp 185 187 a b Merriman John M Winter J M 2006 Europe 1789 to 1914 encyclopedia of the age of industry and empire Detroit Mich Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0684314969 OCLC 76769541 Brown Bradford C 2009 France 1830 Revolution The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest American Cancer Society pp 1 8 doi 10 1002 9781405198073 wbierp0573 ISBN 9781405198073 Evelyne Lever Louis XVI Librairie Artheme Fayard Paris 1985 p 43 Antonia Fraser Marie Antoinette the Journey pp 113 116 Charles Porset Hiram sans culotte Franc maconnerie lumieres et revolution trente ans d etudes et de recherches Paris Honore Champion 1998 p 207 Fraser pp 137 139 Fraser p 189 a b Fraser pp 80 81 a b Fraser p 178 Fraser p 221 Fraser p 326 Fraser pp 274 278 Fraser p 338 Price Monro 2003 The Fall of the French Monarchy pp 93 94 ISBN 978 0330488273 Fraser p 340 Nagel p 65 Fraser p 383 Price Monro 2003 The Fall of the French Monarchy p 170 ISBN 978 0 330 48827 3 Nagel p 103 Nagel p 113 Nagel p 118 Fraser pp 399 440 456 Nagel p 143 Nagel p 152 153 Nagel p 207 Nagel pp 210 222 233 235 Nagel p 153 Price pp 11 12 a b Nagel pp 253 254 Price p 50 Price pp 52 54 Price pp 72 80 83 Price p 84 Price pp 91 92 Price pp 94 95 Price p 109 McConnachie James 2004 Rough Guide to the Loire London Rough Guides p 144 ISBN 978 1843532576 Lever Evelyne Louis XVIII Librairie Artheme Fayard Paris 1988 p 553 French Price pp 113 115 a b Price pp 119 121 T W Redhead January 2012 The French Revolutions BoD Books on Demand p 176 ISBN 978 3 86403 428 2 Retrieved 1 September 2013 King s journey to the Saint Omer camp and in the northern departments Paris Imprimerie Royale 1827 p 237 Imprimerie Royale 1827 King s trip to the eastern departments and to the Luneville maneuver camp Paris Imprimerie Royale 1828 III 213 p Imprimerie Royale 1828 1828 a b Price pp 116 118 a b Price pp 122 128 a b Price pp 136 138 Price pp 130 132 Castelot Andre Charles X Librairie Academique Perrin Paris 1988 p 454 ISBN 2 262 00545 1 Le regime legal est interrompu celui de la force a commence L obeissance cesse d etre un devoir Price pp 141 142 Price pp 151 154 157 Price pp 158 161 163 Price pp 173 176 Castelot Charles X p 482 Castelot Charles X p 491 Charles X s abdication Mon cousin je suis trop profondement peine des maux qui affligent ou qui pourraient menacer mes peuples pour n avoir pas cherche un moyen de les prevenir J ai donc pris la resolution d abdiquer la couronne en faveur de mon petit fils le duc de Bordeaux Le dauphin qui partage mes sentiments renonce aussi a ses droits en faveur de son neveu Vous aurez donc en votre qualite de lieutenant general du royaume a faire proclamer l avenement de Henri V a la couronne Vous prendrez d ailleurs toutes les mesures qui vous concernent pour regler les formes du gouvernement pendant la minorite du nouveau roi Ici je me borne a faire connaitre ces dispositions c est un moyen d eviter encore bien des maux Vous communiquerez mes intentions au corps diplomatique et vous me ferez connaitre le plus tot possible la proclamation par laquelle mon petit fils sera reconnu roi sous le nom de Henri V Price pp 177 181 182 185 a b c Nagel pp 318 325 a b c d A J Mackenzie Stuart A French King at Holyrood Edinburgh 1995 ISBN 0 85976 413 3 a b c Nagel pp 327 328 Nagel pp 322 333 a b Nagel pp 340 342 a b Nagel pp 349 350 a b Helene Haus 25 September 2016 Et si les cendres du roi Charles X etaient transferees a la basilique Saint Denis Are the remains of Charles X to be transferred to Basilica of St Denis Le Parisien in French Retrieved 20 February 2017 a b A K 28 September 2016 Francozi zelijo ostanke Karla X in druzine iz Slovenije Pripadajo nasi domovini The French wish the remains of Charles X and family to be brought from Slovenia They belong to our homeland in Slovenian RTV Slovenija Retrieved 20 February 2017 Al Ma 19 February 2017 Francoski princ Burbonski zeli da njegovi predniki ostanejo pokopani na Kostanjevici A French prince of Bourbon wishes the remains of his ancestors to remain at Kostanjevica in Slovenian RTV Slovenija Retrieved 20 February 2017 Teulet Alexandre 1863 Liste chronologique des chevaliers de l ordre du Saint Esprit depuis son origine jusqu a son extinction 1578 1830 Chronological List of Knights of the Order of the Holy Spirit from its origin to its extinction 1578 1830 Annuaire bulletin de la Societe de l histoire de France in French 2 100 Retrieved 24 March 2020 Ordre de la Legion d honneur Textes officiels anterieurs a 1962 france phaleristique com in French Retrieved 26 March 2020 Ordre royal et militaire de Saint Louis france phaleristique com in French Retrieved 26 March 2020 A Szent Istvan Rend tagjai Archived 22 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Johann Heinrich Friedrich Berlien 1846 Der Elephanten Orden und seine Ritter Kopenhagen Berling p 159 Militaire Willems Orde Bourbon Charles Philippe prince de Military William Order Bourbon Charles Philip Prince of Ministerie van Defensie in Dutch 13 May 1825 Retrieved 17 March 2020 Liste der Ritter des Koniglich Preussischen Hohen Ordens vom Schwarzen Adler 1851 Von Seiner Majestat dem Konige Friedrich Wilhelm III ernannte Ritter p 18 Almanach de la cour pour l annee 1817 l Academie Imp des Sciences 1817 pp 63 78 Koniglich Sachsischer Hof Civil und MilitarStaat im Jahre 1828 in German 1828 p 53 Guerra Francisco 1819 Caballeros Existentes en la Insignie Orden del Toison de Oro Calendario manual y guia de forasteros en Madrid in Spanish 41 retrieved 17 March 2020 Capitolo XIV Ordini cavallereschi Almanacco Reale del Regno Delle Due Sicilie in Italian 1829 pp 415 419 retrieved 8 October 2020 Shaw Wm A 1906 The Knights of England I London p 53 Genealogie ascendante jusqu au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l Europe actuellement vivans Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living in French Bourdeaux Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel 1768 p 11 Further readingArtz Frederick Binkerd France Under the Bourbon Restoration 1814 1830 1931 online free Artz Frederick B Reaction and Revolution 1814 1832 1938 covers Europe online Brown Bradford C France 1830 Revolution in by Immanuel Ness ed The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest 2009 1 8 Frederking Bettina Il ne faut pas etre le roi de deux peuples strategies of national reconciliation in Restoration France French History 22 4 2008 446 468 in English Rader Daniel L The Journalists and the July Revolution in France The Role of the Political Press in the Overthrow of the Bourbon Restoration 1827 1830 Springer 2013 Weiner Margery The French Exiles 1789 1815 Morrow 1961 Wolf John B France 1814 1919 the Rise of a Liberal Democratic Society 1940 pp 1 58 Historiography Sauvigny G de Bertier de Spring 1981 The Bourbon Restoration One Century of French Historiography French Historical Studies 12 1 41 67 doi 10 2307 286306 JSTOR 286306 External links Media related to Charles X of France at Wikimedia Commons Charles X The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Charles XHouse of BourbonCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyBorn 9 October 1757 Died 6 November 1836Regnal titlesPreceded byLouis XVIII King of France16 September 1824 2 August 1830 VacantJuly RevolutionTitle next held byLouis Philippeas King of the FrenchTitles in pretenceVacantTitle last held byLouis XVIII TITULAR King of France2 August 1830 6 November 1836Reason for succession failure July Revolution Succeeded byLouis XIX Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles X amp oldid 1127811542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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