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Françoise Marie de Bourbon

Françoise Marie de Bourbon (Légitimée de France; 4 May[2] 1677 – 1 February 1749) was the youngest illegitimate daughter of King Louis XIV of France and his maîtresse-en-titre, Françoise-Athénaïs de Rochechouart, Marquise de Montespan. At the age of 14, she married her first cousin Philippe d'Orléans, the future regent of France during the minority of Louis XV. Through two of her eight children, she became the ancestress of several of Europe's Roman Catholic monarchs of the 19th and 20th centuries—notably those of Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Spain, and France.

Françoise Marie de Bourbon
Légitimée de France
Duchess of Orléans
Pierre Gobert, "Portrait of the Duchess of Orléans Françoise Marie de Bourbon", 1700
Born4 May 1677
Château de Maintenon, Maintenon, France
Died1 February 1749 (aged 71)
Palais-Royal, Paris, France
Burial6 February 1749[1]
Église de la Madeleine de Trainel, Paris, France
Spouse
(m. 1692; died 1723)
Issue
Detail
HouseBourbon
FatherLouis XIV
MotherMadame de Montespan
Signature

Françoise Marie wielded little political influence. She participated in the botched Cellamare Conspiracy in 1718 which the conspirators orchestrated to oust her husband as regent in favour of her brother Louis-Auguste, Duke of Maine.

Early life (1677–1692)

Françoise Marie was born in 1677 at the Château de Maintenon, owned since 1674 by Françoise d'Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon, the governess of Madame de Montespan's illegitimate children by King Louis XIV. She and her younger brother, Louis Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of Toulouse were cared for by Mmes de Monchevreuil,[3] de Colbert, and de Jussac under Mme. de Maintenon's supervision, as their mother was ostracised from court eventually. As a child, she also went to Versailles to visit her parents occasionally.

Mademoiselle de Blois

On 22 November 1681, when she was four and a half years old, Louis XIV legitimised Françoise Marie and gave her the courtesy title of Mademoiselle de Blois, a style once held by her older half-sister Marie Anne de Bourbon, a legitimised daughter of the king by Louise de La Vallière. Louis XIV did not mention his daughter’s mother in the act of legitimisation because Madame de Montespan was still married to the Marquis de Montespan, who might have counter-claimed paternity and custody of his wife's children.[3] By the time of her birth, her parents' relationship was coming to an end because of Madame de Montespan's possible involvement in the Affaire des poisons.[4]

Her older siblings Louis Auguste and Louise Françoise had been legitimised on 19 December 1673 by letters patent registered at the Parlement de Paris. Her younger brother, Louis Alexandre, was legitimised at the same time as she and received the title of comte de Toulouse. She remained close to him and their older brother, Louis-Auguste de Bourbon, Duc du Maine, for her entire life. However, she never had closeness to her legitimate half-brother, Louis, Dauphin of France.[citation needed]

She inherited her mother's beauty, such that Madame de Caylus commented that Françoise was “naturally timid and glorious and was a little beauty with a beautiful face and beautiful hands; completely in proportion.”[5] She took pride in her royal ancestry and the royal blood of the House of Bourbon that she inherited from her father. Later, it was joked that she would “remember she was a daughter of France, even while on her chaise percée.[6] The Marquis d'Argenson said she was very like her mother, but had also Louis XIV's orderly mind, failing of injustice, and that of his harshness.

Marriage

 
Portrait of Françoise Marie (by François de Troy, ca. 1692)

Madame de Maintenon was a childless widow who, as the king's morganatic wife from the mid-1680s, promoted her charges' interests, scandalising the court by securing the marriage of Mlle de Blois to the king's only legitimate nephew, Philippe d'Orléans in 1692. Then known by his father's subsidiary title, Duke of Chartres, he was the son of Philippe de France, Duc d'Orléans, known, as the king's only brother, as Monsieur. The mésalliance between bastard and legitimate blood royal disgusted Philippe's mother, Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate, who harbored well-known prejudice against her brother-in-law's bastards.[6] Upon learning of her son's acquiescence to the betrothal, she slapped him in front of the court,[7] then turned her back on the king who had bowed in salutation to her.[6] She remained an enemy to her daughter-in-law and indifferent to her grandchildren by her.

On the occasion of the marriage between their respective children, Louis XIV gave to his brother the Palais-Royal in which the Orléans had resided, but had not owned.[8] It was the Palais Cardinal previously, but Cardinal Richelieu, its builder, bequeathed it to the crown upon his death in 1642. Louis XIV also promised an important military post to the Duke of Chartres and gave 100,000 livres to the Duke of Orléans' favourite, the Chevalier de Lorraine. Upon being informed of the identity of her future husband, Françoise remarked:

Je ne me soucie pas qu'il m'aime, je me soucie qu'il m'épouse. ("I care not that he love me, but that he marries me")[8]

Françoise and Philippe d'Orléans married on 18 February 1692 in the chapel of the Palace of Versailles. Cardinal de Bouillon[3] - a member of the House of La Tour d'Auvergne - conducted the service. In 1685, the Cardinal de Bouillon had refused to take part in the marriage of the Duke of Bourbon and Françoise's sister, Mademoiselle de Nantes, and, as a result, had been sent into exile, but he was recalled to marry Françoise and the Duke of Chartres. After the ceremony, a banquet was given in the Hall of Mirrors with all the princes and princesses of the blood in attendance.[3] Other guests included the exiled James II of England and his consort, Mary of Modena. At the newlyweds' bedding ceremony later that evening, Queen Mary handed the new Duchess of Chartres her night shirt.[3] Madame de Montespan had not been invited to the wedding of her daughter.

As her new husband was a legitimate grandson of a king, Françoise assumed the rank of petite-fille de France ("Grand-Daughter of France"), and was addressed as Royal Highness. Furthermore, the newlyweds traveled and lodged wherever the king did, dined with him, and were entitled to armchairs in his presence.[9] As the new duchesse de Chartres, Françoise Marie was next in precedence behind only the Duchess of Burgundy and her own mother-in-law, the Duchess of Orléans.

From her father, Françoise Marie received a dowry of more than two million livres, twice the sum bestowed on her older sister, Louise, who had married Louis, Duke of Bourbon, first prince of the blood royal, whose rank was deemed substantially lower than that of the king's nephew. This difference led to animosity between the sisters.[3] The dowry was not to be paid until the Nine Years' War ended.[10]

Around 1710, the proud Duke of Saint-Simon, a friend of Philippe d’Orléans, wrote an account describing Françoise Marie:

[i]n every way majestic; her complexion, her throat, her arms, were admirable; she had a tolerable mouth, with beautiful teeth, somewhat long; and cheeks too broad and too pendant, which interfered with, but did not spoil her beauty. What disfigured her the most were her eyebrows, which were, so to speak, peeled and red, with very little hair; she had, however, fine eyelashes, with well-set, chestnut-coloured hair. Without being humpbacked or deformed, she had one side larger than the other, which caused her to walk awry; and this defect in her figure indicated another, which was more troublesome in society and which inconvenienced herself.[11]

 
Mademoiselle de Blois as Galatea Triumphant (by Pierre Gobert, 1692)

Her mother-in-law wrote the following in her memoirs:

all the ladies in waiting have made her believe that she did my son honour in marrying him; and she is so vain of her own birth and that of her brothers and sisters that she will not hear a word said against them; she will not see any difference between legitimate and illegitimate children.[12]

Not long after their marriage, Philippe ridiculed his wife's bad temper openly and nicknamed her Madame Lucifer. Her mother-in-law said that during the early years of the Chartres marriage, Françoise was as "drunk as drunk" three to four times a week.[3]

The union, despite open discord, produced eight children, several of whom later married into other European royal families during the Regency of her husband for the young King Louis XV of France. Françoise Marie was so annoyed at her children not being recognised as grandchildren of a king that Saint-Simon wrote:

The duchesse d'Orléans had a head filled with fantasies that she could not realise... Not content with the modern rank of Granddaughter of France, which she enjoyed through her husband, she could not bear the idea that her children were only Princes of the Blood and dreamed up a rank for them that was betwixt and between...great-Grandchildren of France.[13]

Duchess of Orléans (1701–1749)

 
Françoise Marie with her son (by Pierre Gobert)

In 1701, upon the death of his father, her husband became Duke of Orléans, head of the House of Orléans and inherited his father's estates. The new Duchess of Orléans acquired precedence over her mother-in-law, ranking second only to the Dauphine (Duchess of Burgundy). Her father-in-law had died of a stroke at Saint-Cloud following an argument with Louis XIV at Marly concerning the Duke of Chartres' flaunting his pregnant mistress, Marie-Louise de Séry, in front of Françoise.[10] Nonetheless, the new Duke and Duchess of Orléans pursued a lavish lifestyle at the Palais-Royal in Paris and the Château de Saint-Cloud, located some ten kilometers west of Paris. Among many other extravagances, they commissioned the renowned Jean Bérain the Elder[7] to design and decorate their private apartments at the Palais-Royal.

While her husband led the debauched life of a womaniser, Françoise lived a quiet life without scandal, unlike her sisters, the Princess of Conti and the Duchess of Bourbon, and their older brother, the Duke of Maine. Though witty and charming, she preferred the company of the Duchess of Sforza.[3][12] Her intimate circle included her cousins, Marie Élisabeth de Rochechouart, Countess of Castries, who was also her lady-in-waiting, and Diane Gabrielle Damas de Thianges, daughter of Françoise's aunt, Gabrièlle de Rochechouart de Mortemart.

Two days after her birthday in 1707, Françoise Marie lost her mother who had lived in seclusion[3] since being banished from court in 1691. Her father forbade his legitimised children to wear mourning clothes for their mother, but they chose to decline attending court gatherings during the mourning period, with the exception of their eldest brother, the Duke of Maine, who inherited the entirety of his mother's vast fortune.[7]

In 1710 Louis XIV's youngest legitimate grandson, Charles, Duke of Berry, was still unmarried. It was suggested that he marry Louise Élisabeth de Bourbon, the daughter of Louise, Duchess of Bourbon. However, on 6 July 1710, Françoise secured the marriage of her eldest daughter, Marie Louise Élisabeth d'Orléans, to the duke, much to the annoyance of the Duchess of Bourbon. This marriage elevated Marie Louise Élisabeth to the rank of fille de France, above princesses of the blood.

 
The Château de Bagnolet, Françoise Marie's favourite residence (engraving by Jacques Rigaud)

On the death of his great-grandfather Louis XIV, in 1715, the five-year-old Dauphin became the new king of France as Louis XV. Consequently, Françoise's older brother, the Duke of Maine, and her husband, the Duke of Orléans, experienced tension over who would be the regent during the minority of the new king. The Parlement de Paris ruled in favour of her husband. As the wife of the de facto ruler of France, Françoise became the most important lady of the kingdom. During the Regency, her husband increased her annual allowance to 400,000 livres. In March 1719, she acquired the château de Bagnolet near Paris and the estate passed to her son, Louis d'Orléans, Louis le Pieux, on her death. Françoise Marie extended the small château under the direction of Claude Desgots who also worked at the duc du Maine's château de Sceaux.

Family life

Her many daughters were rumoured to be promiscuous. Having become a widow, the Duchess of Berry accumulated lovers and hid several pregnancies. She almost died in labor early in 1719, having been denied the sacraments by the church and when she died on 21 July 1719, she was again pregnant.[14] After the liaison of her favourite daughter, Charlotte Aglaé, with the libertine Louis François Armand du Plessis, duc de Richelieu was discovered, Françoise and her husband married her abroad swiftly. At the same time, the Cellamare Conspiracy was uncovered. Government authorities arrested and imprisoned The Duke and Duchess of Maine and the Cardinal de Richelieu for their involvement in the plot temporarily.

Earlier, Françoise had tried to marry either Louise Adélaïde or Charlotte Aglaé to the Duke of Maine's son, Louis Auguste, Prince of Dombes, but both refused their cousin. In 1721, she arranged for two of her other daughters, Louise Élisabeth, and Philippine Élisabeth, to marry into the royal family of Spain. Louise Élisabeth was to marry the Infante Luis Felipe of Spain, heir to the throne, while Philippine Élisabeth was to marry Luis Felipe's younger half-brother, the Infante Carlos. Both marriages took place but that of Philippine Élisabeth was annulled and she returned to France. She died at the château de Bagnolet in 1734.[citation needed]

After her husband died in December 1723, Françoise retired to Saint-Cloud.

 
Françoise Marie as she appeared during the Regency (by Etienne Jahandier Desroches)

In 1725, Françoise Marie saw the marriage of her cousin, the young King Louis XV, to the Polish princess Marie Leszczyńska, diminishing her precedence at court, as did the births of their daughters. Unlike the other princesses of the blood, The Dowager Duchess of Orleans respected and got along well with Queen Marie and even organized parties in her honor at Francoise's Chateaus de Chaillon, Bagnolet and St.Cloud in 1736, 1740, 1743, 1744, and 1745, continuing until her death in 1749, which the Queen herself attended. In return, Marie Leczinska visited her palaces, talked to her in private, and followed her advice on etiquette regularly. As it turned out, the second of the king's eight daughters, Madame Henriette, fell in love with Françoise Marie's grandson, Louis Philippe, then the duc de Chartres. Louis XV would not, however, allow the marriage because he did not want the House of Orléans to come too close to the throne of France. Afterwards, it fell upon the dowager duchess to find her unwed grandson a suitable bride. At the direction of her son, Françoise Marie negotiated with her niece, Louise Élisabeth de Bourbon, for her grandson to marry Louise Élisabeth's attractive daughter, Louise Henriette de Bourbon. This marriage united a grandchild of Françoise Marie with a grandchild of her sister and enemy, the Duchess of Bourbon. Françoise Marie lived to see, in 1747, the birth of their great-grandson, the future Philippe Égalité.

The next of her daughters to marry was the youngest. Louise Diane, the favourite of Madame, was engaged to the young Louis François de Bourbon, Prince of Conti, whom she married at Versailles. Louise died in childbirth at the Château d'Issy. Louise Diane's only surviving child was the last Prince of Conti, who would later marry Princess Maria Fortunata of Modena. Maria Fortunata was one of the daughters of the wayward Charlotte Aglaé, Françoise Marie's most difficult daughter.[clarification needed] She returned from Modena in a self-imposed exile many a time and Françoise Marie and her son Louis chose to ignore her when she did. She returned to Modena in 1737 as the Sovereign Duchess Consort.

Death

Françoise died on 1 February 1749 at the Palais-Royal after a long illness, aged 71. She was the last surviving child of Louis XIV and outlived her husband by twenty-six years. Her children Charlotte Aglaé and Louis, Duke of Orléans, survived her. She was buried at the Church of Madeleine de Traisnel (Église de la Madeleine de Traisnel) in Paris, an old Benedictine church at 100 Rue de Charonne, on 6 February. Her heart was taken to the Val-de-Grâce.

At present, in the Royal Collection of the British Royal Family, there exists a miniature portrait by the Venetian painter Rosalba Carriera of Françoise. She poses as Amphitrite.[15]

Issue

  1. Mademoiselle de Valois (17 December 1693 – 17 October 1694); died in infancy.
  2. Marie Louise Élisabeth d'Orléans (20 August 1695 – 21 July 1719); married Charles of France, Duke of Berry. Had no surviving issue (all children died in infancy).
  3. Louise Adélaïde d'Orléans (13 August 1698 – 10 February 1743); became a nun and Abbess of Chelles. Died unmarried and without issue.
  4. Charlotte Aglaé d'Orléans (22 October 1700 – 19 January 1761);[16][17] married Francesco III d'Este, Duke of Modena. Had issue.
  5. Louis d'Orléans (4 August 1703 – 4 February 1752); married Margravine Johanna of Baden-Baden. Had issue.
  6. Louise Élisabeth d'Orléans (11 December 1709 – 16 June 1742); married Louis I of Spain. No issue.
  7. Philippine Élisabeth d'Orléans (18 December 1714 – 21 May 1734); died unmarried. No issue.
  8. Louise Diane d'Orléans (27 June 1716 – 26 September 1736); married Louis François de Bourbon. Had issue.

Ancestry

References and notes

  1. ^ Boudet. Antoine, Dictionnaire de la noblesse, seconde edition (in French), Paris, 1776, p. 107
  2. ^ Date as given by the Almanach Royal of France. She has been given three dates of birth over time; 9 February; 4 May; and 25 May.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i The Unruly Daughter of the Regent
  4. ^ Hilton, Lisa, Athénaïs: The Real Queen of France, p. 187
  5. ^ Memoirs of Madame de Caylus[page needed]
  6. ^ a b c Fraser, Lady Antonia, Love and Louis XIV, Nan A. Talese, 2006, pp. 279, 282, 284
  7. ^ a b c Mitford, Nancy, The Sun King, pp. 136, 165
  8. ^ a b Dufresne, Claude, les Orléans, CRITERION, Paris, 1991, pp. 77–78.
  9. ^ Spanheim, Ézéchiel, pp. 87, 100–105, 313–314, 323–327.
  10. ^ a b Pevitt, Christine, Philippe, Duc d'Orléans: Regent of France, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1997, pp. 41, 43, 56
  11. ^ French Memoirs of the Duke of Saint-Simon c. 1710
  12. ^ a b Translated memoirs of the Duchess of Orléans
  13. ^ Goldhammer, Arthur, Saint-Simon and the court of Louis XIV (translated memoirs of Saint-Simon), University of Chicago Press, London, 2001, p. 33
  14. ^ De Barthélémy, E. (ed.), Gazette de la Régence. Janvier 1715-1719, Paris, 1887.
  15. ^ Françoise Marie's portrait, royalcollection.org.uk; accessed 15 April 2014.
  16. ^ Vatout, Jean (1836). Le chateau d'eu: notices historiques, Volume 4. Félix Malteste & Co. p. 438. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  17. ^ Williams, Hugh Noel (1913). Unruly daughters; a romance of the house of Orléans. Hutchinson & Co. p. 10. Retrieved 7 June 2022.

françoise, marie, bourbon, légitimée, france, 1677, february, 1749, youngest, illegitimate, daughter, king, louis, france, maîtresse, titre, françoise, athénaïs, rochechouart, marquise, montespan, married, first, cousin, philippe, orléans, future, regent, fran. Francoise Marie de Bourbon Legitimee de France 4 May 2 1677 1 February 1749 was the youngest illegitimate daughter of King Louis XIV of France and his maitresse en titre Francoise Athenais de Rochechouart Marquise de Montespan At the age of 14 she married her first cousin Philippe d Orleans the future regent of France during the minority of Louis XV Through two of her eight children she became the ancestress of several of Europe s Roman Catholic monarchs of the 19th and 20th centuries notably those of Belgium Italy Portugal Spain and France Francoise Marie de BourbonLegitimee de FranceDuchess of OrleansPierre Gobert Portrait of the Duchess of Orleans Francoise Marie de Bourbon 1700Born4 May 1677Chateau de Maintenon Maintenon FranceDied1 February 1749 aged 71 Palais Royal Paris FranceBurial6 February 1749 1 Eglise de la Madeleine de Trainel Paris FranceSpousePhilippe II Duke of Orleans m 1692 died 1723 wbr IssueDetailLouise Elisabeth Duchess of Berry Louise Adelaide Abbess of Chelles Charlotte Aglae Duchess of Modena Louis Duke of Orleans Louise Elisabeth Queen of Spain Philippine Elisabeth Mademoiselle de Beaujolais Louise Diane Princess of ContiHouseBourbonFatherLouis XIVMotherMadame de MontespanSignatureFrancoise Marie wielded little political influence She participated in the botched Cellamare Conspiracy in 1718 which the conspirators orchestrated to oust her husband as regent in favour of her brother Louis Auguste Duke of Maine Contents 1 Early life 1677 1692 1 1 Mademoiselle de Blois 2 Marriage 3 Duchess of Orleans 1701 1749 3 1 Family life 4 Death 5 Issue 6 Ancestry 7 References and notesEarly life 1677 1692 EditFrancoise Marie was born in 1677 at the Chateau de Maintenon owned since 1674 by Francoise d Aubigne Marquise de Maintenon the governess of Madame de Montespan s illegitimate children by King Louis XIV She and her younger brother Louis Alexandre de Bourbon Count of Toulouse were cared for by Mmes de Monchevreuil 3 de Colbert and de Jussac under Mme de Maintenon s supervision as their mother was ostracised from court eventually As a child she also went to Versailles to visit her parents occasionally Mademoiselle de Blois Edit On 22 November 1681 when she was four and a half years old Louis XIV legitimised Francoise Marie and gave her the courtesy title of Mademoiselle de Blois a style once held by her older half sister Marie Anne de Bourbon a legitimised daughter of the king by Louise de La Valliere Louis XIV did not mention his daughter s mother in the act of legitimisation because Madame de Montespan was still married to the Marquis de Montespan who might have counter claimed paternity and custody of his wife s children 3 By the time of her birth her parents relationship was coming to an end because of Madame de Montespan s possible involvement in the Affaire des poisons 4 Her older siblings Louis Auguste and Louise Francoise had been legitimised on 19 December 1673 by letters patent registered at the Parlement de Paris Her younger brother Louis Alexandre was legitimised at the same time as she and received the title of comte de Toulouse She remained close to him and their older brother Louis Auguste de Bourbon Duc du Maine for her entire life However she never had closeness to her legitimate half brother Louis Dauphin of France citation needed She inherited her mother s beauty such that Madame de Caylus commented that Francoise was naturally timid and glorious and was a little beauty with a beautiful face and beautiful hands completely in proportion 5 She took pride in her royal ancestry and the royal blood of the House of Bourbon that she inherited from her father Later it was joked that she would remember she was a daughter of France even while on her chaise percee 6 The Marquis d Argenson said she was very like her mother but had also Louis XIV s orderly mind failing of injustice and that of his harshness Marriage Edit Portrait of Francoise Marie by Francois de Troy ca 1692 Madame de Maintenon was a childless widow who as the king s morganatic wife from the mid 1680s promoted her charges interests scandalising the court by securing the marriage of Mlle de Blois to the king s only legitimate nephew Philippe d Orleans in 1692 Then known by his father s subsidiary title Duke of Chartres he was the son of Philippe de France Duc d Orleans known as the king s only brother as Monsieur The mesalliance between bastard and legitimate blood royal disgusted Philippe s mother Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate who harbored well known prejudice against her brother in law s bastards 6 Upon learning of her son s acquiescence to the betrothal she slapped him in front of the court 7 then turned her back on the king who had bowed in salutation to her 6 She remained an enemy to her daughter in law and indifferent to her grandchildren by her On the occasion of the marriage between their respective children Louis XIV gave to his brother the Palais Royal in which the Orleans had resided but had not owned 8 It was the Palais Cardinal previously but Cardinal Richelieu its builder bequeathed it to the crown upon his death in 1642 Louis XIV also promised an important military post to the Duke of Chartres and gave 100 000 livres to the Duke of Orleans favourite the Chevalier de Lorraine Upon being informed of the identity of her future husband Francoise remarked Je ne me soucie pas qu il m aime je me soucie qu il m epouse I care not that he love me but that he marries me 8 Francoise and Philippe d Orleans married on 18 February 1692 in the chapel of the Palace of Versailles Cardinal de Bouillon 3 a member of the House of La Tour d Auvergne conducted the service In 1685 the Cardinal de Bouillon had refused to take part in the marriage of the Duke of Bourbon and Francoise s sister Mademoiselle de Nantes and as a result had been sent into exile but he was recalled to marry Francoise and the Duke of Chartres After the ceremony a banquet was given in the Hall of Mirrors with all the princes and princesses of the blood in attendance 3 Other guests included the exiled James II of England and his consort Mary of Modena At the newlyweds bedding ceremony later that evening Queen Mary handed the new Duchess of Chartres her night shirt 3 Madame de Montespan had not been invited to the wedding of her daughter As her new husband was a legitimate grandson of a king Francoise assumed the rank of petite fille de France Grand Daughter of France and was addressed as Royal Highness Furthermore the newlyweds traveled and lodged wherever the king did dined with him and were entitled to armchairs in his presence 9 As the new duchesse de Chartres Francoise Marie was next in precedence behind only the Duchess of Burgundy and her own mother in law the Duchess of Orleans From her father Francoise Marie received a dowry of more than two million livres twice the sum bestowed on her older sister Louise who had married Louis Duke of Bourbon first prince of the blood royal whose rank was deemed substantially lower than that of the king s nephew This difference led to animosity between the sisters 3 The dowry was not to be paid until the Nine Years War ended 10 Around 1710 the proud Duke of Saint Simon a friend of Philippe d Orleans wrote an account describing Francoise Marie i n every way majestic her complexion her throat her arms were admirable she had a tolerable mouth with beautiful teeth somewhat long and cheeks too broad and too pendant which interfered with but did not spoil her beauty What disfigured her the most were her eyebrows which were so to speak peeled and red with very little hair she had however fine eyelashes with well set chestnut coloured hair Without being humpbacked or deformed she had one side larger than the other which caused her to walk awry and this defect in her figure indicated another which was more troublesome in society and which inconvenienced herself 11 Mademoiselle de Blois as Galatea Triumphant by Pierre Gobert 1692 Her mother in law wrote the following in her memoirs all the ladies in waiting have made her believe that she did my son honour in marrying him and she is so vain of her own birth and that of her brothers and sisters that she will not hear a word said against them she will not see any difference between legitimate and illegitimate children 12 Not long after their marriage Philippe ridiculed his wife s bad temper openly and nicknamed her Madame Lucifer Her mother in law said that during the early years of the Chartres marriage Francoise was as drunk as drunk three to four times a week 3 The union despite open discord produced eight children several of whom later married into other European royal families during the Regency of her husband for the young King Louis XV of France Francoise Marie was so annoyed at her children not being recognised as grandchildren of a king that Saint Simon wrote The duchesse d Orleans had a head filled with fantasies that she could not realise Not content with the modern rank of Granddaughter of France which she enjoyed through her husband she could not bear the idea that her children were only Princes of the Blood and dreamed up a rank for them that was betwixt and between great Grandchildren of France 13 Duchess of Orleans 1701 1749 Edit Francoise Marie with her son by Pierre Gobert In 1701 upon the death of his father her husband became Duke of Orleans head of the House of Orleans and inherited his father s estates The new Duchess of Orleans acquired precedence over her mother in law ranking second only to the Dauphine Duchess of Burgundy Her father in law had died of a stroke at Saint Cloud following an argument with Louis XIV at Marly concerning the Duke of Chartres flaunting his pregnant mistress Marie Louise de Sery in front of Francoise 10 Nonetheless the new Duke and Duchess of Orleans pursued a lavish lifestyle at the Palais Royal in Paris and the Chateau de Saint Cloud located some ten kilometers west of Paris Among many other extravagances they commissioned the renowned Jean Berain the Elder 7 to design and decorate their private apartments at the Palais Royal While her husband led the debauched life of a womaniser Francoise lived a quiet life without scandal unlike her sisters the Princess of Conti and the Duchess of Bourbon and their older brother the Duke of Maine Though witty and charming she preferred the company of the Duchess of Sforza 3 12 Her intimate circle included her cousins Marie Elisabeth de Rochechouart Countess of Castries who was also her lady in waiting and Diane Gabrielle Damas de Thianges daughter of Francoise s aunt Gabrielle de Rochechouart de Mortemart Two days after her birthday in 1707 Francoise Marie lost her mother who had lived in seclusion 3 since being banished from court in 1691 Her father forbade his legitimised children to wear mourning clothes for their mother but they chose to decline attending court gatherings during the mourning period with the exception of their eldest brother the Duke of Maine who inherited the entirety of his mother s vast fortune 7 In 1710 Louis XIV s youngest legitimate grandson Charles Duke of Berry was still unmarried It was suggested that he marry Louise Elisabeth de Bourbon the daughter of Louise Duchess of Bourbon However on 6 July 1710 Francoise secured the marriage of her eldest daughter Marie Louise Elisabeth d Orleans to the duke much to the annoyance of the Duchess of Bourbon This marriage elevated Marie Louise Elisabeth to the rank of fille de France above princesses of the blood The Chateau de Bagnolet Francoise Marie s favourite residence engraving by Jacques Rigaud On the death of his great grandfather Louis XIV in 1715 the five year old Dauphin became the new king of France as Louis XV Consequently Francoise s older brother the Duke of Maine and her husband the Duke of Orleans experienced tension over who would be the regent during the minority of the new king The Parlement de Paris ruled in favour of her husband As the wife of the de facto ruler of France Francoise became the most important lady of the kingdom During the Regency her husband increased her annual allowance to 400 000 livres In March 1719 she acquired the chateau de Bagnolet near Paris and the estate passed to her son Louis d Orleans Louis le Pieux on her death Francoise Marie extended the small chateau under the direction of Claude Desgots who also worked at the duc du Maine s chateau de Sceaux Family life Edit Her many daughters were rumoured to be promiscuous Having become a widow the Duchess of Berry accumulated lovers and hid several pregnancies She almost died in labor early in 1719 having been denied the sacraments by the church and when she died on 21 July 1719 she was again pregnant 14 After the liaison of her favourite daughter Charlotte Aglae with the libertine Louis Francois Armand du Plessis duc de Richelieu was discovered Francoise and her husband married her abroad swiftly At the same time the Cellamare Conspiracy was uncovered Government authorities arrested and imprisoned The Duke and Duchess of Maine and the Cardinal de Richelieu for their involvement in the plot temporarily Earlier Francoise had tried to marry either Louise Adelaide or Charlotte Aglae to the Duke of Maine s son Louis Auguste Prince of Dombes but both refused their cousin In 1721 she arranged for two of her other daughters Louise Elisabeth and Philippine Elisabeth to marry into the royal family of Spain Louise Elisabeth was to marry the Infante Luis Felipe of Spain heir to the throne while Philippine Elisabeth was to marry Luis Felipe s younger half brother the Infante Carlos Both marriages took place but that of Philippine Elisabeth was annulled and she returned to France She died at the chateau de Bagnolet in 1734 citation needed After her husband died in December 1723 Francoise retired to Saint Cloud Francoise Marie as she appeared during the Regency by Etienne Jahandier Desroches In 1725 Francoise Marie saw the marriage of her cousin the young King Louis XV to the Polish princess Marie Leszczynska diminishing her precedence at court as did the births of their daughters Unlike the other princesses of the blood The Dowager Duchess of Orleans respected and got along well with Queen Marie and even organized parties in her honor at Francoise s Chateaus de Chaillon Bagnolet and St Cloud in 1736 1740 1743 1744 and 1745 continuing until her death in 1749 which the Queen herself attended In return Marie Leczinska visited her palaces talked to her in private and followed her advice on etiquette regularly As it turned out the second of the king s eight daughters Madame Henriette fell in love with Francoise Marie s grandson Louis Philippe then the duc de Chartres Louis XV would not however allow the marriage because he did not want the House of Orleans to come too close to the throne of France Afterwards it fell upon the dowager duchess to find her unwed grandson a suitable bride At the direction of her son Francoise Marie negotiated with her niece Louise Elisabeth de Bourbon for her grandson to marry Louise Elisabeth s attractive daughter Louise Henriette de Bourbon This marriage united a grandchild of Francoise Marie with a grandchild of her sister and enemy the Duchess of Bourbon Francoise Marie lived to see in 1747 the birth of their great grandson the future Philippe Egalite The next of her daughters to marry was the youngest Louise Diane the favourite of Madame was engaged to the young Louis Francois de Bourbon Prince of Conti whom she married at Versailles Louise died in childbirth at the Chateau d Issy Louise Diane s only surviving child was the last Prince of Conti who would later marry Princess Maria Fortunata of Modena Maria Fortunata was one of the daughters of the wayward Charlotte Aglae Francoise Marie s most difficult daughter clarification needed She returned from Modena in a self imposed exile many a time and Francoise Marie and her son Louis chose to ignore her when she did She returned to Modena in 1737 as the Sovereign Duchess Consort Death EditFrancoise died on 1 February 1749 at the Palais Royal after a long illness aged 71 She was the last surviving child of Louis XIV and outlived her husband by twenty six years Her children Charlotte Aglae and Louis Duke of Orleans survived her She was buried at the Church of Madeleine de Traisnel Eglise de la Madeleine de Traisnel in Paris an old Benedictine church at 100 Rue de Charonne on 6 February Her heart was taken to the Val de Grace At present in the Royal Collection of the British Royal Family there exists a miniature portrait by the Venetian painter Rosalba Carriera of Francoise She poses as Amphitrite 15 Issue EditMademoiselle de Valois 17 December 1693 17 October 1694 died in infancy Marie Louise Elisabeth d Orleans 20 August 1695 21 July 1719 married Charles of France Duke of Berry Had no surviving issue all children died in infancy Louise Adelaide d Orleans 13 August 1698 10 February 1743 became a nun and Abbess of Chelles Died unmarried and without issue Charlotte Aglae d Orleans 22 October 1700 19 January 1761 16 17 married Francesco III d Este Duke of Modena Had issue Louis d Orleans 4 August 1703 4 February 1752 married Margravine Johanna of Baden Baden Had issue Louise Elisabeth d Orleans 11 December 1709 16 June 1742 married Louis I of Spain No issue Philippine Elisabeth d Orleans 18 December 1714 21 May 1734 died unmarried No issue Louise Diane d Orleans 27 June 1716 26 September 1736 married Louis Francois de Bourbon Had issue Ancestry EditAncestors of Francoise Marie de Bourbon8 Henry IV of France4 Louis XIII of France9 Marie de Medici2 Louis XIV of France10 Philip III of Spain5 Anne of Austria11 Margaret of Austria1 Francoise Marie de Bourbon12 Gaspard de Rochechouart marquis de Mortemart6 Gabriel de Rochechouart duc de Mortemart13 Louise de Maure comtesse de Maure3 Madame de Montespan14 Jean de Grandseigne marquis de Marsillac7 Diane de Grandseigne15 Catherine de La Beraudiere dame de VillenonReferences and notes Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Francoise Marie de Bourbon Boudet Antoine Dictionnaire de la noblesse seconde edition in French Paris 1776 p 107 Date as given by the Almanach Royal of France She has been given three dates of birth over time 9 February 4 May and 25 May a b c d e f g h i The Unruly Daughter of the Regent Hilton Lisa Athenais The Real Queen of France p 187 Memoirs of Madame de Caylus page needed a b c Fraser Lady Antonia Love and Louis XIV Nan A Talese 2006 pp 279 282 284 a b c Mitford Nancy The Sun King pp 136 165 a b Dufresne Claude les Orleans CRITERION Paris 1991 pp 77 78 Spanheim Ezechiel pp 87 100 105 313 314 323 327 a b Pevitt Christine Philippe Duc d Orleans Regent of France Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London 1997 pp 41 43 56 French Memoirs of the Duke of Saint Simon c 1710 a b Translated memoirs of the Duchess of Orleans Goldhammer Arthur Saint Simon and the court of Louis XIV translated memoirs of Saint Simon University of Chicago Press London 2001 p 33 De Barthelemy E ed Gazette de la Regence Janvier 1715 1719 Paris 1887 Francoise Marie s portrait royalcollection org uk accessed 15 April 2014 Vatout Jean 1836 Le chateau d eu notices historiques Volume 4 Felix Malteste amp Co p 438 Retrieved 7 June 2022 Williams Hugh Noel 1913 Unruly daughters a romance of the house of Orleans Hutchinson amp Co p 10 Retrieved 7 June 2022 Portals Biography Europe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francoise Marie de Bourbon amp oldid 1132139364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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