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List of French monarchs

France was ruled by monarchs from the establishment of the Kingdom of West Francia in 843 until the end of the Second French Empire in 1870, with several interruptions.

Family tree of Frankish and French monarchs (509–1870)

Classical French historiography usually regards Clovis I, king of the Franks (r. 507–511), as the first king of France. However, historians today consider that such a kingdom did not begin until the establishment of West Francia, during the dissolution of the Carolingian Empire in the 800s.[1][2]

Titles edit

The kings used the title "King of the Franks" (Latin: Rex Francorum) until the late twelfth century; the first to adopt the title of "King of France" (Latin: Rex Franciae; French: roi de France) was Philip II in 1190 (r. 1180–1223), after which the title "King of the Franks" gradually lost ground.[3] However, Francorum Rex continued to be sometimes used, for example by Louis XII in 1499, by Francis I in 1515, and by Henry II in about 1550; it was also used on coins up to the eighteenth century.[4]

During the brief period when the French Constitution of 1791 was in effect (1791–1792) and after the July Revolution in 1830, the style "King of the French" (roi des Français) was used instead of "King of France (and Navarre)". It was a constitutional innovation known as popular monarchy which linked the monarch's title to the French people rather than to the possession of the territory of France.[5]

With the House of Bonaparte, the title "Emperor of the French" (Empereur des Français) was used in 19th-century France (during the first and second French Empires) between 1804 and 1814, again in 1815, and between 1852 and 1870.[6]

From the 14th century down to 1801, the English (and later British) monarch claimed the throne of France, though such claim was purely nominal excepting a short period during the Hundred Years' War when Henry VI of England had control over most of Northern France, including Paris. By 1453, the English had been mostly expelled from France and Henry's claim has since been considered illegitimate; French historiography commonly does not recognize Henry VI of England among the kings of France.

Frankish kings edit

Carolingian dynasty (843–887) edit

The Carolingians were a Frankish noble family with origins in the Arnulfing and Pippinid clans of the 7th century AD. The family consolidated its power in the 8th century, eventually making the offices of mayor of the palace and dux et princeps Francorum hereditary and becoming the real powers behind the Merovingian kings. The dynasty is named after one of these mayors of the palace, Charles Martel, whose son Pepin the Short dethroned the Merovingians in 751 and, with the consent of the Papacy and the aristocracy, was crowned King of the Franks.[7] Under Charles the Great (r. 768–814), better known as "Charlemagne", the Frankish kingdom expanded deep into Central Europe, conquering Italy and most of modern Germany. He was also crowned "Emperor of the Romans" by the Pope, a title that was eventually carried on by the German rulers of the Holy Roman Empire.

Charlemagne was succeeded by his son Louis the Pious (r. 814–840), who eventually divided the kingdom between his sons. His death, however, was followed by a 3-year-long civil war that ended with the Treaty of Verdun, which divided Francia into three kingdoms, one of which (Middle Francia) was short-lived. Modern France developed from West Francia, while East Francia became the Holy Roman Empire and later Germany. By this time, the eastern and western parts of the land had already developed different languages and cultures.[8][9]

Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details
  Charles II "the Bald"[a] c. 10 August 843[i] – 6 October 877
(34 years and 2 months)
Son of Louis the Pious and grandson of Charlemagne; recognized as king after the Treaty of Verdun 13 June 823[b] – 6 October 877
(aged 54)
King of Aquitaine since 838. Crowned "Emperor of the Romans" on Christmas 875. Died of natural causes[12]
  Louis II "the Stammerer"[c] 6 October 877[ii] – 10 April 879
(1 year, 6 months and 4 days)
Son of Charles the Bald 1 November 846 – 10 April 879
(aged 32)
King of Aquitaine since 867. Died of natural causes.[14]
  Louis III 10 April 879[iii] – 5 August 882
(3 years, 3 months and 26 days)
Son of Louis the Stammerer 863 – 5 August 882[d]
(aged 19)
Ruled the North; died after hitting his head with a lintel while riding his horse.[20]
  Carloman II 10 April 879[iv] – 6 December 884
(5 years, 7 months and 26 days)
Son of Louis the Stammerer 866 – 6 December 884[e]
(aged 18)
Ruled the South; died after being accidentally stabbed by his servant.[24]
  Charles (III) "the Fat"[f] 6 December 884[v] – 11 November 887[g]
(2 years, 11 months and 5 days)
Son of Louis II the German, king of East Francia, and grandson of Louis I 839[h] – 13 January 888
(aged 48–49)

King of East Francia since 876; crowned Emperor in 881. Last ruler to control all Frankish territories. Deposed by the nobility, later dying of natural causes[30]

Robertian dynasty (888–898) edit

Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details
  Odo
Eudes or Odon
29 February 888[vi] – 3 January 898
(9 years, 10 months and 15 days)
Son of Robert the Strong; elected king by the French nobles following the deposition of Charles. Initially rivaled by Guy III of Spoleto and Ranulf II of Aquitaine c. 858 – 3 January 898[i]
(aged approx. 40)
Defended Paris from the Vikings; died of natural causes[35]

Carolingian dynasty (898–922) edit

Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details
  Charles III "the Simple" 3 January 898[vii] – 29 June 922
(24 years, 5 months and 26 days)
Posthumous son of Louis II the Stammerer; proclaimed king in opposition to Odo in January 893 17 September 879 – 7 October 929
(aged 50)
Deposed by Robert's followers; later captured by Herbert II, Count of Vermandois. Died in captivity[36]

Robertian dynasty (922–923) edit

Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details
  Robert I 29 June 922[viii]– 15 June 923
(11 months and 17 days)
Son of Robert the Strong and younger brother of Odo 865 – 15 June 923
(aged 58)
Killed at the Battle of Soissons against Charles III. Sole king to die in battle[38]

Bosonid dynasty (923–936) edit

Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details
  Rudolph
Rodolphe or Raoul
15 June 923[ix]– 14 January 936
(12 years, 6 months and 30 days)
Son of Richard, Duke of Burgundy and son-in-law of Robert I Duke of Burgundy since 921. Died of illness after a reign of constant civil war and viking raids. Lost Lotharingia (Lorraine) to Henry I of Germany[39]

Carolingian dynasty (936–987) edit

Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details
  Louis IV "from Overseas" 19 June 936[x] – 10 September 954
(18 years, 2 months and 22 days)
Son of Charles the Simple, recalled to France after being exiled to England 921 – 10 September 954
(aged 33)
Died after falling off his horse[40]
  Lothair
Lothaire
10 September 954[xi] – 2 March 986
(31 years, 5 months and 20 days)
Son of Louis IV 941 – 2 March 986
(aged 44)
Died of natural causes[41]
  Louis V "the Do-Nothing" 2 March 986[xii] – 22 May 987
(1 year, 2 months and 20 days)
Son of Lothair 967 – 22 May 987[k]
(aged 20)
Died in a hunting accident[43]

Capetian dynasty (987–1792) edit

The Capetian dynasty is named for Hugh Capet, a Robertian who served as Duke of the Franks and was elected King in 987. Except for the Bonaparte-led Empires, every monarch of France was a male-line descendant of Hugh Capet. The kingship passed through patrilineally from father to son until the 14th century, a period known as Direct Capetian rule. Afterwards, it passed to the House of Valois, a cadet branch that descended from Philip III. The Valois claim was disputed by Edward III, the Plantagenet king of England who claimed himself as the rightful king of France through his French mother Isabella; the two houses fought the Hundred Years' War over the issue, and with Henry VI of England being for a time partially recognized as King of France. The Valois line died out in the late 16th century, during the French Wars of Religion, to be replaced by the distantly related House of Bourbon, which descended through the Direct Capetian Louis IX. The Bourbons would rule France until deposed in the French Revolution, though they would be restored to the throne after the fall of Napoleon. The last Capetian to rule would be Louis Philippe I, king of the July Monarchy (1830–1848), a member of the cadet House of Bourbon-Orléans.

House of Capet (987–1328) edit

The House of Capet are also commonly known as the "Direct Capetians".

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Hugh "Capet"
Hugues Capet[l]
1 June 987[xiii] – 24 October 996
(9 years, 4 months and 23 days)
Elected king by the French nobles. Son of Hugh the Great and grandson of Robert I[m] c. 940 – 24 October 996
(aged approx. 55)
Duke of the Franks since 956. Died of natural causes.[47]
  Robert II "the Pious" 24 October 996[xiv] – 20 July 1031
(34 years, 8 months and 26 days)
Only son of Hugh Capet c. 970 – 20 July 1031
(aged approx. 60)
Married thrice, getting excommunicated by the Catholic Church. Incorporated the Duchy of Burgundy[48]
Hughes
(junior king)
[n]
19 June 1017 – 17 September 1025
(under Robert II)
Son of Robert II c. 1007 – 17 September 1025
(aged approx. 18)[49]
  Henry I
Henri
20 July 1031[xv] – 4 August 1060
(29 years and 15 days)
Son of Robert II c. 1005 – 4 August 1060
(aged approx. 55)
His reign was marked with internal struggle against feudal lords[50]
  Philip I "the Amorous"
Philippe
4 August 1060[xvi] – 29 July 1108
(47 years, 11 months and 25 days)
Son of Henry I 1052 – 29 July 1108
(aged 56)
Ruled under the regency of Anne of Kiev and Count Baldwin V until 1066[51]
  Louis VI "the Fat" 29 July 1108[xvii] – 1 August 1137
(29 years and 3 days)
Son of Philip I 1081 – 1 August 1137
(aged 56)
His reign contributed to the centralization of royal power. First king to wage war against the English[52]
Philippe
(junior king)
[n]
14 April 1129 – 13 October 1131
(under Louis VI)
Son of Louis VI 29 August 1116 – 13 October 1131
(aged 15)[53]
  Louis VII "the Young" 1 August 1137[xviii] – 18 September 1180
(43 years, 1 month and 17 days)
Son of Louis VI 1120 – 18 September 1180
(aged 60)
Known for his rivalry with Henry II of England and his military campaigns during the Second Crusade[54]
  Philip II "Augustus"
Philippe Auguste
  18 September 1180[xix]– 14 July 1223
(42 years, 9 months and 26 days)
Son of Louis VII 21 August 1165 – 14 July 1223
(aged 57)
Regarded as one of the greatest French rulers. First monarch to style himself as "King of France"[55]
  Louis VIII "the Lion" 14 July 1223[xx]– 8 November 1226
(3 years, 3 months and 25 days)
Son of Philip II 5 September 1187 – 8 November 1226
(aged 39)
Proclaimed king of England in 1216, after which he led an unsuccessful invasion[56]
  Louis IX "the Saint" 8 November 1226[xxi]– 25 August 1270
(43 years, 9 months and 17 days)
Son of Louis VIII 25 April 1214 – 25 August 1270
(aged 56)
Ruled under the regency of Blanche of Castile until 1234. Died during the 8th Crusade; only king to be venerated by the Catholic Church[57]
  Philip III "the Bold"
Philippe
25 August 1270[xxii]– 5 October 1285
(15 years, 1 month and 10 days)
Son of Louis IX 3 April 1245 – 5 October 1285
(aged 40)
Greatly expanded French influence in Europe. Died of a fever[58]
  Philip IV "the Fair"
Philippe
  5 October 1285[xxiii] – 29 November 1314
(29 years, 1 month and 24 days)
Son of Philip III 1268 – 29 November 1314
(aged 46)
King of Navarre (as Philip I) since 16 August 1284, following his marriage with Joan I. Remembered for his struggle with the Roman papacy and his consolidation of royal power, which helped to reduce the influence of feudal lords[59]
  Louis X "the Quarreller" 29 November 1314[xxiv]– 5 June 1316
(1 year, 6 months and 7 days)
Son of Philip IV 3 October 1289 – 5 June 1316
(aged 26)
King of Navarre (as Louis I) since 2 April 1305. His short reign was marked by conflicts with the nobility[60]
  John I "the Posthumous"
Jean
15–19 November 1316
(4 days)
Posthumous son of Louis X King for the four days he lived; youngest and shortest undisputed monarch in French history[o]
  Philip V "the Tall"
Philippe
20 November 1316[xxv]– 3 January 1322
(5 years, 1 month and 14 days)
Son of Philip IV and uncle of John I 1294 – 3 January 1322
(aged 28)
King of Navarre as Philip II.
Died without a male heir[65]
  Charles IV "the Fair" 3 January 1322[xxvi]– 1 February 1328
(6 years and 29 days)
Son of Philip IV and younger brother of Philip V 1294 – 1 February 1328
(aged 34)
King of Navarre as Charles I. Died without a male heir, ending the direct line of Capetians[66]

House of Valois (1328–1589) edit

The death of Charles IV started the Hundred Years' War between the House of Valois and the House of Plantagenet (whose claim was taken up by the cadet branch known as the House of Lancaster) over control of the French throne. The Valois claimed the right to the succession by male-only primogeniture through the ancient Salic Law, having the closest all-male line of descent from a recent French king. They were descended from the third son of Philip III, Charles, Count of Valois. The Plantagenets based their claim on being closer to a more recent French king, Edward III of England being a grandson of Philip IV through his mother, Isabella. The two houses fought the Hundred Years War to enforce their claims; the Valois were ultimately successful, and French historiography counts their leaders as rightful kings. One Plantagenet, Henry VI of England, did enjoy de jure control of the French throne following the Treaty of Troyes, which formed the basis for continued English claims to the throne of France until 1801. The Valois line would rule France until the line became extinct in 1589, in the backdrop of the French Wars of Religion. As Navarre did not have a tradition of male-only primogeniture, the Navarrese monarchy became distinct from the French with Joan II, a daughter of Louis X.

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Philip VI "the Fortunate"
Philippe
  1 April 1328[xxvii] – 22 August 1350
(22 years, 4 months and 21 days)
Son of Charles, Count of Valois, grandson of Philip III and cousin of Charles IV 1293 – 22 August 1350
(aged 57)
His reign was dominated by the consequences of a succession dispute, which led to the Hundred Years' War.[67]
  John II "the Good"
Jean
22 August 1350[xxviii] – 8 April 1364
(13 years, 7 months and 17 days)
Son of Philip VI April 1319[q] – 8 April 1364
(aged 45)
Captured by the English at the Battle of Poitiers (1356); forced to sign a series of humiliating treaties[68]
  Charles V "the Wise"   8 April 1364[xxix]– 16 September 1380
(16 years, 5 months and 8 days)
Son of John II; named Dauphin on 16 July 1349 21 January 1337 – 16 September 1380
(aged 43)
His reign was marked with internal struggle against feudal lords[69]
  Charles VI "the Mad" "the Beloved"   16 Sept 1380[xxx]– 21 October 1422
(42 years, 1 month and 5 days)
Son of Charles V 3 December 1368 – 21 October 1422
(aged 53)
Ruled under the regency of his uncles until 1388. Suffered a long period of mental illness before dying of natural causes[70]
  Henry VI of England
(claimant)
  21 October 1422[xxxi]
19 October 1453[r]
(disputed; 31 years)
Maternal grandson of Charles VI, recognized as heir after the Treaty of Troyes of 21 May 1420 6 December 1421 – 21 May 1471
(aged 49)
King of England since 1 September 1422. Ruled under several regencies until 1437[71]
  Charles VII "the Victorious" "the Well-Served"   21 October 1422[xxxii] – 22 July 1461
(38 years, 9 months and 1 day)
Son of Charles VI and uncle of Henry VI of England, named Dauphin in April 1417 22 February 1403 – 22 July 1461
(aged 58)
His reign saw the end of the Hundred Years' War[72]
  Louis XI "the Prudent" "the Universal Spider"   22 July 1461[xxxiii] – 30 August 1483
(22 years, 1 month and 8 days)
Son of Charles VII 3 July 1423 – 30 August 1483
(aged 60)
His reign saw the strengthening and expansion of royal power. Nicknamed "the Universal Spider" for the numerous intrigues during his rule[73]
  Charles VIII "the Affable"   30 August 1483[xxxiv] – 7 April 1498
(14 years, 7 months and 8 days)
Son of Louis XI 30 June 1470 – 7 April 1498
(aged 27)
Ruled under the regency of his sister Anne until 1491. Started the long and unsuccessful Italian Wars. Died after hitting his head with a lintel[74]

House of Valois-Orléans (1498–1515) edit

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Louis XII "Father of the People"   7 April 1498[xxxv] – 1 January 1515
(16 years, 8 months and 25 days)
Great-grandson of Charles V. Second cousin, and by first marriage son-in-law, of Louis XI 27 June 1462 – 1 January 1515
(aged 52)
Briefly conquered the Kingdom of Naples and the Duchy of Milan[75]

House of Valois-Angoulême (1515–1589) edit

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Francis I "the Father of Letters"
François
  1 January 1515[xxxvi] – 31 March 1547
(32 years, 2 months and 30 days)
Great-great-grandson of Charles V. First cousin once removed, and by first marriage son-in-law, of Louis XII 12 September 1494 – 31 March 1547
(aged 52)
Remembered as a Renaissance patron of the arts and scholarship. Died of a fever[76]
  Henry II
Henri
31 March 1547[xxxvii] – 10 July 1559
(12 years, 3 months and 10 days)
Son of Francis I, named Dauphin in August 1536 31 March 1519 – 10 July 1559
(aged 40)
His reign saw the end of the Italian Wars. Died after being accidentally stabbed in a Jousting tournament[77]
  Francis II
François
10 July 1559[xxxviii] – 5 December 1560
(1 year, 4 months and 25 days)
Son of Henry II 20 January 1544 – 5 December 1560
(aged 16)
King consort of Scotland since 24 April 1558. A weak and sick boy, he remained under the regency of the House of Guise until his premature death[78]
  Charles IX 5 December 1560[xxxix] – 30 May 1574
(13 years, 5 months and 25 days)
Younger brother of Francis II 27 June 1550 – 30 May 1574
(aged 23)
Ruled under the regency of his mother Catherine until 1563, but remained under her influence until his death. The Wars of Religion began under his reign (1562). Best remembered for the Massacre of Vassy[79]
  Henry III
Henri
  30 May 1574[xl] – 2 August 1589
(15 years, 2 months and 3 days)
Younger brother of Francis II and Charles IX 19 September 1551 – 2 August 1589
(aged 37)
Initially ruler of Poland–Lithuania.[s] He reigned through the devastating Wars of Religion, which eventually led to his own assassination[83]

House of Bourbon (1589–1792) edit

The Valois line looked strong on the death of Henry II, who left four male heirs. His first son, Francis II, died in his minority. His second son, Charles IX, had no legitimate sons to inherit. Following the premature death of his fourth son Hercule François and the assassination of his third son, the childless Henry III, France was plunged into a succession crisis over which distant cousin of the king would inherit the throne. The best claimant, King Henry III of Navarre, was a Protestant, and thus unacceptable to much of the French nobility. Ultimately, after winning numerous battles in defence of his claim, Henry converted to Catholicism and was crowned as King Henry IV, founding the House of Bourbon. This marked the second time the thrones of Navarre and France were united under one monarch; as different inheritance laws had caused them to become separated during the events of the Hundred Years Wars. The House of Bourbon would be overthrown during the French Revolution and replaced by a short-lived republic.

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Charles X
(claimant)
  2 August 1589 – 9 May 1590
(disputed; 9 months and 7 days)
7x great-grandson of Louis IX. Proclaimed king by the Catholic League in opposition to Henry of Navarre 22 December 1523 – 9 May 1590
(aged 66)
Imprisoned by Henry III on 23 December 1588; remained his entire "reign" in captivity. Died of natural causes[84]
  Henry IV "the Great" "the Good King"
Henri
  2 August 1589[xli] – 14 May 1610
(20 years, 9 months and 12 days)
10th-generation descendant of Louis IX; also nephew of Charles (X) and by first marriage son-in-law of Henry II. Proclaimed king on Henry III's deathbed 13 December 1553 – 14 May 1610
(aged 56)
King of Lower Navarre (as Henry III) since 10 June 1572. Killed in Paris on 14 May 1610 by Catholic fanatic François Ravaillac.[85]
  Louis XIII "the Just" 14 May 1610[xlii] – 14 May 1643
(33 years)
Son of Henry IV 27 September 1601 – 14 May 1643
(aged 41)
Last King of Lower Navarre (as Louis II).[t] Died of natural causes.[86]
  Louis XIV "the Great" "the Sun King" 14 May 1643[xliii] – 1 September 1715
(72 years, 3 months and 18 days)
Son of Louis XIII 5 September 1638 – 1 September 1715
(aged 76)
Ruled under the regency of his mother Anne of Austria until 1651. Longest reigning sovereign monarch in history[87]
  Louis XV "the Beloved" 1 September 1715[xliv] – 10 May 1774
(58 years, 8 months and 9 days)
Great-grandson of Louis XIV 15 February 1710 – 10 May 1774
(aged 64)
Ruled under the regency of Philippe II, Duke of Bourbon-Orléans, until 1723[88]
  Louis XVI 10 May 1774[xlv] – 21 September 1792[u]
(18 years, 4 months and 11 days)
Grandson of Louis XV 23 August 1754 – 21 January 1793
(aged 38)
Forced to install a constitutional monarchy after 1789. Formally deposed following the proclamation of the First Republic, executed in public[89]
  Louis XVII
(claimant)
21 January 1793 – 8 June 1795
(2 years, 4 months and 18 days; disputed)
Son of Louis XVI; named Dauphin on 4 June 1789 27 March 1785 – 8 June 1795
(aged 10)
Imprisoned by the revolutionary forces on 13 August 1792. Remained his entire "reign" in captivity[90]

Long 19th-century (1792–1870) edit

The period known as the "long nineteenth century" was a tumultuous time in French politics, the period is generally considered to have begun with the French Revolution, which deposed and then executed Louis XVI. Royalists continued to recognize his son, the putative king Louis XVII, as ruler of France; however, Louis was under arrest by the government of the Revolution and died in captivity having never ruled. The republican government itself went through several changes in form and constitution until France was declared an empire following the ascension of the First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte as Emperor Napoleon I. Napoleon himself would be overthrown twice following military defeats during the Napoleonic Wars. After the Napoleonic period followed two different royal governments, the Bourbon Restoration, which was ruled successively by two younger brothers of Louis XVI, and the July Monarchy, ruled by Louis Philippe I, a distant cousin who claimed descent from Louis XIII. The French Revolution of 1848 brought an end to the monarchy again, instituting a brief Second Republic that lasted only four years before its President declared himself Emperor Napoleon III, who would himself be deposed and replaced by the Third Republic, and ending monarchic rule in France for good.

House of Bonaparte, First French Empire (1804–1814) edit

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Napoleon I   18 May 1804[xlvi] – 2 April 1814[v]
(9 years, 10 months and 15 days)
First Consul of the French Republic following the coup d'etat of 19 November 1799; self-proclaimed Emperor of the French 15 August 1769 – 5 May 1821
(aged 51)
Conquered most of Europe in a series of successful wars; remembered as one of the greatest military commanders in history. Deposed in absentia and forced to abdicate, then exiled to the island of Elba[92]
  Napoleon II
(claimant)
4 – 6 April 1814
(2 days; disputed)
Son of Napoleon I 20 March 1811 – 22 July 1832
(aged 21)
Unrecognized by the Coalition and the Senate, only named emperor in Napoleon's will.

House of Bourbon (1814–1815) edit

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Louis XVIII "the Desired"   3 May 1814[xlvii] – 20 March 1815
(1st time; 10 months and 17 days)
Younger brother of Louis XVI; proclaimed king in June 1795. Had his dynasty restored to the throne with the help of other European royal houses, which had dethroned Napoleon 17 November 1755 – 16 September 1824
(aged 68)
Fled France on 21 June 1791, during the Flight to Varennes, and again in March 1815, after the return of Napoleon[93]

House of Bonaparte, Hundred Days (1815) edit

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Napoleon I   20 March – 22 June 1815
(94 days)
Restored as Emperor of the French by the French Army following his escape from the island of Elba 15 August 1769 – 5 May 1821
(aged 51)
Abdicated in favour of his son following his defeat at the Battle of Waterloo. Exiled to the island of Saint Helena, where he later died of a stomach illness[92]
  Napoleon II
(claimant)
22 June – 7 July 1815
(15 days; disputed)
Son of Napoleon I 20 March 1811 – 22 July 1832
(aged 21)
Unrecognized by the Coalition; remained his entire "reign" hidden in Austria, with his mother Marie Louise. Died of tuberculosis several years later[94][95]

Bourbon Restoration (1815–1830) edit

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Louis XVIII "the Desired"   8 July 1815 – 16 September 1824
(9 years, 2 months and 8 days)
Younger brother of Louis XVI; restored to the throne. 17 November 1755 – 16 September 1824
(aged 68)
Attempted to rule under a constitutional monarchy. Last French monarch to die while still reigning[93]
  Charles X 16 September 1824[xlviii]– 2 August 1830
(5 years, 10 months and 17 days)
Younger brother of Louis XVI and Louis XVIII 9 October 1757 – 6 November 1836
(aged 79)
Leader of the Ultra-royalists; attempted to return to the Ancient Regime. Abdicated in favour of his grandson Henry after the July Revolution.[96]
  Louis XIX (?)
(claimant)
2 August 1830
(20 minutes; disputed)
Son of Charles X 6 August 1775 – 3 June 1844
(aged 68)
Allegedly king for 20 minutes;[w] later legitimist pretender to the throne.[99]
  Henry V
(claimant)
2–9 August 1830
(7 days; disputed)
Grandson of Charles X 29 September 1820 – 24 August 1883
(aged 62)
Later legitimist pretender to the throne. Died in exile several years later[100]

House of Bourbon-Orléans, July Monarchy (1830–1848) edit

The Bourbon Restoration came to an end with the July Revolution of 1830 which deposed Charles X and replaced him with Louis Philippe I, a distant cousin with more liberal politics. Charles X's son Louis signed a document renouncing his own right to the throne only after a 20-minute argument with his father. Because he was never crowned he is disputed as a genuine king of France. Louis's nephew Henry was likewise considered by some to be Henry V but the new regime did not recognise his claim and he never ruled.

Charles X named Louis Philippe as Lieutenant général du royaume, a regent to the young Henry V, and charged him to announce his desire to have his grandson succeed him to the Chamber of Deputies (the lower house of the French Parliament at the time, the French equivalent at the time of the UK House of Commons). Louis Philippe did not do this, in order to increase his own chances of succession. As a consequence and because the French parliamentarians were aware of his liberal policies and of his popularity at the time with the French population, they proclaimed Louis Philippe as the new French king, displacing the senior branch of the House of Bourbon.

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Louis Philippe I "the Citizen King"   9 August 1830[xlix]– 24 February 1848
(17 years, 6 months and 15 days)
Sixth-generation descendant of Louis XIII and distant cousin of Charles X; proclaimed king by the Chamber of Deputies after the abdication of Charles X during the July Revolution 6 October 1773 – 26 August 1850
(aged 76)
Styled as King of the French. Formally deposed following the proclamation of the Second Republic. Abdicated in favour of his grandson[101]
  Louis Philippe II
(claimant)
24–26 February 1848
(2 days; disputed)
Grandson of Louis-Philippe 24 August 1838 – 8 September 1894
(aged 56)
Chosen by Louis Philippe I to be his successor, however the National Assembly refused to recognize him as king and proclaimed the Second Republic. Later Orléanist pretender to the throne.[102]

House of Bonaparte, Second French Empire (1852–1870) edit

The French Second Republic lasted from 1848 to 1852, when its president, Charles-Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, was declared Emperor of the French under the regnal name of Napoleon III. He would later be overthrown during the events of the Franco-Prussian War, becoming the last monarch to rule France.

Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details
  Napoleon III   2 December 1852[l]– 4 September 1870
(17 years, 9 months and 2 days)
Nephew of Napoleon I; elected as President of the French Republic in 1848, made himself Emperor of the French after a coup d'état 20 April 1808 – 9 January 1873
(aged 64)
Captured by the German army on 2 September 1870; deposed in absentia following the proclamation of the Third Republic.[103]

Later pretenders edit

Various pretenders descended from the preceding monarchs have claimed to be the legitimate monarch of France, rejecting the claims of the president of France and of one another. These groups are:

  • Legitimist claimants to the throne of France: descendants of the Bourbons. In 1883, after the death of Henri V, grandson of Charles X, unionists recognized the Orléanist claimant as the pretender to the throne of France, as Henri V died without heirs, and also due to the Spanish renunciation, to them the House of Bourbon-Orléans became the senior line of the Capetian dynasty in France.
    • Blancs d'Espagne: descendants of Louis XIV, claiming precedence over the House of Bourbon-Orléans by virtue of primogeniture. They argue that the claimant to the throne would be a Bourbon from the Spanish branch of the family. They ignore the Spanish renunciation: the fact that King Philip V of Spain, whose descendants they are, has renounced the throne of France for himself and his descendants in the Treaty of Utrecht.
  • Orléanist claimants to the throne of France: descendants of Louis-Phillippe, himself descended from a junior line of the Bourbon dynasty, rejecting all heads of state since 1848. They argue that King Louis Philippe acquired legitimacy via popular sovereignty when the representatives of the French people in the French Parliament recognized him as king, with the Bourbons having already been rejected and dethroned by the French people after two revolutions. Blancs d'Espagne argue that the Orléans do not deserve the throne because they are descended from a regicide, Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, who voted for the execution of King Louis XVI during the French Revolution, violating the fundamental laws of the kingdom. Another argument against the Orléans is that the very French Parliament that recognized Louis Philippe as king refused to give the throne to his grandson (and descendants) and proclaimed the Second French Republic.
  • Bonapartist claimants to the throne of France: descendants of Napoleon I and his brothers, rejecting all heads of state 1815–48 and since 1870. They argue that the Imperial throne need to return to the House of Bonaparte, as the monarchs of this house had been chosen directly by the people through referendums, giving them legitimacy to reign via popular sovereignty, and both the Bourbons and the Orléans were rejected and dethroned through revolutions and that the Bonaparte were only dethroned due the interference of foreign enemies, with no popular revolution taking place to overthrow the Bonapartes and that the Third Republic was originally intended to be a provisional regime to return the throne to an Orléans or Bourbon (what never happened).
  • English claimants to the throne of France: kings of England and later of Great Britain (renounced by Hanoverian King George III upon union with Ireland in 1800).
  • Jacobite claimants to the throne of France: senior heirs-general of Edward III of England and thus his claim to the French throne, also claiming England, Scotland, and Ireland.

Timeline edit

House of OrléansHouse of BonaparteHouse of BourbonHouse of ValoisCapetBosonidRobertianCarolingianNapoleon IIILouis Philippe IILouis Philippe IHenri, Count of ChambordLouis Antoine, Duke of AngoulêmeCharles XNapoleon IILouis XVIIINapoleon ILouis XVIILouis XVILouis XVLouis XIVLouis XIIICharles de Bourbon (cardinal)Henry IV of FranceHenry III of FranceCharles IX of FranceFrancis II of FranceHenry II of FranceFrancis I of FranceLouis XIICharles VIII of FranceLouis XIHenry VI of EnglandCharles VII of FranceCharles VI of FranceCharles V of FranceJohn II of FrancePhilip VI of FranceCharles IV of FrancePhilip V of FranceJohn I of FranceLouis X of FrancePhilip IV of FrancePhilip III of FranceLouis IXLouis VIIIPhilip II AugustusLouis VIILouis VI of FrancePhilip I of FranceHenry I of FranceRobert II of FranceHugh CapetLouis V of FranceLothair of FranceLouis IV of FranceRudolph of FranceRobert I of FranceCharles the SimpleOdo of FranceCharles the FatCarloman IILouis III of FranceLouis the StammererCharles the Bald

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Louis the Pious and Charlemagne are both enumerated as "Louis I" and "Charles I" in the lists of French and German monarchs.
  2. ^ Older scholars give his birth as 15 May,[10] the ides of May. However, ancient sources record his birth as 13 June, the ides of June.[11]
  3. ^ Not to be confused with Louis II the German, son of Louis the Pious and king of East Francia (Germany). Both French and German monarchs saw themselves as the successors of Charlemagne, hence why many rulers share the same regnal name.
  4. ^ Scholars give his death as either 3,[16] 4,[17] or 10 August,[18] but ancient sources clearly indicates 5 August.[19]
  5. ^ Some modern sources give his death as "12 December", but this is a mistake.[21][22][23]
  6. ^ Charles the Fat was initially king of East Francia (Germany) and Holy Roman Emperor. Given that he was the third emperor with that name, he is also known as Charles III. He must not to be confused with Charles the Simple, who is also enumerated as Charles III. This discrepancy originates from the regnal number adopted by Charles V, the first French king to assume one.[25]
  7. ^ This is the most accepted and cited date, although it is not entirely confirmed.[28][27]
  8. ^ In older sources his birth was dated to 832, but nowadays 839 is the accepted date.[29]
  9. ^ Odo's death is universally given as 1 January, as given by a late 13th century chronicle,[32] but the earliest source on the matter, from the early 11th century, records his death as 3 January.[33] Another source, from the 13th century, records his death as 2 January.[34]
  10. ^ a b See main entry for references.
  11. ^ Some scholars give his death as 21 May, but contemporary sources give 22 May.[42]
  12. ^ "Capet" (latin: Cappetus) was not actually a name, but a nickname adopted by later historians. It probably derived from chappe, an ecclesiastical mantle wore at the Abbey of Saint Martin of Tours.[44]
  13. ^ Hugh was also descendant of Charlemagne's sons Louis the Pious and Pepin of Italy through his mother and paternal grandmother, respectively, and was also a nephew of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor.[46]
  14. ^ a b Because neither Hugh nor Philip were sole or senior king in their own lifetimes, they are not traditionally listed as kings of France and are not given ordinals.
  15. ^ He lived from 15 to 19 November according to the continuator of Guillaume de Nangis.[61] The Chronique Parisienne Anonyme de 1316 à 1339 gives 13 and 18 November.[62] Modern sources often give his lifespan as 15–20 November.[63]
  16. ^ Humphreys, p. 16 gives 6 January, the same date of Philip IV's coronation. This is a confusion.[64]
  17. ^ Sources give his birth date as 6, 16, 20 or 26 April.
  18. ^ This is the date in which the last English holdout was expelled by the French, with the exception of Calais.
  19. ^ Henry III was elected on 5 May 1573.[80] He was crowned on 21 February 1574,[81] but he was declared deposed soon after, on 12 May.[82]
  20. ^ Lower Navarre was integrated into France during his reign.
  21. ^ Louis XVI's powers as king became obsolete following the March on Versailles on 5 October 1789, after which he became a hostage of the revolutionary forces.
  22. ^ The Sénat proclaimed the deposition in absentia of Napoleon on 2 April, which was followed by the Corps législatif on 3 April. Napoleon wrote an act of abdication on 4 April renouncing the throne in favour of his son. However, this was not accepted by the Coalition, so he wrote an unconditional abdication on 6 April renouncing his rights and that of his family.[91]
  23. ^ Although claimed as the shortest reigning monarch by the Guinness World Records,[97] this claim appears to be unsustained.[98] The exact circumstances of his "abdication" are unknown, as it was announced in a document firmed by both Charles X and Louis, who is only called Dauphin. He is said to have been "king" between his father's signature and his own, as he (allegedly) initially refused to sign the document.

Coronations edit

  1. ^ Charles II was crowned emperor on 25 December 875. For later Frankish and German emperors, see Holy Roman Emperor.
  2. ^ Louis II was crowned on 8 December 877.[13]
  3. ^ Louis III and Carloman II were crowned on September 879.[15]
  4. ^ Louis III and Carloman II were crowned on September 879.[15]
  5. ^ Charles the Fat was most likely crowned on 20 May 885.[26] He was already king of East Francia since 28 August 876. He was also crowned emperor on 12 February 881.[27]
  6. ^ Odo was crowned on 29 February 888 and then again on 13 November.[31]
  7. ^ Charles III was crowned on 28 January 893, in opposition to Odo.[j]
  8. ^ Robert I was crowned on 30 June 922.[37]
  9. ^ Rudolph was crowned on 13 July 923.[j]
  10. ^ Louis IV was crowned on 19 June 936, following a brief interregnum after the death of Rudolph.
  11. ^ Lothair was crowned on 12 November 954.
  12. ^ Louis V was crowned on 8 June 979.
  13. ^ Hugh was elected and crowned king on 1 June 987, in Noyon. He was crowned again on 3 July in Paris by the archbishop of Reims. The latter date is usually regarded as the "official" start of the Capetian dynasty.[45]
  14. ^ Robert II was crowned on 30 December 987.[45]
  15. ^ Henry I was crowned on 14 May 1027.
  16. ^ Philip I was crowned on 23 May 1059.
  17. ^ Louis VI was crowned on 3 August 1108.
  18. ^ Louis VII was crowned as a child on 25 October 1131, and again on 25 December 1137 alongside Eleanor of Aquitaine.
  19. ^ Philip II was crowned on 1 November 1179.
  20. ^ Louis VIII was crowned on 6 August 1223.
  21. ^ Louis IX was crowned on 29 November 1226.
  22. ^ Philip III was crowned on 30 August 1271.
  23. ^ Philip IV was crowned on 6 January 1286.
  24. ^ Louis X was crowned on 24 August 1315.
  25. ^ Philip V was crowned on 9 January 1317.[p]
  26. ^ Charles IV was crowned on 21 February 1322.
  27. ^ Philip VI was crowned on 29 May 1328.
  28. ^ John II was crowned on 26 September 1350.
  29. ^ Charles V was crowned on 19 May 1364.
  30. ^ Charles VI was crowned on 4 November 1380.
  31. ^ Henry (II) was crowned on 16 December 1431, at Notre-Dame de Paris.
  32. ^ Charles VII was crowned on 17 July 1429.
  33. ^ Louis XI was crowned on 15 August 1461.
  34. ^ Charles VIII was crowned on 30 May 1484.
  35. ^ Louis XII was crowned on 27 May 1498.
  36. ^ Francis I was crowned on 25 January 1515.
  37. ^ Henry II was crowned on 26 July 1547.
  38. ^ Francis II was crowned on 18 September 1559.
  39. ^ Charles IX was crowned on 15 May 1561.
  40. ^ Henry III was crowned on 13 February 1575.
  41. ^ Henry IV was crowned on 27 February 1594.
  42. ^ Louis XIII was crowned on 17 October 1610.
  43. ^ Louis XIV was crowned on 7 June 1654.
  44. ^ Louis XV was crowned on 25 October 1722.
  45. ^ Louis XVI was crowned on 11 June 1775.
  46. ^ Napoleon I was crowned on 2 December 1804.
  47. ^ Louis XVIII decided not to have a coronation.
  48. ^ Charles X was crowned on 29 May 1825, an unsuccessful attempt to revive the old monarchical traditions.
  49. ^ Louis Philippe I decided not to have a coronation.
  50. ^ A coronation ceremony for Napoleon III was planned, but never executed.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Guyotjeannin, Olivier, ed. (1996). Clovis chez les historiens (in French). Librairie Droz. pp. 241ff. ISBN 9782600055925.
  2. ^ Sewell, Elizabeth Missing (1876). Popular History of France. Longman. pp. 48–49.
  3. ^ Aguilera-Barchet, Bruno (2014). A History of Western Public Law. Springer. p. 182. ISBN 9783319118031.
  4. ^ Potter, David (2008). Renaissance France at War. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. viii. ISBN 9781843834052.
  5. ^ Deploige, Jeroen; Deneckere, Gita, eds. (2006). Mystifying the Monarch. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Amsterdam University Press. p. 182. ISBN 9789053567678.
  6. ^ Pascal, Adrien (1853). Histoire de Napoléon III. Paris, France: Barbier. p. 359.
  7. ^ Babcock, Philip (1993). Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. MA, US: Merriam-Webster. p. 341.
  8. ^ Reynolds, Susan (1984). Kingdoms and communities in Western Europe, 900–1300. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 256–257. ISBN 978-0-19-821955-2.
  9. ^ Scales, Len (2012). The Shaping of German Identity: Authority and Crisis, 1245-1414. Cambridge University Press. pp. 155–182. ISBN 9780521573337.
  10. ^ McCarty, p. 328; Peignot, p. lv; de Wailly, p. 10.
  11. ^ Annales S. Benigni Divionensis 824. MGH V, 39.
  12. ^ Peignot, p. lv; de Wailly, p. 10; Thoison, p. 189; McCarty, p. 328; EB, Charles II.
  13. ^ Jackson 1995, Vol 1, pp. 110–123.
  14. ^ Peignot, p. lv; de Wailly, p. 10; Thoison, p. 189; McCarty, p. 328; EB, Louis II.
  15. ^ a b McKitterick 1995, p. 137.
  16. ^ Thoison, p. 189; de Wailly, p. 10.
  17. ^ Peignot, p. lviii.
  18. ^ McCarty, p. 327.
  19. ^ Annales Vedastini 882. "Nonis Augusti"
  20. ^ Peignot, p. lviii; Thoison, p. 189; McCarty, p. 328; Dutton 1994, p. 227; EB, Louis III.
  21. ^ Annales Vedastini. 884. "...he survived seven more days, and died in the same place... in December, about 18 years of age."
  22. ^ Obituaires de la province de Sens I, p. 351. "VIII id. [6 December]."
  23. ^ Annales S. Benigni Divionensis 884. "Non. Decemb. [5 December]".
  24. ^ Peignot, p. lviii; Thoison, p. 189; Dutton 1994, p. 227; EB, Carloman.
  25. ^ Brunel 2007, p. 79.
  26. ^ MacLean 2003, p. 126.
  27. ^ a b Schieffer, Theodor (1977), "Karl III", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 11, pp. 181–184
  28. ^ MacLean 2003, p. 194.
  29. ^ MacLean 2003, p. 84.
  30. ^ Peignot, p. lv; de Wailly, p. 10; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Charles III.
  31. ^ Jackson 1995, Vol 1, pp. 133–138.
  32. ^ Annales S. Benigni Divionensis 899. MGH V, 40.
  33. ^ Annales Prumienses 898. MGH XV(2), 1292.
  34. ^ Obituaires de la province de Sens I, p. 343.
  35. ^ Peignot, p. lix; de Wailly, p. 10; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Eudes.
  36. ^ Peignot, pp. lix–lx; de Wailly, p. 10; Thoison, p. 189; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Charles III.
  37. ^ Champion 1976, pp. 9–11.
  38. ^ Peignot, p. lx; de Wailly, p. 10; Thoison, p. 189; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Eudes.
  39. ^ Peignot, p. lxi; de Wailly, p. 10; Thoison, p. 189; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Rudolf.
  40. ^ Peignot, p. lxi; de Wailly, p. 10; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Louis IV.
  41. ^ Peignot, p. lxii; de Wailly, p. 10; Thoison, p. 190; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Lothar.
  42. ^ Richer (1845) [c. 995]. Histoire de son temps (in French). Vol. IV. J. Renouard. p. 147.
  43. ^ Peignot, pp. lxii–lxiii; de Wailly, p. 10; McCarty, p. 329; EB, Louis V.
  44. ^ Bodin 1840, p. 43.
  45. ^ a b Havet 1891.
  46. ^ Alcan 1892, pp. 254–261.
  47. ^ Peignot, pp. 10–16; Humphreys, p. 1; EB, Hugh.
  48. ^ Peignot, pp. 16–20; Humphreys, p. 2; EB, Robert II.
  49. ^ Peignot, p. 17.
  50. ^ Peignot, p. 20–22; Humphreys, p. 3; EB, Henry I.
  51. ^ Thoison, p. 190; Humphreys, p. 4; EB, Philip I.
  52. ^ Peignot, p. 29–32; Humphreys, p. 5; EB, Louis VI.
  53. ^ Peignot, p. 29.
  54. ^ Thoison, p. 190; Humphreys, p. 6; EB, Louis VII.
  55. ^ Thoison, p. 190; Humphreys, p. 8; EB, Philip II.
  56. ^ Thoison, p. 190; Humphreys, p. 10; EB, Louis VIII.
  57. ^ Thoison, p. 191; Humphreys, p. 11; EB, Louis IX.
  58. ^ Thoison, p. 191; Humphreys, p. 12; EB, Philip III.
  59. ^ Thoison, p. 191; Humphreys, p. 14; EB, Philip IV.
  60. ^ McCarty, p. 330; Humphreys, p. 15; EB, Philip IV.
  61. ^ Hercule Géraud (1843) Chronique latine de Guillaume de Nangis, de 1113 à 1300. pp. 430–431.
  62. ^ Amedée Hellot (1884). Chronique parisienne anonyme du XIVe siècle. p. 26.
  63. ^ Humphreys, p. 15; EB, John I ("19/20 November").
  64. ^ Jackson 1995, Vol II, p. 376.
  65. ^ Thoison, p. 192; Humphreys, p. 16; EB, Philip V.
  66. ^ Peignot, p. 85; Humphreys, p. 17; EB, Charles IV.
  67. ^ Peignot, pp. 91–96; Humphreys, p. 19; EB, Philip VI.
  68. ^ Peignot, p. 96; Humphreys, p. 19; EB, John II.
  69. ^ Peignot, p. 105; Humphreys, p. 20; EB, Henry I.
  70. ^ Peignot, p. 112; Humphreys, p. 21; EB, Charles VI.
  71. ^ Curry 1993, pp. 102–122; Bradford 2004, pp. 621–625; EB, Henry VI.
  72. ^ Peignot, p. 123; Humphreys, p. 23; EB, Frances I.
  73. ^ Peignot, p. 136; Humphreys, p. 25; EB, Louis XI.
  74. ^ Peignot, p. 143; Humphreys, p. 27; Knecht 2007, p. 125; EB, Charles VII.
  75. ^ Peignot, pp. 150; Humphreys, p. 28; Knecht 2007, p. 112; EB, Louis XII.
  76. ^ Peignot, p. 157; Humphreys, p. 30; Knecht 2007, p. 112; EB, Francis I.
  77. ^ Peignot, p. 168; Humphreys, p. 33; EB, Henry II.
  78. ^ Curry 1993, pp. 103–122; Humphreys, p. 35; EB, Francis II.
  79. ^ Peignot, p. 179; Humphreys, p. 36; EB, Charles IX.
  80. ^ Knecht 2016, p. 56. "On 5 May three orators were chosen [...] On 11 May the minority conceded defeat [but the election] did not happen till 15 May.".
  81. ^ Knecht 2016, p. 76.
  82. ^ Knecht 2016, p. 84.
  83. ^ Peignot, p. 186; Humphreys, p. 38; EB, Henry III.
  84. ^ Peignot, p. 203; Wellman, p. 83; Treccani, Carlo.
  85. ^ Peignot, p. 195; Humphreys, p. 39; EB, Henry IV.
  86. ^ Peignot, p. 205; Humphreys, p. 42; EB, Louis XIII.
  87. ^ Peignot, p. 216; Humphreys, p. 43; EB, Louis XIV.
  88. ^ Peignot, p. 238; Humphreys, p. 47; EB, Louis XV.
  89. ^ Peignot, p. 253; Humphreys, p. 51; EB, Louis XVI.
  90. ^ Peignot, p. 260; EB, p. Louis (XVII).
  91. ^ Vial, Charles-Éloi (2014). "Les trois actes d'abdication de Napoléon Ier". Napoleonica La Revue (in French). 19 (1): 3. doi:10.3917/napo.141.0003.
  92. ^ a b Peignot, p. 261; EB, p. Napoleon I.
  93. ^ a b Peignot, p. 262; EB, p. Louis XVIII.
  94. ^ EB, Napoléon-François-Charles-Joseph Bonaparte.
  95. ^ "France: Commission of Government: 1815 - Archontology". www.archontology.org. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  96. ^ EB, Charles X.
  97. ^ "Shortest reign of a monarch". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  98. ^ Pinoteau, Hervé (1982). "Notes de vexillologie royale française". Hidalguía. Madrid (172–173): 361–362.
  99. ^ Castelot 1988, p. 454; Blanc 1848, p. 214.
  100. ^ EB, Henri Dieudonné.
  101. ^ Brownell, p. 120; EB, p. Louis Philippe.
  102. ^ Holoman 2004, p. 184; EB, Louis Philippe.
  103. ^ EB, Napoleon III.

Main bibliography edit

  • de Wailly, E. (1838). "Liste Chronologique des rois de France". Eléments de paléographie. Vol. 1. Ghent University.
  • Jacquin, Emmanuel (2000), Les Tuileries, Du Louvre à la Concorde, Editions du Patrimoine, Centres des Monuments Nationaux, Paris. (ISBN 978-2-85822-296-4)
  • Encyclopædia Britannica Online
  • Humphreys, A.L. (1907). The Kings of France, their Wives and Mistresses. London. ASIN B004Z0M2K2. OCLC 1047511953.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • McCarty, L. P. (1890). "France". The Annual Statistician and Economist. Harvard University: Pacific Press Publishing Company. pp. 327–332.
  • Peignot, Gabriel (1819). Abrégé de l'histoire de France (in French). Harvard University.
  • Thoison, E. (1888). "Table Chronologique". Les séjours des rois de France: 481–1789. Société historique et archéologique du Gâtinais. Bibliothèque nationale de France.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Secondary bibliography edit

  • Alcan, Félix (1892). Revue historique (in French). Vol. 40.
  • Blanc, Louis (1848). France Under Louis Philippe. Translated by Walter Kelly.
  • Bodin, Felix (1840). Resumé de l'histoire de France. London: Joseph Rickerby. p. 43.
  • Bradford, James C. (2004). International Encyclopedia of Military History. Routledge. ISBN 9781135950347.
  • Brownell, Henry (1854). "The Rulers of France". The People's Book of Ancient and Modern History. Dayton & Wentworth.
  • Brunel, G. (2007). "Les cisterciens et Charles V". Société de l'histoire de France: 67–92. JSTOR 23408518.
  • Castelot, André (1988). Charles X. Librairie Académique Perrin. ISBN 2-262-00545-1.
  • Curry, Anne (1993). The Hundred Years War. Macmillan. ISBN 9781349227112.
  • Champion, Honoré (1976). Robert Ier et Raoul de Bourgogne. Slatkine. pp. 9–11.
  • Dutton, Paul E. (1994). The Politics of Dreaming in the Carolingian Empire. University of Nebraska Press. p. 227. ISBN 9780803216532.
  • Holoman, D. Kern (2004). The Société Des Concerts Du Conservatoire, 1828–1967. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520236646.
  • Knecht, Robert (2007). The Valois: Kings of France. A&C Black. ISBN 9781852855222.
  • Knecht, Robert (2016). Hero or Tyrant? Henry III, King of France. Routledge. ISBN 9781317122142.
  • McKitterick, Rosamond (1995). The New Cambridge Medieval History. Vol. 2. Cambridge University Press. p. 137. ISBN 9780521362924.
  • MacLean, Simon (2003). Charles the Fat and the End of the Carolingian Empire. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139440295.
  • Jackson, Richard A. (1995). Ordines Coronationis Franciae. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9781512821604. JSTOR j.ctt1kgqwvd.
  • Havet, Julien (1891). "Les couronnements des rois Hugues et Robert". Revue historique. 45: 290–297. JSTOR 40939391.
  • Wellman, Kathleen (2013). Queens and Mistresses of Renaissance France. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300178852.

Further reading edit

  • Allevy, Alcide (1863). Histoire de France allevysée (in French). British Library. pp. 75–105.
  • Babbitt, Susan M. (1985). The France of Charles V. APS. ISBN 9780871697516.
  • Bak, János M. (1990). Coronations: Medieval and Early Modern Monarchic Ritual. University of California Press. ISBN 9780801469138.
  • Brougham, Henry (1861). Principles of Government: Monarchical government. Political Philosophy. Harvard: Bohn.
  • d'Hozier, Louis (1738). Armorial général de la France. Paris. pp. xvi–xvii.
  • Doyle, William, ed. (2001). Old Regime France. Short Oxford History of France. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-873129-9.
  • Engrand, H. (1816). Leçons élémentaires sur l'Histoire de France (in French). British Library.
  • Fierro, Alfred (1996). Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris. Robert Laffont. ISBN 2-221--07862-4.

list, french, monarchs, this, article, about, french, kings, beginning, with, treaty, verdun, kings, before, list, frankish, kings, france, ruled, monarchs, from, establishment, kingdom, west, francia, until, second, french, empire, 1870, with, several, interr. This article is about French kings beginning with the 843 Treaty of Verdun For kings before 843 see List of Frankish kings France was ruled by monarchs from the establishment of the Kingdom of West Francia in 843 until the end of the Second French Empire in 1870 with several interruptions From top left to right Robert I Hugh Capet Louis IX Francis I Henry IV Louis XIV Louis XVI Napoleon I Napoleon III Family tree of Frankish and French monarchs 509 1870 Classical French historiography usually regards Clovis I king of the Franks r 507 511 as the first king of France However historians today consider that such a kingdom did not begin until the establishment of West Francia during the dissolution of the Carolingian Empire in the 800s 1 2 Contents 1 Titles 2 Frankish kings 2 1 Carolingian dynasty 843 887 2 2 Robertian dynasty 888 898 2 3 Carolingian dynasty 898 922 2 4 Robertian dynasty 922 923 2 5 Bosonid dynasty 923 936 2 6 Carolingian dynasty 936 987 3 Capetian dynasty 987 1792 3 1 House of Capet 987 1328 3 2 House of Valois 1328 1589 3 2 1 House of Valois Orleans 1498 1515 3 2 2 House of Valois Angouleme 1515 1589 3 3 House of Bourbon 1589 1792 4 Long 19th century 1792 1870 4 1 House of Bonaparte First French Empire 1804 1814 4 2 House of Bourbon 1814 1815 4 3 House of Bonaparte Hundred Days 1815 4 4 Bourbon Restoration 1815 1830 4 5 House of Bourbon Orleans July Monarchy 1830 1848 4 6 House of Bonaparte Second French Empire 1852 1870 5 Later pretenders 6 Timeline 7 See also 8 Notes 8 1 Coronations 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Main bibliography 9 3 Secondary bibliography 9 4 Further readingTitles editFurther information Style of the French sovereign Further information French monarchs family tree simple and French monarchs family tree The kings used the title King of the Franks Latin Rex Francorum until the late twelfth century the first to adopt the title of King of France Latin Rex Franciae French roi de France was Philip II in 1190 r 1180 1223 after which the title King of the Franks gradually lost ground 3 However Francorum Rex continued to be sometimes used for example by Louis XII in 1499 by Francis I in 1515 and by Henry II in about 1550 it was also used on coins up to the eighteenth century 4 During the brief period when the French Constitution of 1791 was in effect 1791 1792 and after the July Revolution in 1830 the style King of the French roi des Francais was used instead of King of France and Navarre It was a constitutional innovation known as popular monarchy which linked the monarch s title to the French people rather than to the possession of the territory of France 5 With the House of Bonaparte the title Emperor of the French Empereur des Francais was used in 19th century France during the first and second French Empires between 1804 and 1814 again in 1815 and between 1852 and 1870 6 From the 14th century down to 1801 the English and later British monarch claimed the throne of France though such claim was purely nominal excepting a short period during the Hundred Years War when Henry VI of England had control over most of Northern France including Paris By 1453 the English had been mostly expelled from France and Henry s claim has since been considered illegitimate French historiography commonly does not recognize Henry VI of England among the kings of France Frankish kings editFor earlier rulers see List of Frankish kings Carolingian dynasty 843 887 edit Main article Carolingian dynasty The Carolingians were a Frankish noble family with origins in the Arnulfing and Pippinid clans of the 7th century AD The family consolidated its power in the 8th century eventually making the offices of mayor of the palace and dux et princeps Francorum hereditary and becoming the real powers behind the Merovingian kings The dynasty is named after one of these mayors of the palace Charles Martel whose son Pepin the Short dethroned the Merovingians in 751 and with the consent of the Papacy and the aristocracy was crowned King of the Franks 7 Under Charles the Great r 768 814 better known as Charlemagne the Frankish kingdom expanded deep into Central Europe conquering Italy and most of modern Germany He was also crowned Emperor of the Romans by the Pope a title that was eventually carried on by the German rulers of the Holy Roman Empire Charlemagne was succeeded by his son Louis the Pious r 814 840 who eventually divided the kingdom between his sons His death however was followed by a 3 year long civil war that ended with the Treaty of Verdun which divided Francia into three kingdoms one of which Middle Francia was short lived Modern France developed from West Francia while East Francia became the Holy Roman Empire and later Germany By this time the eastern and western parts of the land had already developed different languages and cultures 8 9 Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details nbsp Charles II the Bald a c 10 August 843 i 6 October 877 34 years and 2 months Son of Louis the Pious and grandson of Charlemagne recognized as king after the Treaty of Verdun 13 June 823 b 6 October 877 aged 54 King of Aquitaine since 838 Crowned Emperor of the Romans on Christmas 875 Died of natural causes 12 nbsp Louis II the Stammerer c 6 October 877 ii 10 April 879 1 year 6 months and 4 days Son of Charles the Bald 1 November 846 10 April 879 aged 32 King of Aquitaine since 867 Died of natural causes 14 nbsp Louis III 10 April 879 iii 5 August 882 3 years 3 months and 26 days Son of Louis the Stammerer 863 5 August 882 d aged 19 Ruled the North died after hitting his head with a lintel while riding his horse 20 nbsp Carloman II 10 April 879 iv 6 December 884 5 years 7 months and 26 days Son of Louis the Stammerer 866 6 December 884 e aged 18 Ruled the South died after being accidentally stabbed by his servant 24 nbsp Charles III the Fat f 6 December 884 v 11 November 887 g 2 years 11 months and 5 days Son of Louis II the German king of East Francia and grandson of Louis I 839 h 13 January 888 aged 48 49 King of East Francia since 876 crowned Emperor in 881 Last ruler to control all Frankish territories Deposed by the nobility later dying of natural causes 30 Robertian dynasty 888 898 edit Main article Robertians Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details nbsp OdoEudes or Odon 29 February 888 vi 3 January 898 9 years 10 months and 15 days Son of Robert the Strong elected king by the French nobles following the deposition of Charles Initially rivaled by Guy III of Spoleto and Ranulf II of Aquitaine c 858 3 January 898 i aged approx 40 Defended Paris from the Vikings died of natural causes 35 Carolingian dynasty 898 922 edit Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details nbsp Charles III the Simple 3 January 898 vii 29 June 922 24 years 5 months and 26 days Posthumous son of Louis II the Stammerer proclaimed king in opposition to Odo in January 893 17 September 879 7 October 929 aged 50 Deposed by Robert s followers later captured by Herbert II Count of Vermandois Died in captivity 36 Robertian dynasty 922 923 edit Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details nbsp Robert I 29 June 922 viii 15 June 923 11 months and 17 days Son of Robert the Strong and younger brother of Odo 865 15 June 923 aged 58 Killed at the Battle of Soissons against Charles III Sole king to die in battle 38 Bosonid dynasty 923 936 edit Main article Bosonids Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details nbsp RudolphRodolphe or Raoul 15 June 923 ix 14 January 936 12 years 6 months and 30 days Son of Richard Duke of Burgundy and son in law of Robert I Duke of Burgundy since 921 Died of illness after a reign of constant civil war and viking raids Lost Lotharingia Lorraine to Henry I of Germany 39 Carolingian dynasty 936 987 edit Portrait Name Reign Succession Life details nbsp Louis IV from Overseas 19 June 936 x 10 September 954 18 years 2 months and 22 days Son of Charles the Simple recalled to France after being exiled to England 921 10 September 954 aged 33 Died after falling off his horse 40 nbsp LothairLothaire 10 September 954 xi 2 March 986 31 years 5 months and 20 days Son of Louis IV 941 2 March 986 aged 44 Died of natural causes 41 nbsp Louis V the Do Nothing 2 March 986 xii 22 May 987 1 year 2 months and 20 days Son of Lothair 967 22 May 987 k aged 20 Died in a hunting accident 43 Capetian dynasty 987 1792 editMain article Capetian dynasty The Capetian dynasty is named for Hugh Capet a Robertian who served as Duke of the Franks and was elected King in 987 Except for the Bonaparte led Empires every monarch of France was a male line descendant of Hugh Capet The kingship passed through patrilineally from father to son until the 14th century a period known as Direct Capetian rule Afterwards it passed to the House of Valois a cadet branch that descended from Philip III The Valois claim was disputed by Edward III the Plantagenet king of England who claimed himself as the rightful king of France through his French mother Isabella the two houses fought the Hundred Years War over the issue and with Henry VI of England being for a time partially recognized as King of France The Valois line died out in the late 16th century during the French Wars of Religion to be replaced by the distantly related House of Bourbon which descended through the Direct Capetian Louis IX The Bourbons would rule France until deposed in the French Revolution though they would be restored to the throne after the fall of Napoleon The last Capetian to rule would be Louis Philippe I king of the July Monarchy 1830 1848 a member of the cadet House of Bourbon Orleans House of Capet 987 1328 edit Main article House of Capet The House of Capet are also commonly known as the Direct Capetians Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Hugh Capet Hugues Capet l 1 June 987 xiii 24 October 996 9 years 4 months and 23 days Elected king by the French nobles Son of Hugh the Great and grandson of Robert I m c 940 24 October 996 aged approx 55 Duke of the Franks since 956 Died of natural causes 47 nbsp Robert II the Pious 24 October 996 xiv 20 July 1031 34 years 8 months and 26 days Only son of Hugh Capet c 970 20 July 1031 aged approx 60 Married thrice getting excommunicated by the Catholic Church Incorporated the Duchy of Burgundy 48 Hughes junior king n 19 June 1017 17 September 1025 under Robert II Son of Robert II c 1007 17 September 1025 aged approx 18 49 nbsp Henry IHenri 20 July 1031 xv 4 August 1060 29 years and 15 days Son of Robert II c 1005 4 August 1060 aged approx 55 His reign was marked with internal struggle against feudal lords 50 nbsp Philip I the Amorous Philippe 4 August 1060 xvi 29 July 1108 47 years 11 months and 25 days Son of Henry I 1052 29 July 1108 aged 56 Ruled under the regency of Anne of Kiev and Count Baldwin V until 1066 51 nbsp Louis VI the Fat 29 July 1108 xvii 1 August 1137 29 years and 3 days Son of Philip I 1081 1 August 1137 aged 56 His reign contributed to the centralization of royal power First king to wage war against the English 52 Philippe junior king n 14 April 1129 13 October 1131 under Louis VI Son of Louis VI 29 August 1116 13 October 1131 aged 15 53 nbsp Louis VII the Young 1 August 1137 xviii 18 September 1180 43 years 1 month and 17 days Son of Louis VI 1120 18 September 1180 aged 60 Known for his rivalry with Henry II of England and his military campaigns during the Second Crusade 54 nbsp Philip II Augustus Philippe Auguste nbsp 18 September 1180 xix 14 July 1223 42 years 9 months and 26 days Son of Louis VII 21 August 1165 14 July 1223 aged 57 Regarded as one of the greatest French rulers First monarch to style himself as King of France 55 nbsp Louis VIII the Lion 14 July 1223 xx 8 November 1226 3 years 3 months and 25 days Son of Philip II 5 September 1187 8 November 1226 aged 39 Proclaimed king of England in 1216 after which he led an unsuccessful invasion 56 nbsp Louis IX the Saint 8 November 1226 xxi 25 August 1270 43 years 9 months and 17 days Son of Louis VIII 25 April 1214 25 August 1270 aged 56 Ruled under the regency of Blanche of Castile until 1234 Died during the 8th Crusade only king to be venerated by the Catholic Church 57 nbsp Philip III the Bold Philippe 25 August 1270 xxii 5 October 1285 15 years 1 month and 10 days Son of Louis IX 3 April 1245 5 October 1285 aged 40 Greatly expanded French influence in Europe Died of a fever 58 nbsp Philip IV the Fair Philippe nbsp 5 October 1285 xxiii 29 November 1314 29 years 1 month and 24 days Son of Philip III 1268 29 November 1314 aged 46 King of Navarre as Philip I since 16 August 1284 following his marriage with Joan I Remembered for his struggle with the Roman papacy and his consolidation of royal power which helped to reduce the influence of feudal lords 59 nbsp Louis X the Quarreller 29 November 1314 xxiv 5 June 1316 1 year 6 months and 7 days Son of Philip IV 3 October 1289 5 June 1316 aged 26 King of Navarre as Louis I since 2 April 1305 His short reign was marked by conflicts with the nobility 60 nbsp John I the Posthumous Jean 15 19 November 1316 4 days Posthumous son of Louis X King for the four days he lived youngest and shortest undisputed monarch in French history o nbsp Philip V the Tall Philippe 20 November 1316 xxv 3 January 1322 5 years 1 month and 14 days Son of Philip IV and uncle of John I 1294 3 January 1322 aged 28 King of Navarre as Philip II Died without a male heir 65 nbsp Charles IV the Fair 3 January 1322 xxvi 1 February 1328 6 years and 29 days Son of Philip IV and younger brother of Philip V 1294 1 February 1328 aged 34 King of Navarre as Charles I Died without a male heir ending the direct line of Capetians 66 House of Valois 1328 1589 edit Main article House of Valois The death of Charles IV started the Hundred Years War between the House of Valois and the House of Plantagenet whose claim was taken up by the cadet branch known as the House of Lancaster over control of the French throne The Valois claimed the right to the succession by male only primogeniture through the ancient Salic Law having the closest all male line of descent from a recent French king They were descended from the third son of Philip III Charles Count of Valois The Plantagenets based their claim on being closer to a more recent French king Edward III of England being a grandson of Philip IV through his mother Isabella The two houses fought the Hundred Years War to enforce their claims the Valois were ultimately successful and French historiography counts their leaders as rightful kings One Plantagenet Henry VI of England did enjoy de jure control of the French throne following the Treaty of Troyes which formed the basis for continued English claims to the throne of France until 1801 The Valois line would rule France until the line became extinct in 1589 in the backdrop of the French Wars of Religion As Navarre did not have a tradition of male only primogeniture the Navarrese monarchy became distinct from the French with Joan II a daughter of Louis X Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Philip VI the Fortunate Philippe nbsp 1 April 1328 xxvii 22 August 1350 22 years 4 months and 21 days Son of Charles Count of Valois grandson of Philip III and cousin of Charles IV 1293 22 August 1350 aged 57 His reign was dominated by the consequences of a succession dispute which led to the Hundred Years War 67 nbsp John II the Good Jean 22 August 1350 xxviii 8 April 1364 13 years 7 months and 17 days Son of Philip VI April 1319 q 8 April 1364 aged 45 Captured by the English at the Battle of Poitiers 1356 forced to sign a series of humiliating treaties 68 nbsp Charles V the Wise nbsp 8 April 1364 xxix 16 September 1380 16 years 5 months and 8 days Son of John II named Dauphin on 16 July 1349 21 January 1337 16 September 1380 aged 43 His reign was marked with internal struggle against feudal lords 69 nbsp Charles VI the Mad the Beloved nbsp 16 Sept 1380 xxx 21 October 1422 42 years 1 month and 5 days Son of Charles V 3 December 1368 21 October 1422 aged 53 Ruled under the regency of his uncles until 1388 Suffered a long period of mental illness before dying of natural causes 70 nbsp Henry VI of England claimant nbsp 21 October 1422 xxxi 19 October 1453 r disputed 31 years Maternal grandson of Charles VI recognized as heir after the Treaty of Troyes of 21 May 1420 6 December 1421 21 May 1471 aged 49 King of England since 1 September 1422 Ruled under several regencies until 1437 71 nbsp Charles VII the Victorious the Well Served nbsp 21 October 1422 xxxii 22 July 1461 38 years 9 months and 1 day Son of Charles VI and uncle of Henry VI of England named Dauphin in April 1417 22 February 1403 22 July 1461 aged 58 His reign saw the end of the Hundred Years War 72 nbsp Louis XI the Prudent the Universal Spider nbsp 22 July 1461 xxxiii 30 August 1483 22 years 1 month and 8 days Son of Charles VII 3 July 1423 30 August 1483 aged 60 His reign saw the strengthening and expansion of royal power Nicknamed the Universal Spider for the numerous intrigues during his rule 73 nbsp Charles VIII the Affable nbsp 30 August 1483 xxxiv 7 April 1498 14 years 7 months and 8 days Son of Louis XI 30 June 1470 7 April 1498 aged 27 Ruled under the regency of his sister Anne until 1491 Started the long and unsuccessful Italian Wars Died after hitting his head with a lintel 74 House of Valois Orleans 1498 1515 edit Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Louis XII Father of the People nbsp 7 April 1498 xxxv 1 January 1515 16 years 8 months and 25 days Great grandson of Charles V Second cousin and by first marriage son in law of Louis XI 27 June 1462 1 January 1515 aged 52 Briefly conquered the Kingdom of Naples and the Duchy of Milan 75 House of Valois Angouleme 1515 1589 edit Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Francis I the Father of Letters Francois nbsp 1 January 1515 xxxvi 31 March 1547 32 years 2 months and 30 days Great great grandson of Charles V First cousin once removed and by first marriage son in law of Louis XII 12 September 1494 31 March 1547 aged 52 Remembered as a Renaissance patron of the arts and scholarship Died of a fever 76 nbsp Henry II Henri 31 March 1547 xxxvii 10 July 1559 12 years 3 months and 10 days Son of Francis I named Dauphin in August 1536 31 March 1519 10 July 1559 aged 40 His reign saw the end of the Italian Wars Died after being accidentally stabbed in a Jousting tournament 77 nbsp Francis II Francois 10 July 1559 xxxviii 5 December 1560 1 year 4 months and 25 days Son of Henry II 20 January 1544 5 December 1560 aged 16 King consort of Scotland since 24 April 1558 A weak and sick boy he remained under the regency of the House of Guise until his premature death 78 nbsp Charles IX 5 December 1560 xxxix 30 May 1574 13 years 5 months and 25 days Younger brother of Francis II 27 June 1550 30 May 1574 aged 23 Ruled under the regency of his mother Catherine until 1563 but remained under her influence until his death The Wars of Religion began under his reign 1562 Best remembered for the Massacre of Vassy 79 nbsp Henry IIIHenri nbsp 30 May 1574 xl 2 August 1589 15 years 2 months and 3 days Younger brother of Francis II and Charles IX 19 September 1551 2 August 1589 aged 37 Initially ruler of Poland Lithuania s He reigned through the devastating Wars of Religion which eventually led to his own assassination 83 House of Bourbon 1589 1792 edit Main article House of Bourbon The Valois line looked strong on the death of Henry II who left four male heirs His first son Francis II died in his minority His second son Charles IX had no legitimate sons to inherit Following the premature death of his fourth son Hercule Francois and the assassination of his third son the childless Henry III France was plunged into a succession crisis over which distant cousin of the king would inherit the throne The best claimant King Henry III of Navarre was a Protestant and thus unacceptable to much of the French nobility Ultimately after winning numerous battles in defence of his claim Henry converted to Catholicism and was crowned as King Henry IV founding the House of Bourbon This marked the second time the thrones of Navarre and France were united under one monarch as different inheritance laws had caused them to become separated during the events of the Hundred Years Wars The House of Bourbon would be overthrown during the French Revolution and replaced by a short lived republic Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Charles X claimant nbsp 2 August 1589 9 May 1590 disputed 9 months and 7 days 7x great grandson of Louis IX Proclaimed king by the Catholic League in opposition to Henry of Navarre 22 December 1523 9 May 1590 aged 66 Imprisoned by Henry III on 23 December 1588 remained his entire reign in captivity Died of natural causes 84 nbsp Henry IV the Great the Good King Henri nbsp 2 August 1589 xli 14 May 1610 20 years 9 months and 12 days 10th generation descendant of Louis IX also nephew of Charles X and by first marriage son in law of Henry II Proclaimed king on Henry III s deathbed 13 December 1553 14 May 1610 aged 56 King of Lower Navarre as Henry III since 10 June 1572 Killed in Paris on 14 May 1610 by Catholic fanatic Francois Ravaillac 85 nbsp Louis XIII the Just 14 May 1610 xlii 14 May 1643 33 years Son of Henry IV 27 September 1601 14 May 1643 aged 41 Last King of Lower Navarre as Louis II t Died of natural causes 86 nbsp Louis XIV the Great the Sun King 14 May 1643 xliii 1 September 1715 72 years 3 months and 18 days Son of Louis XIII 5 September 1638 1 September 1715 aged 76 Ruled under the regency of his mother Anne of Austria until 1651 Longest reigning sovereign monarch in history 87 nbsp Louis XV the Beloved 1 September 1715 xliv 10 May 1774 58 years 8 months and 9 days Great grandson of Louis XIV 15 February 1710 10 May 1774 aged 64 Ruled under the regency of Philippe II Duke of Bourbon Orleans until 1723 88 nbsp Louis XVI 10 May 1774 xlv 21 September 1792 u 18 years 4 months and 11 days Grandson of Louis XV 23 August 1754 21 January 1793 aged 38 Forced to install a constitutional monarchy after 1789 Formally deposed following the proclamation of the First Republic executed in public 89 nbsp Louis XVII claimant 21 January 1793 8 June 1795 2 years 4 months and 18 days disputed Son of Louis XVI named Dauphin on 4 June 1789 27 March 1785 8 June 1795 aged 10 Imprisoned by the revolutionary forces on 13 August 1792 Remained his entire reign in captivity 90 Long 19th century 1792 1870 editSee also France in the long nineteenth century The period known as the long nineteenth century was a tumultuous time in French politics the period is generally considered to have begun with the French Revolution which deposed and then executed Louis XVI Royalists continued to recognize his son the putative king Louis XVII as ruler of France however Louis was under arrest by the government of the Revolution and died in captivity having never ruled The republican government itself went through several changes in form and constitution until France was declared an empire following the ascension of the First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte as Emperor Napoleon I Napoleon himself would be overthrown twice following military defeats during the Napoleonic Wars After the Napoleonic period followed two different royal governments the Bourbon Restoration which was ruled successively by two younger brothers of Louis XVI and the July Monarchy ruled by Louis Philippe I a distant cousin who claimed descent from Louis XIII The French Revolution of 1848 brought an end to the monarchy again instituting a brief Second Republic that lasted only four years before its President declared himself Emperor Napoleon III who would himself be deposed and replaced by the Third Republic and ending monarchic rule in France for good House of Bonaparte First French Empire 1804 1814 edit Main articles House of Bonaparte and First French Empire Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Napoleon I nbsp 18 May 1804 xlvi 2 April 1814 v 9 years 10 months and 15 days First Consul of the French Republic following the coup d etat of 19 November 1799 self proclaimed Emperor of the French 15 August 1769 5 May 1821 aged 51 Conquered most of Europe in a series of successful wars remembered as one of the greatest military commanders in history Deposed in absentia and forced to abdicate then exiled to the island of Elba 92 nbsp Napoleon II claimant 4 6 April 1814 2 days disputed Son of Napoleon I 20 March 1811 22 July 1832 aged 21 Unrecognized by the Coalition and the Senate only named emperor in Napoleon s will House of Bourbon 1814 1815 edit Main article Bourbon Restoration in France Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Louis XVIII the Desired nbsp 3 May 1814 xlvii 20 March 1815 1st time 10 months and 17 days Younger brother of Louis XVI proclaimed king in June 1795 Had his dynasty restored to the throne with the help of other European royal houses which had dethroned Napoleon 17 November 1755 16 September 1824 aged 68 Fled France on 21 June 1791 during the Flight to Varennes and again in March 1815 after the return of Napoleon 93 House of Bonaparte Hundred Days 1815 edit Main article Hundred Days Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Napoleon I nbsp 20 March 22 June 1815 94 days Restored as Emperor of the French by the French Army following his escape from the island of Elba 15 August 1769 5 May 1821 aged 51 Abdicated in favour of his son following his defeat at the Battle of Waterloo Exiled to the island of Saint Helena where he later died of a stomach illness 92 nbsp Napoleon II claimant 22 June 7 July 1815 15 days disputed Son of Napoleon I 20 March 1811 22 July 1832 aged 21 Unrecognized by the Coalition remained his entire reign hidden in Austria with his mother Marie Louise Died of tuberculosis several years later 94 95 Bourbon Restoration 1815 1830 edit Main article Bourbon Restoration in France Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Louis XVIII the Desired nbsp 8 July 1815 16 September 1824 9 years 2 months and 8 days Younger brother of Louis XVI restored to the throne 17 November 1755 16 September 1824 aged 68 Attempted to rule under a constitutional monarchy Last French monarch to die while still reigning 93 nbsp Charles X 16 September 1824 xlviii 2 August 1830 5 years 10 months and 17 days Younger brother of Louis XVI and Louis XVIII 9 October 1757 6 November 1836 aged 79 Leader of the Ultra royalists attempted to return to the Ancient Regime Abdicated in favour of his grandson Henry after the July Revolution 96 nbsp Louis XIX claimant 2 August 1830 20 minutes disputed Son of Charles X 6 August 1775 3 June 1844 aged 68 Allegedly king for 20 minutes w later legitimist pretender to the throne 99 nbsp Henry V claimant 2 9 August 1830 7 days disputed Grandson of Charles X 29 September 1820 24 August 1883 aged 62 Later legitimist pretender to the throne Died in exile several years later 100 House of Bourbon Orleans July Monarchy 1830 1848 edit Main articles House of Bourbon Orleans and July Monarchy The Bourbon Restoration came to an end with the July Revolution of 1830 which deposed Charles X and replaced him with Louis Philippe I a distant cousin with more liberal politics Charles X s son Louis signed a document renouncing his own right to the throne only after a 20 minute argument with his father Because he was never crowned he is disputed as a genuine king of France Louis s nephew Henry was likewise considered by some to be Henry V but the new regime did not recognise his claim and he never ruled Charles X named Louis Philippe as Lieutenant general du royaume a regent to the young Henry V and charged him to announce his desire to have his grandson succeed him to the Chamber of Deputies the lower house of the French Parliament at the time the French equivalent at the time of the UK House of Commons Louis Philippe did not do this in order to increase his own chances of succession As a consequence and because the French parliamentarians were aware of his liberal policies and of his popularity at the time with the French population they proclaimed Louis Philippe as the new French king displacing the senior branch of the House of Bourbon Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Louis Philippe I the Citizen King nbsp 9 August 1830 xlix 24 February 1848 17 years 6 months and 15 days Sixth generation descendant of Louis XIII and distant cousin of Charles X proclaimed king by the Chamber of Deputies after the abdication of Charles X during the July Revolution 6 October 1773 26 August 1850 aged 76 Styled as King of the French Formally deposed following the proclamation of the Second Republic Abdicated in favour of his grandson 101 nbsp Louis Philippe II claimant 24 26 February 1848 2 days disputed Grandson of Louis Philippe 24 August 1838 8 September 1894 aged 56 Chosen by Louis Philippe I to be his successor however the National Assembly refused to recognize him as king and proclaimed the Second Republic Later Orleanist pretender to the throne 102 House of Bonaparte Second French Empire 1852 1870 edit Main article Second French Empire The French Second Republic lasted from 1848 to 1852 when its president Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte was declared Emperor of the French under the regnal name of Napoleon III He would later be overthrown during the events of the Franco Prussian War becoming the last monarch to rule France Portrait Name Arms Reign Succession Life details nbsp Napoleon III nbsp 2 December 1852 l 4 September 1870 17 years 9 months and 2 days Nephew of Napoleon I elected as President of the French Republic in 1848 made himself Emperor of the French after a coup d etat 20 April 1808 9 January 1873 aged 64 Captured by the German army on 2 September 1870 deposed in absentia following the proclamation of the Third Republic 103 Later pretenders editVarious pretenders descended from the preceding monarchs have claimed to be the legitimate monarch of France rejecting the claims of the president of France and of one another These groups are Legitimist claimants to the throne of France descendants of the Bourbons In 1883 after the death of Henri V grandson of Charles X unionists recognized the Orleanist claimant as the pretender to the throne of France as Henri V died without heirs and also due to the Spanish renunciation to them the House of Bourbon Orleans became the senior line of the Capetian dynasty in France Blancs d Espagne descendants of Louis XIV claiming precedence over the House of Bourbon Orleans by virtue of primogeniture They argue that the claimant to the throne would be a Bourbon from the Spanish branch of the family They ignore the Spanish renunciation the fact that King Philip V of Spain whose descendants they are has renounced the throne of France for himself and his descendants in the Treaty of Utrecht Orleanist claimants to the throne of France descendants of Louis Phillippe himself descended from a junior line of the Bourbon dynasty rejecting all heads of state since 1848 They argue that King Louis Philippe acquired legitimacy via popular sovereignty when the representatives of the French people in the French Parliament recognized him as king with the Bourbons having already been rejected and dethroned by the French people after two revolutions Blancs d Espagne argue that the Orleans do not deserve the throne because they are descended from a regicide Louis Philippe II Duke of Orleans who voted for the execution of King Louis XVI during the French Revolution violating the fundamental laws of the kingdom Another argument against the Orleans is that the very French Parliament that recognized Louis Philippe as king refused to give the throne to his grandson and descendants and proclaimed the Second French Republic Bonapartist claimants to the throne of France descendants of Napoleon I and his brothers rejecting all heads of state 1815 48 and since 1870 They argue that the Imperial throne need to return to the House of Bonaparte as the monarchs of this house had been chosen directly by the people through referendums giving them legitimacy to reign via popular sovereignty and both the Bourbons and the Orleans were rejected and dethroned through revolutions and that the Bonaparte were only dethroned due the interference of foreign enemies with no popular revolution taking place to overthrow the Bonapartes and that the Third Republic was originally intended to be a provisional regime to return the throne to an Orleans or Bourbon what never happened English claimants to the throne of France kings of England and later of Great Britain renounced by Hanoverian King George III upon union with Ireland in 1800 Jacobite claimants to the throne of France senior heirs general of Edward III of England and thus his claim to the French throne also claiming England Scotland and Ireland Timeline editSee also editFamily tree of French monarchs Family tree of French monarchs simplified English claims to the French throne Fundamental laws of the Kingdom of France List of French royal consorts List of heirs to the French throne List of presidents of France Style of the French sovereign Succession to the French throneNotes edit Louis the Pious and Charlemagne are both enumerated as Louis I and Charles I in the lists of French and German monarchs Older scholars give his birth as 15 May 10 the ides of May However ancient sources record his birth as 13 June the ides of June 11 Not to be confused with Louis II the German son of Louis the Pious and king of East Francia Germany Both French and German monarchs saw themselves as the successors of Charlemagne hence why many rulers share the same regnal name Scholars give his death as either 3 16 4 17 or 10 August 18 but ancient sources clearly indicates 5 August 19 Some modern sources give his death as 12 December but this is a mistake 21 22 23 Charles the Fat was initially king of East Francia Germany and Holy Roman Emperor Given that he was the third emperor with that name he is also known as Charles III He must not to be confused with Charles the Simple who is also enumerated as Charles III This discrepancy originates from the regnal number adopted by Charles V the first French king to assume one 25 This is the most accepted and cited date although it is not entirely confirmed 28 27 In older sources his birth was dated to 832 but nowadays 839 is the accepted date 29 Odo s death is universally given as 1 January as given by a late 13th century chronicle 32 but the earliest source on the matter from the early 11th century records his death as 3 January 33 Another source from the 13th century records his death as 2 January 34 a b See main entry for references Some scholars give his death as 21 May but contemporary sources give 22 May 42 Capet latin Cappetus was not actually a name but a nickname adopted by later historians It probably derived from chappe an ecclesiastical mantle wore at the Abbey of Saint Martin of Tours 44 Hugh was also descendant of Charlemagne s sons Louis the Pious and Pepin of Italy through his mother and paternal grandmother respectively and was also a nephew of Otto I Holy Roman Emperor 46 a b Because neither Hugh nor Philip were sole or senior king in their own lifetimes they are not traditionally listed as kings of France and are not given ordinals He lived from 15 to 19 November according to the continuator of Guillaume de Nangis 61 The Chronique Parisienne Anonyme de 1316 a 1339 gives 13 and 18 November 62 Modern sources often give his lifespan as 15 20 November 63 Humphreys p 16 gives 6 January the same date of Philip IV s coronation This is a confusion 64 Sources give his birth date as 6 16 20 or 26 April This is the date in which the last English holdout was expelled by the French with the exception of Calais Henry III was elected on 5 May 1573 80 He was crowned on 21 February 1574 81 but he was declared deposed soon after on 12 May 82 Lower Navarre was integrated into France during his reign Louis XVI s powers as king became obsolete following the March on Versailles on 5 October 1789 after which he became a hostage of the revolutionary forces The Senat proclaimed the deposition in absentia of Napoleon on 2 April which was followed by the Corps legislatif on 3 April Napoleon wrote an act of abdication on 4 April renouncing the throne in favour of his son However this was not accepted by the Coalition so he wrote an unconditional abdication on 6 April renouncing his rights and that of his family 91 Although claimed as the shortest reigning monarch by the Guinness World Records 97 this claim appears to be unsustained 98 The exact circumstances of his abdication are unknown as it was announced in a document firmed by both Charles X and Louis who is only called Dauphin He is said to have been king between his father s signature and his own as he allegedly initially refused to sign the document Coronations edit Charles II was crowned emperor on 25 December 875 For later Frankish and German emperors see Holy Roman Emperor Louis II was crowned on 8 December 877 13 Louis III and Carloman II were crowned on September 879 15 Louis III and Carloman II were crowned on September 879 15 Charles the Fat was most likely crowned on 20 May 885 26 He was already king of East Francia since 28 August 876 He was also crowned emperor on 12 February 881 27 Odo was crowned on 29 February 888 and then again on 13 November 31 Charles III was crowned on 28 January 893 in opposition to Odo j Robert I was crowned on 30 June 922 37 Rudolph was crowned on 13 July 923 j Louis IV was crowned on 19 June 936 following a brief interregnum after the death of Rudolph Lothair was crowned on 12 November 954 Louis V was crowned on 8 June 979 Hugh was elected and crowned king on 1 June 987 in Noyon He was crowned again on 3 July in Paris by the archbishop of Reims The latter date is usually regarded as the official start of the Capetian dynasty 45 Robert II was crowned on 30 December 987 45 Henry I was crowned on 14 May 1027 Philip I was crowned on 23 May 1059 Louis VI was crowned on 3 August 1108 Louis VII was crowned as a child on 25 October 1131 and again on 25 December 1137 alongside Eleanor of Aquitaine Philip II was crowned on 1 November 1179 Louis VIII was crowned on 6 August 1223 Louis IX was crowned on 29 November 1226 Philip III was crowned on 30 August 1271 Philip IV was crowned on 6 January 1286 Louis X was crowned on 24 August 1315 Philip V was crowned on 9 January 1317 p Charles IV was crowned on 21 February 1322 Philip VI was crowned on 29 May 1328 John II was crowned on 26 September 1350 Charles V was crowned on 19 May 1364 Charles VI was crowned on 4 November 1380 Henry II was crowned on 16 December 1431 at Notre Dame de Paris Charles VII was crowned on 17 July 1429 Louis XI was crowned on 15 August 1461 Charles VIII was crowned on 30 May 1484 Louis XII was crowned on 27 May 1498 Francis I was crowned on 25 January 1515 Henry II was crowned on 26 July 1547 Francis II was crowned on 18 September 1559 Charles IX was crowned on 15 May 1561 Henry III was crowned on 13 February 1575 Henry IV was crowned on 27 February 1594 Louis XIII was crowned on 17 October 1610 Louis XIV was crowned on 7 June 1654 Louis XV was crowned on 25 October 1722 Louis XVI was crowned on 11 June 1775 Napoleon I was crowned on 2 December 1804 Louis XVIII decided not to have a coronation Charles X was crowned on 29 May 1825 an unsuccessful attempt to revive the old monarchical traditions Louis Philippe I decided not to have a coronation A coronation ceremony for Napoleon III was planned but never executed References editCitations edit Guyotjeannin Olivier ed 1996 Clovis chez les historiens in French Librairie Droz pp 241ff ISBN 9782600055925 Sewell Elizabeth Missing 1876 Popular History of France Longman pp 48 49 Aguilera Barchet Bruno 2014 A History of Western Public Law Springer p 182 ISBN 9783319118031 Potter David 2008 Renaissance France at War Boydell amp Brewer Ltd p viii ISBN 9781843834052 Deploige Jeroen Deneckere Gita eds 2006 Mystifying the Monarch Amsterdam Netherlands Amsterdam University Press p 182 ISBN 9789053567678 Pascal Adrien 1853 Histoire de Napoleon III Paris France Barbier p 359 Babcock Philip 1993 Webster s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged MA US Merriam Webster p 341 Reynolds Susan 1984 Kingdoms and communities in Western Europe 900 1300 Oxford Clarendon Press pp 256 257 ISBN 978 0 19 821955 2 Scales Len 2012 The Shaping of German Identity Authority and Crisis 1245 1414 Cambridge University Press pp 155 182 ISBN 9780521573337 McCarty p 328 Peignot p lv de Wailly p 10 Annales S Benigni Divionensis 824 MGH V 39 Peignot p lv de Wailly p 10 Thoison p 189 McCarty p 328 EB Charles II Jackson 1995 Vol 1 pp 110 123 Peignot p lv de Wailly p 10 Thoison p 189 McCarty p 328 EB Louis II a b McKitterick 1995 p 137 Thoison p 189 de Wailly p 10 Peignot p lviii McCarty p 327 Annales Vedastini 882 Nonis Augusti Peignot p lviii Thoison p 189 McCarty p 328 Dutton 1994 p 227 EB Louis III Annales Vedastini 884 he survived seven more days and died in the same place in December about 18 years of age Obituaires de la province de Sens I p 351 VIII id 6 December Annales S Benigni Divionensis 884 Non Decemb 5 December Peignot p lviii Thoison p 189 Dutton 1994 p 227 EB Carloman Brunel 2007 p 79 MacLean 2003 p 126 a b Schieffer Theodor 1977 Karl III Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 11 pp 181 184 MacLean 2003 p 194 MacLean 2003 p 84 Peignot p lv de Wailly p 10 McCarty p 329 EB Charles III Jackson 1995 Vol 1 pp 133 138 Annales S Benigni Divionensis 899 MGH V 40 Annales Prumienses 898 MGH XV 2 1292 Obituaires de la province de Sens I p 343 Peignot p lix de Wailly p 10 McCarty p 329 EB Eudes Peignot pp lix lx de Wailly p 10 Thoison p 189 McCarty p 329 EB Charles III Champion 1976 pp 9 11 Peignot p lx de Wailly p 10 Thoison p 189 McCarty p 329 EB Eudes Peignot p lxi de Wailly p 10 Thoison p 189 McCarty p 329 EB Rudolf Peignot p lxi de Wailly p 10 McCarty p 329 EB Louis IV Peignot p lxii de Wailly p 10 Thoison p 190 McCarty p 329 EB Lothar Richer 1845 c 995 Histoire de son temps in French Vol IV J Renouard p 147 Peignot pp lxii lxiii de Wailly p 10 McCarty p 329 EB Louis V Bodin 1840 p 43 a b Havet 1891 Alcan 1892 pp 254 261 Peignot pp 10 16 Humphreys p 1 EB Hugh Peignot pp 16 20 Humphreys p 2 EB Robert II Peignot p 17 Peignot p 20 22 Humphreys p 3 EB Henry I Thoison p 190 Humphreys p 4 EB Philip I Peignot p 29 32 Humphreys p 5 EB Louis VI Peignot p 29 Thoison p 190 Humphreys p 6 EB Louis VII Thoison p 190 Humphreys p 8 EB Philip II Thoison p 190 Humphreys p 10 EB Louis VIII Thoison p 191 Humphreys p 11 EB Louis IX Thoison p 191 Humphreys p 12 EB Philip III Thoison p 191 Humphreys p 14 EB Philip IV McCarty p 330 Humphreys p 15 EB Philip IV Hercule Geraud 1843 Chronique latine de Guillaume de Nangis de 1113 a 1300 pp 430 431 Amedee Hellot 1884 Chronique parisienne anonyme du XIVe siecle p 26 Humphreys p 15 EB John I 19 20 November Jackson 1995 Vol II p 376 Thoison p 192 Humphreys p 16 EB Philip V Peignot p 85 Humphreys p 17 EB Charles IV Peignot pp 91 96 Humphreys p 19 EB Philip VI Peignot p 96 Humphreys p 19 EB John II Peignot p 105 Humphreys p 20 EB Henry I Peignot p 112 Humphreys p 21 EB Charles VI Curry 1993 pp 102 122 Bradford 2004 pp 621 625 EB Henry VI Peignot p 123 Humphreys p 23 EB Frances I Peignot p 136 Humphreys p 25 EB Louis XI Peignot p 143 Humphreys p 27 Knecht 2007 p 125 EB Charles VII Peignot pp 150 Humphreys p 28 Knecht 2007 p 112 EB Louis XII Peignot p 157 Humphreys p 30 Knecht 2007 p 112 EB Francis I Peignot p 168 Humphreys p 33 EB Henry II Curry 1993 pp 103 122 Humphreys p 35 EB Francis II Peignot p 179 Humphreys p 36 EB Charles IX Knecht 2016 p 56 On 5 May three orators were chosen On 11 May the minority conceded defeat but the election did not happen till 15 May Knecht 2016 p 76 Knecht 2016 p 84 Peignot p 186 Humphreys p 38 EB Henry III Peignot p 203 Wellman p 83 Treccani Carlo Peignot p 195 Humphreys p 39 EB Henry IV Peignot p 205 Humphreys p 42 EB Louis XIII Peignot p 216 Humphreys p 43 EB Louis XIV Peignot p 238 Humphreys p 47 EB Louis XV Peignot p 253 Humphreys p 51 EB Louis XVI Peignot p 260 EB p Louis XVII Vial Charles Eloi 2014 Les trois actes d abdication de Napoleon Ier Napoleonica La Revue in French 19 1 3 doi 10 3917 napo 141 0003 a b Peignot p 261 EB p Napoleon I a b Peignot p 262 EB p Louis XVIII EB Napoleon Francois Charles Joseph Bonaparte France Commission of Government 1815 Archontology www archontology org Retrieved 9 December 2023 EB Charles X Shortest reign of a monarch Guinness World Records Retrieved 10 February 2023 Pinoteau Herve 1982 Notes de vexillologie royale francaise Hidalguia Madrid 172 173 361 362 Castelot 1988 p 454 Blanc 1848 p 214 EB Henri Dieudonne Brownell p 120 EB p Louis Philippe Holoman 2004 p 184 EB Louis Philippe EB Napoleon III Main bibliography edit de Wailly E 1838 Liste Chronologique des rois de France Elements de paleographie Vol 1 Ghent University Jacquin Emmanuel 2000 Les Tuileries Du Louvre a la Concorde Editions du Patrimoine Centres des Monuments Nationaux Paris ISBN 978 2 85822 296 4 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Humphreys A L 1907 The Kings of France their Wives and Mistresses London ASIN B004Z0M2K2 OCLC 1047511953 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link McCarty L P 1890 France The Annual Statistician and Economist Harvard University Pacific Press Publishing Company pp 327 332 Peignot Gabriel 1819 Abrege de l histoire de France in French Harvard University Thoison E 1888 Table Chronologique Les sejours des rois de France 481 1789 Societe historique et archeologique du Gatinais Bibliotheque nationale de France a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Secondary bibliography edit Alcan Felix 1892 Revue historique in French Vol 40 Blanc Louis 1848 France Under Louis Philippe Translated by Walter Kelly Bodin Felix 1840 Resume de l histoire de France London Joseph Rickerby p 43 Bradford James C 2004 International Encyclopedia of Military History Routledge ISBN 9781135950347 Brownell Henry 1854 The Rulers of France The People s Book of Ancient and Modern History Dayton amp Wentworth Brunel G 2007 Les cisterciens et Charles V Societe de l histoire de France 67 92 JSTOR 23408518 Castelot Andre 1988 Charles X Librairie Academique Perrin ISBN 2 262 00545 1 Curry Anne 1993 The Hundred Years War Macmillan ISBN 9781349227112 Champion Honore 1976 Robert Ier et Raoul de Bourgogne Slatkine pp 9 11 Dutton Paul E 1994 The Politics of Dreaming in the Carolingian Empire University of Nebraska Press p 227 ISBN 9780803216532 Holoman D Kern 2004 The Societe Des Concerts Du Conservatoire 1828 1967 University of California Press ISBN 9780520236646 Knecht Robert 2007 The Valois Kings of France A amp C Black ISBN 9781852855222 Knecht Robert 2016 Hero or Tyrant Henry III King of France Routledge ISBN 9781317122142 McKitterick Rosamond 1995 The New Cambridge Medieval History Vol 2 Cambridge University Press p 137 ISBN 9780521362924 MacLean Simon 2003 Charles the Fat and the End of the Carolingian Empire Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139440295 Jackson Richard A 1995 Ordines Coronationis Franciae University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9781512821604 JSTOR j ctt1kgqwvd Havet Julien 1891 Les couronnements des rois Hugues et Robert Revue historique 45 290 297 JSTOR 40939391 Wellman Kathleen 2013 Queens and Mistresses of Renaissance France Yale University Press ISBN 9780300178852 Further reading edit Allevy Alcide 1863 Histoire de France allevysee in French British Library pp 75 105 Babbitt Susan M 1985 The France of Charles V APS ISBN 9780871697516 Bak Janos M 1990 Coronations Medieval and Early Modern Monarchic Ritual University of California Press ISBN 9780801469138 Brougham Henry 1861 Principles of Government Monarchical government Political Philosophy Harvard Bohn d Hozier Louis 1738 Armorial general de la France Paris pp xvi xvii Doyle William ed 2001 Old Regime France Short Oxford History of France Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 873129 9 Engrand H 1816 Lecons elementaires sur l Histoire de France in French British Library Fierro Alfred 1996 Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris Robert Laffont ISBN 2 221 07862 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of French monarchs amp oldid 1205583045, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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