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Louis Antoine, Duke of Enghien

Louis Antoine de Bourbon, Duke of Enghien (duc d'Enghien pronounced [dɑ̃ɡɛ̃]) (Louis Antoine Henri; 2 August 1772 – 21 March 1804) was a member of the House of Bourbon of France. More famous for his death than his life, he was executed by order of Napoleon Bonaparte, who brought charges against him of aiding Britain and plotting against Napoleon.

Louis Antoine
Duke of Enghien
Born(1772-08-02)2 August 1772
Château de Chantilly, France
Died21 March 1804(1804-03-21) (aged 31)
Château de Vincennes, France
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1804)
Names
Louis Antoine Henri de Bourbon
HouseBourbon-Condé
FatherLouis Henri de Bourbon, Prince de Condė
MotherBathilde d'Orléans
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

Biography edit

 
Louis Antoine as a young boy.

The Duke of Enghien was the only son of Louis Henri de Bourbon and Bathilde d'Orléans.[1] As a member of the reigning House of Bourbon, he was a prince du sang. He was born at the Château de Chantilly, the country residence of the Princes of Condé – a title he was born to inherit. He was given the title duc d'Enghien from birth, his father already being the Duke of Bourbon and the heir of the Prince of Condé, the Duke of Bourbon being the Heir apparent of Condé.

His mother's full name was Louise Marie Thérèse Bathilde d'Orléans; she was the only surviving daughter of Louis Philippe d'Orléans (grandson of the Regent Philippe d'Orléans) and Louise Henriette de Bourbon. His uncle was the future Philippe Égalité and he was thus a first cousin of the future Louis-Philippe I, King of the French. He was also doubly descended from Louis XIV through his legitimated daughters, Mademoiselle de Blois and Mademoiselle de Nantes.

He was an only child, his parents separating in 1778 after his father's romantic involvement with one Marguerite Catherine Michelot, a Paris Opera singer, was discovered; it was his mother who was blamed for her husband's infidelity. Michelot was the mother of Enghien's two illegitimate sisters.

He was educated privately by the Abbé Millot, and in military matters by Commodore de Vinieux. He early on showed the warlike spirit of the House of Condé, and began his military career in 1788. At the outbreak of the French Revolution, he emigrated with his father and grandfather a few days after the Storming of the Bastille, and in exile he would seek to raise forces for the invasion of France and restoration of the monarchy to its pre-revolutionary status.

In 1792, at the outbreak of French Revolutionary Wars, he held a command in the corps of émigrés organized and commanded by his grandfather, the Prince of Condé.[citation needed] This Army of Condé shared in the Duke of Brunswick's unsuccessful invasion of France.[2]

 
Charlotte Louise de Rohan, Enghien's secret wife; miniature by François-Joseph Desvernois

After this, the young duke continued to serve under his father and grandfather in the Condé army, and, on several occasions, distinguished himself by his bravery and ardour in the vanguard. On the dissolution of that force after the peace of Lunéville (February 1801), he privately married Princess Charlotte de Rohan, niece of the Cardinal de Rohan, and took up his residence at Ettenheim in Baden, near the Rhine.

Seizure, trial and death edit

Early in 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte, then First Consul of France, heard news which seemed to connect the young duke with the Cadoudal Affair, a conspiracy which was being tracked by the French police at the time. It involved royalists Jean-Charles Pichegru and Georges Cadoudal who wished to overthrow Bonaparte's regime and reinstate the monarchy.[3] The news ran that the duke was in company with Charles François Dumouriez and had made secret journeys into France. This was false; there is no evidence that the duke had dealings with either Cadoudal or Pichegru. However, the duke had previously been condemned in absentia for having fought against the French Republic in the Armée des Émigrés. Napoleon gave orders for the seizure of the duke.

French dragoons crossed the Rhine secretly, surrounded his house and brought him to Strasbourg (15 March 1804), and thence to the Château de Vincennes, near Paris, where a military commission of French colonels presided over by General Pierre-Augustin Hulin was hastily convened to try him. The duke was charged chiefly with bearing arms against France in the late war, and with intending to take part in the new coalition then proposed against France.

The military commission, presided over by Hulin, drew up the act of condemnation, being incited thereto by orders from Anne Jean Marie René Savary, who had come charged with instructions to kill the duke. Savary prevented any chance of an interview between the condemned and the First Consul, and, on 21 March, the duke was shot in the moat of the castle, near a grave which had already been prepared. A platoon of the Gendarmes d'élite was in charge of the execution.[4] His last words were "I must die then at the hands of Frenchmen!"[5]

In 1816, his remains were exhumed and placed in the Holy Chapel[6] of the Château de Vincennes.

Impact of death edit

 
Execution of the Duke of Enghien by Jean-Paul Laurens
 
His tomb by Louis Pierre Deseine in the castle of Vincennes

Royalty across Europe were shocked and dismayed at the duke's death. Tsar Alexander I of Russia was especially alarmed, and decided to curb Napoleon's power.[7] "Baden was the territory of the tsar's father-in-law, and the German principalities were part of the Holy Roman Empire of which Russia was a guarantor."[7][8]

Enghien was the last descendant of the House of Condé; his grandfather and father survived him, but died without producing further heirs. It is now known that Joséphine and Madame de Rémusat had begged Bonaparte to spare the duke, but nothing would bend his will. Whether Talleyrand, Fouché or Savary bore responsibility for the seizure of the duke is debatable, as at times Napoleon was known to claim Talleyrand conceived the idea, while at other times he took full responsibility himself.[9] On his way to St. Helena and at Longwood, Napoleon asserted that, in the same circumstances, he would do the same again; he inserted a similar declaration in his will, stating that "[I]t was necessary for the safety, interest, and the honour of the French people when the Comte d'Artois, by his own confession, was supporting sixty assassins at Paris."[10]

The execution shocked the aristocracy of Europe, who still remembered the bloodletting of the Revolution. Either Antoine Boulay, comte de la Meurthe[11] (deputy from Meurthe in the Corps législatif) or Napoleon's chief of police, Fouché,[12] said about his execution "C'est pire qu'un crime, c'est une faute", a statement often rendered in English as "It was worse than a crime; it was a blunder." The statement is also sometimes attributed to Talleyrand. In the 1844 essay, "Experience," Emerson misattributes the line to Napoleon himself.

In contrast, in France the execution appeared to quiet domestic resistance to Napoleon, who soon set up a military dictatorship by crowning himself Emperor of the French. Cadoudal, dismayed at the news of Napoleon's proclamation, reputedly exclaimed, "We wanted to make a king, but we made an emperor".[13]

Cultural references edit

Tolstoy edit

The killing of d'Enghien is discussed in the opening book of Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace.[14]: 6  The vicomte de Mortemart, a French émigré who supposedly knew the duke personally, is the focus of attention of the Russian aristocrats gathered at Anna Pavlovna Sherer's home:

The group about Mortemart immediately began discussing the murder of the duc d'Enghien. "After the murder of the Duc, even the most partial ceased to regard [Buonaparte] as a hero. If to some people he ever was a hero, after the murder of the duc there was one martyr more in heaven and one hero less on earth." The vicomte said that the duc d'Enghien had perished by his own magnanimity, and that there were particular reasons for Buonaparte's hatred of him.(...)

It was an anecdote, then current, to the effect that the duc d'Enghien had gone secretly to Paris to visit Mademoiselle George; that at her house he came upon Bonaparte, who also enjoyed the famous actress' favors, and that in his presence Napoleon happened to fall into one of the fainting fits to which he was subject, and was thus at the Duc's mercy. The latter spared him, and this magnanimity Bonaparte subsequently repaid by death. The story was very pretty and interesting, especially at the point where the rivals suddenly recognized one another; and the ladies looked agitated.

The actress Marguerite-Joséphine Wiemer, known as "Mademoiselle George", was indeed Napoleon's mistress, but there is no evidence that Enghien had anything to do with her, or that the story preserved to posterity by Tolstoy's masterpiece was anything more than one of the pieces of gossip and conspiracy theories current around Europe at the time.

Dumas edit

The killing is treated in The Last Cavalier by Alexandre Dumas. For example:

[T]he dominant sentiment in Bonaparte's mind at that moment was neither fear nor vengeance, but rather the desire for all of France to realise that Bourbon blood, so sacred to Royalist partisans, was no more sacred to him than the blood of any other citizen in the Republic.

"Well, then", asked Cambacérès, "what have you decided?"

"It's simple", said Bonaparte. "We shall kidnap the Duc d'Enghien and be done with it."[15]

His death was also briefly mentioned in The Count of Monte Cristo:

'There wasn't any trouble over treaties when it was a question of shooting the poor Duc d'Enghien' "[16]

Film edit

La mort du duc d'Enghien en 1804 (1909) was a one-reel silent film directed by Albert Capellani.[17]

Ancestry edit

References and notes edit

  1. ^ Fremont-Barnes, Gregory (2007). Encyclopedia of the Age of Political Revolutions and New Ideologies, 1760-1815: A-L. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 216. ISBN 978-0313334467.
  2. ^ Fremont-Barnes, Gregory (2007). Encyclopedia of the Age of Political Revolutions and New Ideologies, 1760-1815: A-L. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 217. ISBN 978-0313334467.
  3. ^ Crowe, Eyre Evans (1 January 1843). The History of France. Harper.
  4. ^ Isidore Marie Brignole Gautier, "Conduite de Bonaparte relativement aux assassinats de Monseigneur le duc d'Enghien et du Marquis de Frotté", Paris, 1823, p.32
  5. ^ Roberts, Andrew (2014). Napoleon: A Life. Pengiun. p. 418.
  6. ^ The Duke of Enghien's short biography in Napoleon & Empire website, displaying photographs of the Château de Vincennes and its Holy Chapel
  7. ^ a b Charles Esdaile (2009). Napoleon's Wars: An International History. Penguin. pp. 192–93. ISBN 9781101464373.
  8. ^ Saunders, David (1992). Russia in the Age of Reaction and Reform, 1801-1881. London & New York: Longman. p. 38.
  9. ^ Duff Cooper, Talleyrand. (Great Britain: Jonathan Cape, 1932), p. 139-141
  10. ^ "The d'Enghien Affair: Crime or Blunder?". napoleon-series.org.
  11. ^ The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations
  12. ^ John Bartlett, Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919), 9625
  13. ^ "Chapitre 28". napoleonicsociety.com.
  14. ^ Tolstoy, Leo (1949). War and Peace. Garden City: International Collectors Library.
  15. ^ Dumas, Alexandre, The Last Cavalier, p. 292 (Lauren Yoder trans., Pegasus Books 2007) (1869).
  16. ^ Dumas, Alexandre, The Count of Monte Cristo, p. 41 (Chapman and Hall trans., Wordsworth Classics 2002) (1844).
  17. ^ "The Death of the Duke D'Enghien". IMDb. 20 December 1909.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Enghien, Louis Antoine Henri de Bourbon Condé, Duc d'". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Charles Esdaile (2009). Napoleon's Wars: An International History. Penguin. pp. 190–93. ISBN 9781101464373.
  • David Nicholls (1999). Napoleon: A Biographical Companion. ABC-CLIO. pp. 94–95.
  • Schroeder, Paul W. The Transformation of European Politics 1763-1848 (1996), pp 248–51

External links edit

louis, antoine, duke, enghien, louis, antoine, bourbon, duke, enghien, enghien, pronounced, ɡɛ, louis, antoine, henri, august, 1772, march, 1804, member, house, bourbon, france, more, famous, death, than, life, executed, order, napoleon, bonaparte, brought, ch. Louis Antoine de Bourbon Duke of Enghien duc d Enghien pronounced dɑ ɡɛ Louis Antoine Henri 2 August 1772 21 March 1804 was a member of the House of Bourbon of France More famous for his death than his life he was executed by order of Napoleon Bonaparte who brought charges against him of aiding Britain and plotting against Napoleon Louis AntoineDuke of EnghienBorn 1772 08 02 2 August 1772Chateau de Chantilly FranceDied21 March 1804 1804 03 21 aged 31 Chateau de Vincennes FranceBurialSainte Chapelle de VincennesSpouseCharlotte de Rohan m 1804 wbr NamesLouis Antoine Henri de BourbonHouseBourbon CondeFatherLouis Henri de Bourbon Prince de CondeMotherBathilde d OrleansReligionRoman CatholicismSignature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Seizure trial and death 1 1 1 Impact of death 2 Cultural references 2 1 Tolstoy 2 2 Dumas 2 3 Film 3 Ancestry 4 References and notes 5 External linksBiography edit nbsp Louis Antoine as a young boy The Duke of Enghien was the only son of Louis Henri de Bourbon and Bathilde d Orleans 1 As a member of the reigning House of Bourbon he was a prince du sang He was born at the Chateau de Chantilly the country residence of the Princes of Conde a title he was born to inherit He was given the title duc d Enghien from birth his father already being the Duke of Bourbon and the heir of the Prince of Conde the Duke of Bourbon being the Heir apparent of Conde His mother s full name was Louise Marie Therese Bathilde d Orleans she was the only surviving daughter of Louis Philippe d Orleans grandson of the Regent Philippe d Orleans and Louise Henriette de Bourbon His uncle was the future Philippe Egalite and he was thus a first cousin of the future Louis Philippe I King of the French He was also doubly descended from Louis XIV through his legitimated daughters Mademoiselle de Blois and Mademoiselle de Nantes He was an only child his parents separating in 1778 after his father s romantic involvement with one Marguerite Catherine Michelot a Paris Opera singer was discovered it was his mother who was blamed for her husband s infidelity Michelot was the mother of Enghien s two illegitimate sisters He was educated privately by the Abbe Millot and in military matters by Commodore de Vinieux He early on showed the warlike spirit of the House of Conde and began his military career in 1788 At the outbreak of the French Revolution he emigrated with his father and grandfather a few days after the Storming of the Bastille and in exile he would seek to raise forces for the invasion of France and restoration of the monarchy to its pre revolutionary status In 1792 at the outbreak of French Revolutionary Wars he held a command in the corps of emigres organized and commanded by his grandfather the Prince of Conde citation needed This Army of Conde shared in the Duke of Brunswick s unsuccessful invasion of France 2 nbsp Charlotte Louise de Rohan Enghien s secret wife miniature by Francois Joseph DesvernoisAfter this the young duke continued to serve under his father and grandfather in the Conde army and on several occasions distinguished himself by his bravery and ardour in the vanguard On the dissolution of that force after the peace of Luneville February 1801 he privately married Princess Charlotte de Rohan niece of the Cardinal de Rohan and took up his residence at Ettenheim in Baden near the Rhine Seizure trial and death edit Early in 1804 Napoleon Bonaparte then First Consul of France heard news which seemed to connect the young duke with the Cadoudal Affair a conspiracy which was being tracked by the French police at the time It involved royalists Jean Charles Pichegru and Georges Cadoudal who wished to overthrow Bonaparte s regime and reinstate the monarchy 3 The news ran that the duke was in company with Charles Francois Dumouriez and had made secret journeys into France This was false there is no evidence that the duke had dealings with either Cadoudal or Pichegru However the duke had previously been condemned in absentia for having fought against the French Republic in the Armee des Emigres Napoleon gave orders for the seizure of the duke French dragoons crossed the Rhine secretly surrounded his house and brought him to Strasbourg 15 March 1804 and thence to the Chateau de Vincennes near Paris where a military commission of French colonels presided over by General Pierre Augustin Hulin was hastily convened to try him The duke was charged chiefly with bearing arms against France in the late war and with intending to take part in the new coalition then proposed against France The military commission presided over by Hulin drew up the act of condemnation being incited thereto by orders from Anne Jean Marie Rene Savary who had come charged with instructions to kill the duke Savary prevented any chance of an interview between the condemned and the First Consul and on 21 March the duke was shot in the moat of the castle near a grave which had already been prepared A platoon of the Gendarmes d elite was in charge of the execution 4 His last words were I must die then at the hands of Frenchmen 5 In 1816 his remains were exhumed and placed in the Holy Chapel 6 of the Chateau de Vincennes Impact of death edit nbsp Execution of the Duke of Enghien by Jean Paul Laurens nbsp His tomb by Louis Pierre Deseine in the castle of VincennesRoyalty across Europe were shocked and dismayed at the duke s death Tsar Alexander I of Russia was especially alarmed and decided to curb Napoleon s power 7 Baden was the territory of the tsar s father in law and the German principalities were part of the Holy Roman Empire of which Russia was a guarantor 7 8 Enghien was the last descendant of the House of Conde his grandfather and father survived him but died without producing further heirs It is now known that Josephine and Madame de Remusat had begged Bonaparte to spare the duke but nothing would bend his will Whether Talleyrand Fouche or Savary bore responsibility for the seizure of the duke is debatable as at times Napoleon was known to claim Talleyrand conceived the idea while at other times he took full responsibility himself 9 On his way to St Helena and at Longwood Napoleon asserted that in the same circumstances he would do the same again he inserted a similar declaration in his will stating that I t was necessary for the safety interest and the honour of the French people when the Comte d Artois by his own confession was supporting sixty assassins at Paris 10 The execution shocked the aristocracy of Europe who still remembered the bloodletting of the Revolution Either Antoine Boulay comte de la Meurthe 11 deputy from Meurthe in the Corps legislatif or Napoleon s chief of police Fouche 12 said about his execution C est pire qu un crime c est une faute a statement often rendered in English as It was worse than a crime it was a blunder The statement is also sometimes attributed to Talleyrand In the 1844 essay Experience Emerson misattributes the line to Napoleon himself In contrast in France the execution appeared to quiet domestic resistance to Napoleon who soon set up a military dictatorship by crowning himself Emperor of the French Cadoudal dismayed at the news of Napoleon s proclamation reputedly exclaimed We wanted to make a king but we made an emperor 13 Cultural references editTolstoy edit The killing of d Enghien is discussed in the opening book of Leo Tolstoy s War and Peace 14 6 The vicomte de Mortemart a French emigre who supposedly knew the duke personally is the focus of attention of the Russian aristocrats gathered at Anna Pavlovna Sherer s home The group about Mortemart immediately began discussing the murder of the duc d Enghien After the murder of the Duc even the most partial ceased to regard Buonaparte as a hero If to some people he ever was a hero after the murder of the duc there was one martyr more in heaven and one hero less on earth The vicomte said that the duc d Enghien had perished by his own magnanimity and that there were particular reasons for Buonaparte s hatred of him It was an anecdote then current to the effect that the duc d Enghien had gone secretly to Paris to visit Mademoiselle George that at her house he came upon Bonaparte who also enjoyed the famous actress favors and that in his presence Napoleon happened to fall into one of the fainting fits to which he was subject and was thus at the Duc s mercy The latter spared him and this magnanimity Bonaparte subsequently repaid by death The story was very pretty and interesting especially at the point where the rivals suddenly recognized one another and the ladies looked agitated The actress Marguerite Josephine Wiemer known as Mademoiselle George was indeed Napoleon s mistress but there is no evidence that Enghien had anything to do with her or that the story preserved to posterity by Tolstoy s masterpiece was anything more than one of the pieces of gossip and conspiracy theories current around Europe at the time Dumas edit The killing is treated in The Last Cavalier by Alexandre Dumas For example T he dominant sentiment in Bonaparte s mind at that moment was neither fear nor vengeance but rather the desire for all of France to realise that Bourbon blood so sacred to Royalist partisans was no more sacred to him than the blood of any other citizen in the Republic Well then asked Cambaceres what have you decided It s simple said Bonaparte We shall kidnap the Duc d Enghien and be done with it 15 His death was also briefly mentioned in The Count of Monte Cristo There wasn t any trouble over treaties when it was a question of shooting the poor Duc d Enghien 16 Film edit La mort du duc d Enghien en 1804 1909 was a one reel silent film directed by Albert Capellani 17 Ancestry edit nbsp Arms of Bathilde as Duchess of Bourbon Princess of Conde mother of Louis de Bourbon Conde Duc d Enghien nbsp Arms of the House of Rohan Gules nine mascles orAncestors of Louis Antoine Duke of Enghien8 Louis Henri Duke of Bourbon4 Louis Joseph Prince of Conde9 Caroline of Hesse Rotenburg2 Louis Henri Prince of Conde10 Charles de Rohan Prince of Soubise5 Charlotte de Rohan11 Anne Marie Louise de La Tour d Auvergne1 Louis Antoine Duke of Enghien12 Louis Duke of Orleans6 Louis Philippe I Duke of Orleans13 Auguste of Baden Baden3 Bathilde of Orleans14 Louis Armand II Prince of Conti7 Louise Henriette de Bourbon15 Louise Elisabeth de BourbonReferences and notes edit Fremont Barnes Gregory 2007 Encyclopedia of the Age of Political Revolutions and New Ideologies 1760 1815 A L Greenwood Publishing Group p 216 ISBN 978 0313334467 Fremont Barnes Gregory 2007 Encyclopedia of the Age of Political Revolutions and New Ideologies 1760 1815 A L Greenwood Publishing Group p 217 ISBN 978 0313334467 Crowe Eyre Evans 1 January 1843 The History of France Harper Isidore Marie Brignole Gautier Conduite de Bonaparte relativement aux assassinats de Monseigneur le duc d Enghien et du Marquis de Frotte Paris 1823 p 32 Roberts Andrew 2014 Napoleon A Life Pengiun p 418 The Duke of Enghien s short biography in Napoleon amp Empire website displaying photographs of the Chateau de Vincennes and its Holy Chapel a b Charles Esdaile 2009 Napoleon s Wars An International History Penguin pp 192 93 ISBN 9781101464373 Saunders David 1992 Russia in the Age of Reaction and Reform 1801 1881 London amp New York Longman p 38 Duff Cooper Talleyrand Great Britain Jonathan Cape 1932 p 139 141 The d Enghien Affair Crime or Blunder napoleon series org The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations John Bartlett Familiar Quotations 10th ed 1919 9625 Chapitre 28 napoleonicsociety com Tolstoy Leo 1949 War and Peace Garden City International Collectors Library Dumas Alexandre The Last Cavalier p 292 Lauren Yoder trans Pegasus Books 2007 1869 Dumas Alexandre The Count of Monte Cristo p 41 Chapman and Hall trans Wordsworth Classics 2002 1844 The Death of the Duke D Enghien IMDb 20 December 1909 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Enghien Louis Antoine Henri de Bourbon Conde Duc d Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Charles Esdaile 2009 Napoleon s Wars An International History Penguin pp 190 93 ISBN 9781101464373 David Nicholls 1999 Napoleon A Biographical Companion ABC CLIO pp 94 95 Schroeder Paul W The Transformation of European Politics 1763 1848 1996 pp 248 51External links edit Enghien Louis Antoine Henri de Bourbon Duc d New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Antoine Duke of Enghien amp oldid 1184987047, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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