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Louise Françoise, Princess of Condé

Louise Françoise, Duchess of Bourbon (1 June 1673 – 16 June 1743) was the eldest surviving legitimised[1] daughter of Louis XIV of France and his maîtresse-en-titre Françoise-Athénaïs, Marquise de Montespan. She was said to have been named after her godmother, Louise de La Vallière,[2] the woman her mother had replaced as the king's mistress. Before her marriage, she was known at court as Mademoiselle de Nantes.

Louise Françoise
Princess of Condé
Duchess of Bourbon
Légitimée de France
Portrait by Pierre Gobert, ca. 1692
Born(1673-06-01)1 June 1673
Tournai, France
Died16 June 1743(1743-06-16) (aged 70)
Palais Bourbon, Paris, France
Burial
Carmel du faubourg Saint-Jacques, Paris, France
Spouse
(m. 1685; died 1710)
Issue
Detail
HouseBourbon
FatherLouis XIV of France
MotherFrançoise-Athénaïs, Marquise de Montespan
Signature

Married at the age of 11, Louise Françoise became known as Madame la Duchesse, a style she kept as a widow. She was Duchess of Bourbon[3] and Princess of Condé by marriage. She was later a leading member of the cabale de Meudon,[4] a group centered on her half-brother Louis, Grand Dauphin. While her son Louis Henri, Duke of Bourbon, was Prime Minister of France, she tried to further her political influence, but to little avail.

Considered attractive, Louise Françoise had a turbulent love life and was frequently part of scandals during her father's reign. Later in life, she built the Palais Bourbon in Paris, the present seat of the National Assembly of France, with the fortune she amassed having invested greatly with John Law.

Early life (1673–1685) edit

Louise Françoise was born in Tournai on 1 June 1673 while her parents, King Louis XIV of France and Françoise-Athénaïs de Rochechouart were on a military tour; her maternal aunt, the Marquise de Thianges, was there also. After returning from Tournai, her parents placed her and her older siblings in the care of one of her mother's acquaintances, the widowed Madame Scarron.

On 19 December 1673, Louis XIV legitimised the children he had had with his mistress in a legitimisation process that was recognised with letters patent from the Parlement of Paris. At the time of their legitimisation, her eldest brother, Louis-Auguste de Bourbon, received the title of Duke of Maine; her next eldest brother, Louis-César de Bourbon, became the Count of Vexin, while Louise Françoise received the courtesy title of Mademoiselle de Nantes. Her parents had nicknamed her Poupotte after her doll-like appearance.[5]

 
Portrait completed in 1690 showing the flattering style of Francois de Troy

In the year after her birth, another sibling joined Louis-Auguste, Louis-César, and Louise Françoise at their residence in Paris. The future Mademoiselle de Tours had been born at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye in November 1674. The young Mademoiselle de Tours was legitimised in 1676 and would become a great friend of Louise Françoise.[5] The death of her younger sister, in 1681, deeply affected her.

After the death of Mademoiselle de Tours, Madame de Montespan wrote to the Duc du Maine:

I do not speak to you of my grief, you are naturally too good not to have experienced it for yourself. As for Mademoiselle de Nantes, she has felt it as deeply as if she were twenty and has received the visits of the Queen and Madame la Dauphine[6]

The Mesdemoiselles of Nantes and of Tours had been raised together in a private house on the Rue de Vaugirard in Paris, where the king's illegitimate children with Madame de Montespan had been hidden away from the prying eyes of the court by their parents.[5] Louise Françoise would never be close to either her older half-sister, Marie Anne de Bourbon, or younger full sister, Françoise Marie de Bourbon, as the three sisters were intensely jealous of each other. Louise Françoise and Françoise Marie were especially competitive, despising any increase in status or rank that the other, or any of her children, might achieve. Louise Françoise was, however, close to her half-brother Louis, Grand Dauphin.

Having inherited her parents' passion for music and dance, Louise Françoise became a good dancer. When she was nine, she played Youth in a ballet dedicated to the Dauphine of France.[7] She also inherited her mother's sharp and caustic wit, the famous Mortemart esprit, which made her popular with some but not with others. Saint-Simon later said of the future Princess of Condé:.

. her face was formed by the most tender loves and her nature made to dally with them. She possessed the art of placing everyone at their ease; there was nothing about her which did not tend naturally to please, with a grace unparalleled, even in her slightest actions. She made captive even those who had the most cause to fear her, and those who had the best of reasons to hate her required often to recall the fact to resist her charms. Sportive, gay, and merry, she passed her youth in frivolity and in pleasures of all kinds, and, whenever the opportunity presented itself, they extended even to debauchery.[8]

She was also called the..

prettiest, wittiest, and naughtiest of the fast set in the latter half of the reign, and was in constant hot water. Her comic verse, too often indecent, was genuinely amusing, except to the victims, and the king was not at all amused at a set which she had written on his august self[9]

Duchess of Bourbon (1685–1710) edit

 
The marriage of Mademoiselle de Nantes to the Duc de Bourbon (by an anonymous artist, 1685)

On 25 May 1685, at the age of eleven, Louise Françoise was married to Louis de Bourbon, Duke of Bourbon, a distant sixteen-year-old cousin of her father. Her husband was the son of Henry Jules, Duke of Enghien, the son of the head of the House of Condé, a cadet branch of the reigning House of Bourbon. His mother was Anne Henriette of Bavaria. Louis XIV gave his daughter a large dowry of one million livres upon her marriage.[5]

At court, Louise Françoise's husband was known by the courtesy title of duc de Bourbon, and was addressed as Monsieur le Duc. As a result, his new wife became known as Madame la Duchesse.[10]

Some time after her marriage in 1686, while the court was in residence at the Palace of Fontainebleau, Louise Françoise contracted smallpox. While her then seventeen-year-old husband did not help nurse her back to health, her mother and grandfather-in-law, Le Grand Condé, did.[11] Louise Françoise recovered, but Le Grand Condé died the following November after having caught her illness.[2] Louise Françoise and her husband eventually had nine children, all of whom survived into adulthood.

After her mother officially left court in 1691, Louise Françoise would visit her at the convent of the Filles de Saint-Joseph, in the rue Saint-Dominique in Paris,[12] where she had retired. As they saw each other often, the two became much closer, and Louise Françoise was deeply affected by her mother's death in 1707. Louis XIV forbade anyone at court to wear mourning clothes for his former mistress, but, as a mark of respect for their mother, Louise Françoise and her two younger siblings, Françoise Marie de Bourbon and the Count of Toulouse, decided not to attend any court gatherings. On the other hand, her older brother, the Duke of Maine, could barely conceal his joy at inheriting his mother's fortune. The Château de Clagny was bequeathed to him, but he rarely used it.[2]

 
Portrait of Louise Françoise and her daughter Henriette Louise (by Pierre Gobert)

In 1692, her youngest sister, Françoise Marie, was married to their first cousin, Philippe d'Orléans, the only son and heir of their uncle, Monsieur. As the wife of a petit-fils de France, Françoise Marie took precedence at court over Louise Françoise and their half-sister Marie Anne. This, combined with the fact that Françoise Marie received a dowry twice the amount given to her older sister, greatly angered Louise Françoise, who thereafter became quite competitive with her younger, more successful sister.[13]

Louise Françoise was a beautiful and vivacious woman. Around 1695, she began a romantic affair with François Louis de Bourbon, prince de Conti,[11] the handsome brother-in-law of her older half-sister, Marie Anne de Bourbon. François Louis' wife was the pious Marie Thérèse de Bourbon; Marie Thérèse was in turn the oldest sister of Louise Françoise's husband.[8] Louise Françoise's fourth daughter Marie Anne, born in 1697, was thought to have been the result of this affair.[11]

When her husband discovered his wife's infidelity, he was furious but did not openly quarrel with the Prince of Conti due to a fear of his father-in-law, Louis XIV. Her older half-brother, the Dauphin, to whom she was close, allowed the couple to meet at his country estate at Meudon away from her husband and the court.[5]

Upon the death of her father-in-law on 1 April 1709, her husband succeeded to the title of Prince of Condé. He did not, however, succeed to his father's rank of Premier Prince du Sang, which was instead officially transferred from the House of Condé to the House of Orléans. As a result, her younger sister's husband, the Duke of Orléans, became entitled to use the style of Monsieur le Prince. His wife, Louise Françoise's sister Françoise Marie, accordingly became entitled to use the style Madame la Princesse.[14] Despite the fact that Françoise-Marie never referred to herself as Madame la Princesse, this transfer in rank from the House of Condé to the House of Orléans greatly aggravated the rivalry between Louise Françoise and her younger sister.[15]

Princess of Condé and widowhood (1710–1740) edit

 
Louise Françoise in widow robes (by Pierre Gobert, 1737). Musée Condé

Louise Françoise's husband, who had by this time descended into madness,[5] did not survive his father long and died within the year in 1710. Although Louise Françoise should have officially assumed the style of Madame la Princesse de Condé douairière (Dowager Princess of Condé) upon the death of her husband, she instead chose to be known in her widowhood as Madame la Duchesse douairière. She had a portrait taken in widow's dress.[16] When her husband died she is said to have been affected but Madame de Caylus did not believe her grief was sincere.[8]

In the hope of ingratiating herself with the future king, Louise Françoise frequently attended the court of her older half-brother, Monseigneur,[13] at the Château de Meudon. At Meudon, she became close to Élisabeth Thérèse de Lorraine, princesse d'Epinoy and her older sister, Mademoiselle de Lillebonne, a future Abbess of Remiremont Abbey. Unexpectedly, the dauphin died in 1711, ruining his sister's plan of establishing a more solid relationship with the Crown. Despite her dashed hopes, Louise Françoise was deeply affected by the dauphin's death. This death made her nephew, Louis, Duke of Burgundy, and his wife, Marie Adélaïde, the new Dauphin and Dauphine.

Marie Adélaïde and Louise Françoise were to become bitter enemies because of the new dauphine's condescending attitude toward ladies of inferior rank. The Duchess of Orléans and the older Dowager Princess of Conti also grew to dislike their niece for her haughty behavior.

As a dowager, Louise Françoise became a good friend of Jeanne Baptiste d'Albert de Luynes, the former mistress of Victor Amadeus, Duke of Savoy. Jeanne Baptiste had escaped Savoy in 1700 and had been residing in Paris ever since. She was a great literary figure of the day.

Within two years, in 1712, the new dauphin and his young wife died, leaving only a small son, the duc d'Anjou, as the legitimate heir of Louis XIV. In 1715, the king died, and was succeeded by his five-year-old great-grandson, Louis XV. A controversy immediately arose between Louise Françoise's older brother, the Duke of Maine, and her brother-in-law, the Duke of Orléans, over which of the two should be declared Regent. After the Parlement of Paris had deliberated for a week, the Duke of Orléans was declared the official Regent. This of course exacerbated the rivalry between Louise Françoise and her younger sister, the Duchess of Orléans, now the highest ranking lady of France.[5]

During the Régence, Louise Françoise was frequently occupied with the escapades of her second daughter, Louise Élisabeth, Princess of Conti, who had become the mistress of Philippe Charles de La Fare. When her daughter's husband, the Prince of Conti, discovered the liaison, he became physically abusive toward his wife.[5] The only son of the Conti couple, Louis François de Bourbon, was thought to have been the result of his mother's adulterous relationship with La Fare. Louise Élisabeth later took refuge from her violent husband with her mother at the Palais Bourbon.

In 1714, her niece, Mademoiselle du Maine, the daughter of her older brother, the Duke of Maine, was named in her honour.

In the 1720s, Louise Françoise became the mistress of the Marquis de Lassay. In order to be closer to her, he built the Hôtel de Lassay[13] next to the Palais Bourbon, her residence in Paris. Later on, a gallery was built, housing the grander, more public part of the collection of paintings that made Lassay's reputation as a connoisseur redound in Parisian circles for a generation after his death;[17] the gallery that joined the two buildings also enabled the lovers to have better access to each other.

In 1737, she was asked to be the godmother to Louis XV's eldest son, Louis, Dauphin of France. The young dauphin's godfather was Louise Françoise's nephew, Louis, Duke of Orléans.

When her son was disgraced during the Regency of Philippe d'Orléans, Louise Françoise regarded his mistress Madame de Prie as the cause. As such, Louise Françoise detested her.[8] Her son died in exile in 1740 to be succeeded by his son, Louise Françoise's grandson, Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé, who was aged four.

Palais Bourbon edit

 
Garden façade of the Palais Bourbon, facing the Seine, as built by Louise Françoise

During her long widowhood, Louise Françoise built the Palais Bourbon in Paris, not far from the residences of her surviving siblings. Named after her family, it was built after her stay at the Grand Trianon, which became the architectural inspiration for her new home.

Construction on the palace started in 1722, when she was forty-nine years old. Several designers were involved, including Robert de Cotte, who drew up plans around 1720,[18] Lorenzo Giardini, who died in 1722, and Lassurance, who died in 1724. Jean Aubert became the chief architect in 1726 and is given credit for the definitive design. Jacques Gabriel acted as a consultant.[19][20]

The Palais had a collection of large reception rooms, the main one being the Galerie which overlooked the Seine; the main salon of the Palais looked towards the Tuileries Palace to the east. The Palais was linked to the Hôtel de Lassay by means of a corridor overlooking a joint Parterre.

Her older half-sister, Marie Anne de Bourbon, who was the Dowager Princess of Conti, lived in the Hôtel de Conti, opposite the Louvre, on the Quai de Conti. Her older brother, the Duke of Maine, owned the Hôtel du Maine (destroyed 1838) on the rue Bourbon (now the rue de Lille), very near the Palais Bourbon.[21] Her younger sister, the Duchess of Orléans, lived at the Palais-Royal, the Orléans residence in Paris. Near the Louvre and the Palais-Royal, her youngest brother, the Count of Toulouse, lived in the Hôtel de Toulouse. In 1733 her daughter Louise Élisabeth moved into a house very near the Palais Bourbon, which became another Hôtel de Conti (now the Hôtel de Brienne), on the rue Saint-Dominique.

Death edit

Louise Françoise de Bourbon died on 16 June 1743, at the age of seventy, at the Palais Bourbon. She was buried at the Carmel du faubourg Saint-Jacques,[22] a Carmelite convent on the Left Bank in Paris Latin Quarter.

Children edit

Louise Françoise gave birth to nine children:

Name Portrait Lifespan Notes
Marie Anne Gabrielle Éléonore de Bourbon
Abbess of Saint-Antoine-des-Champs
  22 December 1690 -
30 August 1760
Born at the Palace of Versailles; mentally ill; became abbess of Saint-Antoine-des-Champs in her teens; died in Villejuif. During her youth, she was known as Mademoiselle de Condé and de Bourbon.
Louis Henri Joseph de Bourbon
Duke of Bourbon
Prince of Condé
  18 August 1692 -
27 January 1740
Born at the Palace of Versailles and married twice; first to his paternal cousin Marie Anne de Bourbon and had no issue. He later married Landgravine Caroline of Hesse-Rotenburg and had issue. He was the Prime Minister of France during the reign of Louis XV of France but the king had him exiled. Louis Henri died in exile at the Château de Chantilly.
Louise Élisabeth de Bourbon
Princess of Conti
  22 November 1693 –
27 May 1775
Born at the Palace of Versailles, she married her paternal cousin Louis Armand II, Prince of Conti. She was the maternal grandmother of Philippe Égalité. She died in Paris having outlived all her siblings.
Louise Anne de Bourbon
Mademoiselle de Charolais
  23 June 1695 -
8 April 1758
Born at the Palace of Versailles, she never married; she had a romantic affair with the Duke of Richelieu and was his mistress just like her cousin, Charlotte Aglaé d'Orléans. She never had any legitimate children, but was suspected of having illegitimate issue, although there was no proof. She owned the Hôtel de Rothelin-Charolais (where she died) and in her life was known as Mademoiselle de Sens and then Mademoiselle de Charolais.
Marie Anne de Bourbon
Mademoiselle de Clermont
  16 October 1697 -
11 August 1741
Born in Paris, she was said to have been the fruit of her mother's affair with François Louis, Prince of Conti. She married Louis de Melun, Duke of Joyeuse in 1719, in secret and against her brother's wishes; she died in Paris after having been for many years in the service of Queen Maria Leszczyńska; known as Mademoiselle de Clermont.
Charles de Bourbon
Count of Charolais
  19 June 1700 -
23 July 1760
Born at Chantilly, he was known as the Count of Charolais and on his death, the title was passed to his sister Louise Anne; He secretly married Jeanne de Valois-Saint-Rémy, a descendant of Henry II of France via an illegitimate branch. Their son was Louis-Thomas (1718–1799), who was not legitimated by the king, later was exiled to England; he also had issue from his affair with one Marguerite Caron de Rancurel. Died in Paris.
Henriette Louise Marie Françoise Gabrielle de Bourbon
Abbess of Beaumont-lès-Tours
  15 January 1703 -
19 September 1772
Born at the Palace of Versailles, she was once considered as a possible bride for Louis XV; despite that, she never married; known as Mademoiselle de Vermandois, she was the abbesse de Beaumont-lès-Tours from 1728; she died at Beaumont.
Élisabeth Thérèse Alexandrine de Bourbon
Mademoiselle de Sens
  15 September 1705 -
15 April 1765
Born in Paris she was known as Mademoiselle de Sens; her vast fortune went to her nephew, Louis Joseph de Bourbon – future Prince of Condé.
Louis de Bourbon
Count of Clermont
  15 June 1709-
16 June 1771
Born at the Palace of Versailles, he was the Count of Clermont from birth and was the abbé de Saint-Germain-des-Près from 1737; never married and died at Versailles; he founded the Académie du Petit-Luxembourg, where scientists, artists and architects would meet. He was also the fifth Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of France, the supreme Masonic authority in France, which existed from approximately 1728 until its reorganisation in 1773.

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Légitimée de France, see Fils de France.
  2. ^ a b c Hilton, Lisa, Athénaïs: The Real Queen of France, Little, Brown and Company, London, 2002.[page needed]
  3. ^ Known as the Duchess of Bourbon until her death even though de facto Princess of Condé.
  4. ^ Bernot, Jacques (2004). Mademoiselle de Nantes, fille préférée de Louis XIV. Nouvelles Editions Latines. p. 73. ISBN 978-2-7233-2042-9.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "Louise-Françoise de Bourbon, Duchesse de Bourbon et Princesse de Condé – Party like 1660". partylike1660.com. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  6. ^ Athénaïs: The Real Queen of France by Lisa Hilton, p. 201.
  7. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 223
  8. ^ a b c d "Love Affairs of the Condé's". InternatArchive.com. Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  9. ^ Lewis. L, W, The Sunset of the Splendid Century, Life and times of the duc du Maine 1670–1736, New York, 1953, p. 90
  10. ^ Fraser, Antonia, Love and Louis XIV, Nan A. Talese, 2006.[page needed]
  11. ^ a b c "Grand daughters of Louis XIV". Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  12. ^ "Rue Saint Dominique". Paris-pittoresque.com. Retrieved 19 May 2009.
  13. ^ a b c Freeman-Mitford, Nancy (The Hon.), The Sun King, BCA, 1966.[page needed]
  14. ^ ib. Spanheim, Ézéchiel, pp. 104–105.
  15. ^ Mitford, Nancy, The Sun King[page needed]
  16. ^ "Portrait de Louise Françoise de Bourbon, princesse de Condé, en tenue de veuve". ArtValue.
  17. ^ Charlotte Guichard, "Valeur et réputation de la collection: Les éloges d’'amateur' à Paris dans la seconde moitié du xviiie siècle"
  18. ^ Robert Neuman (1994) Robert de Cotte and the Perfection of Architecture in Eighteenth-Century France, Chicago/London: The University of Chicago Press, ISBN 9780226574370, pp. 145–148.
  19. ^ Wend von Kalnein (1995), Architecture in France in the Eighteenth Century, translated by David Britt (New Haven: Yale University Press, ISBN 9780300060133), p. 55.
  20. ^ Andrew Ayers (2004), The Architecture of Paris (Stuttgart; London: Edition Axel Menges. ISBN 9783930698967), p. 136.
  21. ^ Robert Neuman (1994) Robert de Cotte and the Perfection of Architecture in Eighteenth-Century France, Chicago/London: The University of Chicago Press, ISBN 9780226574370, pp. 142–143; Alexandre Gady (2008) Les Hôtels particuliers de Paris du Moyen Âge à la Belle Époque, Paris: Parigramme, ISBN 9782840962137, pp. 313. The site of the former Hôtel du Maine is at 84–86 rue de Lille.
  22. ^ Eriau, Jean-Baptiste, L'ancien Carmel du faubourg Saint-Jacques (1604–1792), J. de Gigord, A. Picard, Paris, 1929(http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/rhef_0300-9505_1929_num_15_69_2523_t1_0497_0000_2

References edit

  • Fraser, Antonia (2006). Love and Louis XIV. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.

External links edit

Louise Françoise, Princess of Condé
Born: 1 June 1673 Died: 16 June 1743
French nobility
Preceded by
Royal domain
Mademoiselle de Nantes
19 December 1673 – 25 May 1685
Succeeded by
Royal domain
Preceded by Duchess of Bourbon
25 May 1685 – 1 April 1709
Succeeded by
Preceded by Princess of Condé
1 April 1709 – 16 June 1743
Succeeded by
de facto Marie Anne de Bourbon
but did not use the title

louise, françoise, princess, condé, louise, françoise, duchess, bourbon, june, 1673, june, 1743, eldest, surviving, legitimised, daughter, louis, france, maîtresse, titre, françoise, athénaïs, marquise, montespan, said, have, been, named, after, godmother, lou. Louise Francoise Duchess of Bourbon 1 June 1673 16 June 1743 was the eldest surviving legitimised 1 daughter of Louis XIV of France and his maitresse en titre Francoise Athenais Marquise de Montespan She was said to have been named after her godmother Louise de La Valliere 2 the woman her mother had replaced as the king s mistress Before her marriage she was known at court as Mademoiselle de Nantes Louise FrancoisePrincess of CondeDuchess of BourbonLegitimee de FrancePortrait by Pierre Gobert ca 1692Born 1673 06 01 1 June 1673Tournai FranceDied16 June 1743 1743 06 16 aged 70 Palais Bourbon Paris FranceBurialCarmel du faubourg Saint Jacques Paris FranceSpouseLouis III Prince of Conde m 1685 died 1710 wbr IssueDetailMarie Anne Eleonore Mademoiselle de Bourbon Louis Henri Duke of Bourbon Louise Elisabeth Princess of Conti Louise Anne Mademoiselle de Charolais Marie Anne Mademoiselle de Clermont Charles Count of Charolais Henriette Louise Mademoiselle de Vermandois Elisabeth Alexandrine Mademoiselle de Sens Louis Count of ClermontHouseBourbonFatherLouis XIV of FranceMotherFrancoise Athenais Marquise de MontespanSignature Married at the age of 11 Louise Francoise became known as Madame la Duchesse a style she kept as a widow She was Duchess of Bourbon 3 and Princess of Conde by marriage She was later a leading member of the cabale de Meudon 4 a group centered on her half brother Louis Grand Dauphin While her son Louis Henri Duke of Bourbon was Prime Minister of France she tried to further her political influence but to little avail Considered attractive Louise Francoise had a turbulent love life and was frequently part of scandals during her father s reign Later in life she built the Palais Bourbon in Paris the present seat of the National Assembly of France with the fortune she amassed having invested greatly with John Law Contents 1 Early life 1673 1685 2 Duchess of Bourbon 1685 1710 3 Princess of Conde and widowhood 1710 1740 4 Palais Bourbon 5 Death 6 Children 7 Ancestry 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEarly life 1673 1685 editLouise Francoise was born in Tournai on 1 June 1673 while her parents King Louis XIV of France and Francoise Athenais de Rochechouart were on a military tour her maternal aunt the Marquise de Thianges was there also After returning from Tournai her parents placed her and her older siblings in the care of one of her mother s acquaintances the widowed Madame Scarron On 19 December 1673 Louis XIV legitimised the children he had had with his mistress in a legitimisation process that was recognised with letters patent from the Parlement of Paris At the time of their legitimisation her eldest brother Louis Auguste de Bourbon received the title of Duke of Maine her next eldest brother Louis Cesar de Bourbon became the Count of Vexin while Louise Francoise received the courtesy title of Mademoiselle de Nantes Her parents had nicknamed her Poupotte after her doll like appearance 5 nbsp Portrait completed in 1690 showing the flattering style of Francois de Troy In the year after her birth another sibling joined Louis Auguste Louis Cesar and Louise Francoise at their residence in Paris The future Mademoiselle de Tours had been born at the Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye in November 1674 The young Mademoiselle de Tours was legitimised in 1676 and would become a great friend of Louise Francoise 5 The death of her younger sister in 1681 deeply affected her After the death of Mademoiselle de Tours Madame de Montespan wrote to the Duc du Maine I do not speak to you of my grief you are naturally too good not to have experienced it for yourself As for Mademoiselle de Nantes she has felt it as deeply as if she were twenty and has received the visits of the Queen and Madame la Dauphine 6 The Mesdemoiselles of Nantes and of Tours had been raised together in a private house on the Rue de Vaugirard in Paris where the king s illegitimate children with Madame de Montespan had been hidden away from the prying eyes of the court by their parents 5 Louise Francoise would never be close to either her older half sister Marie Anne de Bourbon or younger full sister Francoise Marie de Bourbon as the three sisters were intensely jealous of each other Louise Francoise and Francoise Marie were especially competitive despising any increase in status or rank that the other or any of her children might achieve Louise Francoise was however close to her half brother Louis Grand Dauphin nbsp Older half sister Marie Anne de Bourbon nbsp Younger sister Francoise Marie de Bourbon left and Louise Francoise right Having inherited her parents passion for music and dance Louise Francoise became a good dancer When she was nine she played Youth in a ballet dedicated to the Dauphine of France 7 She also inherited her mother s sharp and caustic wit the famous Mortemart esprit which made her popular with some but not with others Saint Simon later said of the future Princess of Conde her face was formed by the most tender loves and her nature made to dally with them She possessed the art of placing everyone at their ease there was nothing about her which did not tend naturally to please with a grace unparalleled even in her slightest actions She made captive even those who had the most cause to fear her and those who had the best of reasons to hate her required often to recall the fact to resist her charms Sportive gay and merry she passed her youth in frivolity and in pleasures of all kinds and whenever the opportunity presented itself they extended even to debauchery 8 She was also called the prettiest wittiest and naughtiest of the fast set in the latter half of the reign and was in constant hot water Her comic verse too often indecent was genuinely amusing except to the victims and the king was not at all amused at a set which she had written on his august self 9 Duchess of Bourbon 1685 1710 edit nbsp The marriage of Mademoiselle de Nantes to the Duc de Bourbon by an anonymous artist 1685 On 25 May 1685 at the age of eleven Louise Francoise was married to Louis de Bourbon Duke of Bourbon a distant sixteen year old cousin of her father Her husband was the son of Henry Jules Duke of Enghien the son of the head of the House of Conde a cadet branch of the reigning House of Bourbon His mother was Anne Henriette of Bavaria Louis XIV gave his daughter a large dowry of one million livres upon her marriage 5 At court Louise Francoise s husband was known by the courtesy title of duc de Bourbon and was addressed as Monsieur le Duc As a result his new wife became known as Madame la Duchesse 10 Some time after her marriage in 1686 while the court was in residence at the Palace of Fontainebleau Louise Francoise contracted smallpox While her then seventeen year old husband did not help nurse her back to health her mother and grandfather in law Le Grand Conde did 11 Louise Francoise recovered but Le Grand Conde died the following November after having caught her illness 2 Louise Francoise and her husband eventually had nine children all of whom survived into adulthood After her mother officially left court in 1691 Louise Francoise would visit her at the convent of the Filles de Saint Joseph in the rue Saint Dominique in Paris 12 where she had retired As they saw each other often the two became much closer and Louise Francoise was deeply affected by her mother s death in 1707 Louis XIV forbade anyone at court to wear mourning clothes for his former mistress but as a mark of respect for their mother Louise Francoise and her two younger siblings Francoise Marie de Bourbon and the Count of Toulouse decided not to attend any court gatherings On the other hand her older brother the Duke of Maine could barely conceal his joy at inheriting his mother s fortune The Chateau de Clagny was bequeathed to him but he rarely used it 2 nbsp Portrait of Louise Francoise and her daughter Henriette Louise by Pierre Gobert In 1692 her youngest sister Francoise Marie was married to their first cousin Philippe d Orleans the only son and heir of their uncle Monsieur As the wife of a petit fils de France Francoise Marie took precedence at court over Louise Francoise and their half sister Marie Anne This combined with the fact that Francoise Marie received a dowry twice the amount given to her older sister greatly angered Louise Francoise who thereafter became quite competitive with her younger more successful sister 13 Louise Francoise was a beautiful and vivacious woman Around 1695 she began a romantic affair with Francois Louis de Bourbon prince de Conti 11 the handsome brother in law of her older half sister Marie Anne de Bourbon Francois Louis wife was the pious Marie Therese de Bourbon Marie Therese was in turn the oldest sister of Louise Francoise s husband 8 Louise Francoise s fourth daughter Marie Anne born in 1697 was thought to have been the result of this affair 11 When her husband discovered his wife s infidelity he was furious but did not openly quarrel with the Prince of Conti due to a fear of his father in law Louis XIV Her older half brother the Dauphin to whom she was close allowed the couple to meet at his country estate at Meudon away from her husband and the court 5 Upon the death of her father in law on 1 April 1709 her husband succeeded to the title of Prince of Conde He did not however succeed to his father s rank of Premier Prince du Sang which was instead officially transferred from the House of Conde to the House of Orleans As a result her younger sister s husband the Duke of Orleans became entitled to use the style of Monsieur le Prince His wife Louise Francoise s sister Francoise Marie accordingly became entitled to use the style Madame la Princesse 14 Despite the fact that Francoise Marie never referred to herself as Madame la Princesse this transfer in rank from the House of Conde to the House of Orleans greatly aggravated the rivalry between Louise Francoise and her younger sister 15 Princess of Conde and widowhood 1710 1740 edit nbsp Louise Francoise in widow robes by Pierre Gobert 1737 Musee Conde Louise Francoise s husband who had by this time descended into madness 5 did not survive his father long and died within the year in 1710 Although Louise Francoise should have officially assumed the style of Madame la Princesse de Conde douairiere Dowager Princess of Conde upon the death of her husband she instead chose to be known in her widowhood as Madame la Duchesse douairiere She had a portrait taken in widow s dress 16 When her husband died she is said to have been affected but Madame de Caylus did not believe her grief was sincere 8 In the hope of ingratiating herself with the future king Louise Francoise frequently attended the court of her older half brother Monseigneur 13 at the Chateau de Meudon At Meudon she became close to Elisabeth Therese de Lorraine princesse d Epinoy and her older sister Mademoiselle de Lillebonne a future Abbess of Remiremont Abbey Unexpectedly the dauphin died in 1711 ruining his sister s plan of establishing a more solid relationship with the Crown Despite her dashed hopes Louise Francoise was deeply affected by the dauphin s death This death made her nephew Louis Duke of Burgundy and his wife Marie Adelaide the new Dauphin and Dauphine Marie Adelaide and Louise Francoise were to become bitter enemies because of the new dauphine s condescending attitude toward ladies of inferior rank The Duchess of Orleans and the older Dowager Princess of Conti also grew to dislike their niece for her haughty behavior As a dowager Louise Francoise became a good friend of Jeanne Baptiste d Albert de Luynes the former mistress of Victor Amadeus Duke of Savoy Jeanne Baptiste had escaped Savoy in 1700 and had been residing in Paris ever since She was a great literary figure of the day Within two years in 1712 the new dauphin and his young wife died leaving only a small son the duc d Anjou as the legitimate heir of Louis XIV In 1715 the king died and was succeeded by his five year old great grandson Louis XV A controversy immediately arose between Louise Francoise s older brother the Duke of Maine and her brother in law the Duke of Orleans over which of the two should be declared Regent After the Parlement of Paris had deliberated for a week the Duke of Orleans was declared the official Regent This of course exacerbated the rivalry between Louise Francoise and her younger sister the Duchess of Orleans now the highest ranking lady of France 5 During the Regence Louise Francoise was frequently occupied with the escapades of her second daughter Louise Elisabeth Princess of Conti who had become the mistress of Philippe Charles de La Fare When her daughter s husband the Prince of Conti discovered the liaison he became physically abusive toward his wife 5 The only son of the Conti couple Louis Francois de Bourbon was thought to have been the result of his mother s adulterous relationship with La Fare Louise Elisabeth later took refuge from her violent husband with her mother at the Palais Bourbon In 1714 her niece Mademoiselle du Maine the daughter of her older brother the Duke of Maine was named in her honour In the 1720s Louise Francoise became the mistress of the Marquis de Lassay In order to be closer to her he built the Hotel de Lassay 13 next to the Palais Bourbon her residence in Paris Later on a gallery was built housing the grander more public part of the collection of paintings that made Lassay s reputation as a connoisseur redound in Parisian circles for a generation after his death 17 the gallery that joined the two buildings also enabled the lovers to have better access to each other In 1737 she was asked to be the godmother to Louis XV s eldest son Louis Dauphin of France The young dauphin s godfather was Louise Francoise s nephew Louis Duke of Orleans When her son was disgraced during the Regency of Philippe d Orleans Louise Francoise regarded his mistress Madame de Prie as the cause As such Louise Francoise detested her 8 Her son died in exile in 1740 to be succeeded by his son Louise Francoise s grandson Louis Joseph Prince of Conde who was aged four Palais Bourbon edit nbsp Garden facade of the Palais Bourbon facing the Seine as built by Louise Francoise During her long widowhood Louise Francoise built the Palais Bourbon in Paris not far from the residences of her surviving siblings Named after her family it was built after her stay at the Grand Trianon which became the architectural inspiration for her new home Construction on the palace started in 1722 when she was forty nine years old Several designers were involved including Robert de Cotte who drew up plans around 1720 18 Lorenzo Giardini who died in 1722 and Lassurance who died in 1724 Jean Aubert became the chief architect in 1726 and is given credit for the definitive design Jacques Gabriel acted as a consultant 19 20 The Palais had a collection of large reception rooms the main one being the Galerie which overlooked the Seine the main salon of the Palais looked towards the Tuileries Palace to the east The Palais was linked to the Hotel de Lassay by means of a corridor overlooking a joint Parterre Her older half sister Marie Anne de Bourbon who was the Dowager Princess of Conti lived in the Hotel de Conti opposite the Louvre on the Quai de Conti Her older brother the Duke of Maine owned the Hotel du Maine destroyed 1838 on the rue Bourbon now the rue de Lille very near the Palais Bourbon 21 Her younger sister the Duchess of Orleans lived at the Palais Royal the Orleans residence in Paris Near the Louvre and the Palais Royal her youngest brother the Count of Toulouse lived in the Hotel de Toulouse In 1733 her daughter Louise Elisabeth moved into a house very near the Palais Bourbon which became another Hotel de Conti now the Hotel de Brienne on the rue Saint Dominique Death editLouise Francoise de Bourbon died on 16 June 1743 at the age of seventy at the Palais Bourbon She was buried at the Carmel du faubourg Saint Jacques 22 a Carmelite convent on the Left Bank in Paris Latin Quarter Children editLouise Francoise gave birth to nine children Name Portrait Lifespan Notes Marie Anne Gabrielle Eleonore de BourbonAbbess of Saint Antoine des Champs nbsp 22 December 1690 30 August 1760 Born at the Palace of Versailles mentally ill became abbess of Saint Antoine des Champs in her teens died in Villejuif During her youth she was known as Mademoiselle de Conde and de Bourbon Louis Henri Joseph de BourbonDuke of BourbonPrince of Conde nbsp 18 August 1692 27 January 1740 Born at the Palace of Versailles and married twice first to his paternal cousin Marie Anne de Bourbon and had no issue He later married Landgravine Caroline of Hesse Rotenburg and had issue He was the Prime Minister of France during the reign of Louis XV of France but the king had him exiled Louis Henri died in exile at the Chateau de Chantilly Louise Elisabeth de BourbonPrincess of Conti nbsp 22 November 1693 27 May 1775 Born at the Palace of Versailles she married her paternal cousin Louis Armand II Prince of Conti She was the maternal grandmother of Philippe Egalite She died in Paris having outlived all her siblings Louise Anne de BourbonMademoiselle de Charolais nbsp 23 June 1695 8 April 1758 Born at the Palace of Versailles she never married she had a romantic affair with the Duke of Richelieu and was his mistress just like her cousin Charlotte Aglae d Orleans She never had any legitimate children but was suspected of having illegitimate issue although there was no proof She owned the Hotel de Rothelin Charolais where she died and in her life was known as Mademoiselle de Sens and then Mademoiselle de Charolais Marie Anne de BourbonMademoiselle de Clermont nbsp 16 October 1697 11 August 1741 Born in Paris she was said to have been the fruit of her mother s affair with Francois Louis Prince of Conti She married Louis de Melun Duke of Joyeuse in 1719 in secret and against her brother s wishes she died in Paris after having been for many years in the service of Queen Maria Leszczynska known as Mademoiselle de Clermont Charles de BourbonCount of Charolais nbsp 19 June 1700 23 July 1760 Born at Chantilly he was known as the Count of Charolais and on his death the title was passed to his sister Louise Anne He secretly married Jeanne de Valois Saint Remy a descendant of Henry II of France via an illegitimate branch Their son was Louis Thomas 1718 1799 who was not legitimated by the king later was exiled to England he also had issue from his affair with one Marguerite Caron de Rancurel Died in Paris Henriette Louise Marie Francoise Gabrielle de BourbonAbbess of Beaumont les Tours nbsp 15 January 1703 19 September 1772 Born at the Palace of Versailles she was once considered as a possible bride for Louis XV despite that she never married known as Mademoiselle de Vermandois she was the abbesse de Beaumont les Tours from 1728 she died at Beaumont Elisabeth Therese Alexandrine de BourbonMademoiselle de Sens nbsp 15 September 1705 15 April 1765 Born in Paris she was known as Mademoiselle de Sens her vast fortune went to her nephew Louis Joseph de Bourbon future Prince of Conde Louis de BourbonCount of Clermont nbsp 15 June 1709 16 June 1771 Born at the Palace of Versailles he was the Count of Clermont from birth and was the abbe de Saint Germain des Pres from 1737 never married and died at Versailles he founded the Academie du Petit Luxembourg where scientists artists and architects would meet He was also the fifth Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of France the supreme Masonic authority in France which existed from approximately 1728 until its reorganisation in 1773 Ancestry editAncestors of Louise Francoise Princess of Conde8 Henry IV of France4 Louis XIII of France9 Marie de Medici2 Louis XIV of France10 Philip III of Spain5 Anne of Austria11 Margaret of Austria1 Louise Francoise de Bourbon12 Gaspard de Rochechouart marquis de Mortemart6 Gabriel de Rochechouart duc de Mortemart13 Louise de Maure comtesse de Maure3 Madame de Montespan14 Jean de Grandseigne marquis de Marsillac7 Diane de Grandseigne15 Catherine de La Beraudiere dame de VillenonNotes edit Legitimee de France see Fils de France a b c Hilton Lisa Athenais The Real Queen of France Little Brown and Company London 2002 page needed Known as the Duchess of Bourbon until her death even though de facto Princess of Conde Bernot Jacques 2004 Mademoiselle de Nantes fille preferee de Louis XIV Nouvelles Editions Latines p 73 ISBN 978 2 7233 2042 9 a b c d e f g h Louise Francoise de Bourbon Duchesse de Bourbon et Princesse de Conde Party like 1660 partylike1660 com Retrieved 11 December 2022 Athenais The Real Queen of France by Lisa Hilton p 201 Fraser 2006 p 223 a b c d Love Affairs of the Conde s InternatArchive com Retrieved 24 June 2010 Lewis L W The Sunset of the Splendid Century Life and times of the duc du Maine 1670 1736 New York 1953 p 90 Fraser Antonia Love and Louis XIV Nan A Talese 2006 page needed a b c Grand daughters of Louis XIV Retrieved 24 June 2010 Rue Saint Dominique Paris pittoresque com Retrieved 19 May 2009 a b c Freeman Mitford Nancy The Hon The Sun King BCA 1966 page needed ib Spanheim Ezechiel pp 104 105 Mitford Nancy The Sun King page needed Portrait de Louise Francoise de Bourbon princesse de Conde en tenue de veuve ArtValue Charlotte Guichard Valeur et reputation de la collection Les eloges d amateur a Paris dans la seconde moitie du xviiie siecle Robert Neuman 1994 Robert de Cotte and the Perfection of Architecture in Eighteenth Century France Chicago London The University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226574370 pp 145 148 Wend von Kalnein 1995 Architecture in France in the Eighteenth Century translated by David Britt New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300060133 p 55 Andrew Ayers 2004 The Architecture of Paris Stuttgart London Edition Axel Menges ISBN 9783930698967 p 136 Robert Neuman 1994 Robert de Cotte and the Perfection of Architecture in Eighteenth Century France Chicago London The University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226574370 pp 142 143 Alexandre Gady 2008 Les Hotels particuliers de Paris du Moyen Age a la Belle Epoque Paris Parigramme ISBN 9782840962137 pp 313 The site of the former Hotel du Maine is at 84 86 rue de Lille Eriau Jean Baptiste L ancien Carmel du faubourg Saint Jacques 1604 1792 J de Gigord A Picard Paris 1929 http www persee fr web revues home prescript article rhef 0300 9505 1929 num 15 69 2523 t1 0497 0000 2References editFraser Antonia 2006 Love and Louis XIV Weidenfeld and Nicolson External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louise Francoise de Bourbon nbsp Biography portal nbsp Europe portal Louise Francoise Princess of CondeHouse of BourbonBorn 1 June 1673 Died 16 June 1743 French nobility Preceded byRoyal domain Mademoiselle de Nantes19 December 1673 25 May 1685 Succeeded byRoyal domain Preceded byAnne Henriette of Bavaria Duchess of Bourbon25 May 1685 1 April 1709 Succeeded byMarie Anne de Bourbon Preceded byAnne Henriette of Bavaria Princess of Conde1 April 1709 16 June 1743 Succeeded byde facto Marie Anne de Bourbon but did not use the title Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louise Francoise Princess of Conde amp oldid 1213187650, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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