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Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon, Duchess of Orléans

Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon, Duchess of Orléans (13 March 1753 – 23 June 1821), was the daughter of Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre and Princess Maria Teresa d'Este. At the death of her brother, Louis Alexandre, Prince of Lamballe, she became the wealthiest heiress in France prior to the French Revolution. She married Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, the "regicide" Philippe Égalité, and was the mother of France's last king, Louis Philippe I. She was sister-in-law to Marie Thérèse Louise, Princess of Lamballe, and was the last member of the Bourbon-Penthièvre family.

Early life

Marie-Adélaïde was born on 13 March 1753 at the Hôtel de Toulouse, the family residence in Paris since 1712, when her grandfather, Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, comte de Toulouse, bought it from Louis Phélypeaux de La Vrillière. She was the youngest daughter of Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre and his wife, Princess Maria Teresa d'Este. Her mother died in childbirth the following year.[1] Styled Mademoiselle d'Ivoy[2] initially and, as a young girl, until her marriage, Mademoiselle de Penthièvre (derived from the duchy inherited by her father). The style of Mademoiselle de Penthièvre had been previously borne by her sister Marie Louise de Bourbon (1751–1753), who died six months after Marie-Adélaïde's birth.

Education

At birth, she was put in the care of Madame de Sourcy and, as was the custom for many girls of the nobility, she was later raised at the Abbaye de Montmartre convent, overlooking Paris,[3][4] where she spent twelve years. As a child, she was encouraged to take an active part in the charities for which her father had become known as "Prince of the Poor".[5] His reputation for beneficence made him popular throughout France and, subsequently, saved him during the Revolution.[6]

Marriage

Upon the death of her brother and only sibling, the Prince de Lamballe, on 8 May 1768, Marie-Adélaïde became heiress to what was to become the largest fortune of France.[7]

Her marriage to Louis Philippe Joseph d'Orléans, Duke of Chartres, son of the Duke of Orléans, had been envisaged earlier and, while the Duke of Penthièvre saw in it the opportunity for his daughter to marry the First Prince of the Blood Royal, the Orléanses did not want another union with an illegitimate branch of the royal family. However, when the Prince de Lamballe's death left his sister sole heiress to the family fortune, the bar sinister on her inescutcheon was "overlooked". Although Marie-Adélaîde was much in love with her Orléans cousin, Louis XV warned Penthièvre against such a marriage because of the reputation of the young Duke of Chartres as a libertine. Louis XV was also fearful of the powerful leverage given the Orléans branch should it inherit the Penthièvre fortune.[3]

You are wrong, my cousin, said Louis XV to Penthièvre, the Duke of Chartres has a bad temper, bad habits: he is a libertine, your daughter will not be happy. Do not rush, wait![8]

Mademoiselle de Penthièvre was presented to the King on 7 December 1768, in a ceremony called de nubilité,[3][9] by her maternal aunt, Maria Fortunata d'Este, Comtesse de la Marche. She was greeted by Louis XV, the Dauphin and other members of the royal family. On that day, she was baptised by Charles Antoine de La Roche-Aymon, Grand Almoner of France, and given the names Louise Marie Adélaïde.[10]

Her marriage to the Duke of Chartres took place at the Palace of Versailles on 5 April 1769 in a ceremony which all of the princes du sang attended. The marriage contract was signed by all members of the royal family. Afterwards, Louis XV hosted a wedding supper which included the entire royal family. Mlle de Penthièvre brought to the already wealthy House of Orléans a dowry of six million livres, an annual income of 240,000 livres (later increased to 400,000), and the expectation of much more upon her father's death.[citation needed]

The Comtesse de Genlis

 
La famille du Duc de Penthièvre, ou La tasse de chocolat, painting by Jean-Baptiste Charpentier le Vieux (1768). From left to right, seated: Duc de Penthièvre; prince de Lamballe; Princesse de Lamballe, Comtesse de Toulouse; standing in background: Mlle de Penthièvre.

During the first few months of their marriage, the couple appeared devoted to each other, but the duke went back to the life of libertinage he had led before his marriage.

In the summer of 1772, a few months after his wife had given birth to a stillborn daughter, Philippe's secret liaison began with one of her ladies-in-waiting, Stéphanie Félicité Ducrest de St-Albin, Comtesse de Genlis, the niece of Madame de Montesson, the morganatic wife of Philippe's father. Passionate at first, the liaison cooled within a few months and, by the spring of 1773, was reported to be "dead".[3] After the romantic affair was over, Félicité remained in the service of Marie-Adélaïde at the Palais-Royal, a trusted friend to both Marie-Adélaïde and Philippe. They both appreciated her intelligence and, in July 1779, she became the governess of the couple's twin daughters born in 1777.[3]

In 1782, the young Louis Philippe was nine and in need of discipline. However, the Duke of Chartres could not think of someone better qualified to "turn his sons over to" than Mme de Genlis. Thus she became the "gouverneur" of the Duc and Duchesse de Chartres' children. Teacher and pupils left the Palais-Royal and went to live in a house built specially for them on the grounds of the Couvent des Dames de Bellechasse in Paris. Mme de Genlis was an excellent teacher, but like those of her former lover, the Duc de Chartres, her liberal political views made her unpopular with Queen Marie Antoinette. In the dissemination of her ideas, de Genlis managed to alienate her charges from their mother.[citation needed]

Marie-Adélaïde began to object to the education given her children by her former lady-in-waiting. The relationship between the two women became unbearable when Louis-Philippe, on 2 November 1790, one month after his seventeenth birthday, joined the revolutionary Jacobin Club. Marie-Adélaïde's relationship with her husband was also at its worst at this point, and the only way the two would communicate was through letters.[3] In the memoirs of the Baronne d'Oberkirch, Marie-Adélaïde is described as:

...always wearing a melancholic expression which nothing could cure. She sometimes smiled, she never laughed....[11]

Upon the death of her father-in-law Louis Philippe d'Orléans in November 1785, her husband became the new Duke of Orléans, and First Prince of the Blood, taking rank only after the immediate family of the king. As the wife of a prince du sang she was entitled to be addressed as Your Serene Highness, a style to which her own illegitimate branch of the Bourbons had no right.

Revolution

On 5 April 1791, Marie-Adélaïde left her husband,[3] and went to live with her father at the château de Bizy[12] overlooking Vernon, Eure in Normandy[13] In September 1792, having sided with the Revolution, the Duke of Orléans was elected to the National Convention under the name of Philippe Égalité. Siding with the radical group called La Montagne, he was from the very beginning suspect in the eyes of the Girondists, who wanted all the Bourbons to be banished from France. The fate of the Orléans family was sealed when Marie-Adélaïde's eldest son, the duc de Chartres, "Général Égalité" in the Army of the North commanded by Charles François Dumouriez, sought political asylum from the Austrians in March 1793. On 6 April, all the members of the Orléans family still remaining in France were arrested. After their arrest in Paris, Philippe Égalité and his son, the comte de Beaujolais, were imprisoned in the prison de l'Abbaye in Paris.[3]

Later, the two were transferred to the prison of Fort Saint-Jean in Marseille, where they were soon joined by the duc de Montpensier who had been arrested while serving as an officer in the Army of the Alps. The day before his father and brothers were arrested in France, the duc de Chartres rushed to Tournai, near the French border,[14] where his sister Adélaïde and Mme de Genlis had been living since Philippe Égalité had made them emigrate in November 1792. The duc de Chartres accompanied them to safety in Switzerland.[3] In the meantime, due to her poor health, Marie-Adélaïde was allowed to stay in France, under guard, at the château de Bizy, where her father had died a month earlier. Her inheritance, however, was confiscated by the revolutionary government. Despite having voted for the death of his cousin Louis XVI of France, and having denounced his son's defection, Philippe Égalité was guillotined on 6 November 1793.[citation needed]

Widow Égalité

 
The Palais du Luxembourg where Marie-Adélaïde was imprisoned from November 1793 to July 1794.

Upon the execution of her husband, Marie-Adélaïde, now known as the "Veuve Égalité" ("Widow Égalité"), was incarcerated at the Luxembourg Palace, which had been transformed into a prison during the Revolution. There she met the man who was to become the "love of her life", a former member of the National Convention named Jacques-Marie Rouzet,[15] who had been imprisoned at the fall of the Girondins. Nearly executed before the fall of Robespierre, in July 1794 at the end of the Reign of Terror, she was transferred to the "Pension Belhomme", a former mental institution turned into a "prison for the rich" during the Revolution.[16]

After Rouzet, who after his liberation had become a member of the Council of Five Hundred, succeeded, in 1796, to secure her liberation and that of her two sons still imprisoned in Marseille,[17] the two always remained together and lived in Paris until 1797, when a decree banished the remaining members of the House of Bourbon from France. Marie-Adélaïde was exiled to Spain, as was her sister-in-law Bathilde d'Orléans, the last princesse de Condé. Rouzet accompanied them to the Spanish border and managed to secretly join them in Barcelona where he became her chancellor, and she obtained for him the title of comte de Folmont.[18]

Marie-Adélaïde was never to see her two younger sons again, Montpensier and Beaujolais, who died in exile before the 1814 Bourbon Restoration. She, Rouzet and the Orléans exiled in Spain returned to France in 1814 at the time of the first Bourbon Restoration. After legal battles which lasted until her death, the bulk of her inheritance was eventually recovered. She died in her castle at Ivry-sur-Seine[19] on 23 June 1821, after battling breast cancer.[20] Rouzet had died nine months before, on 25 October 1820, and she had him inhumed in the new family chapel she had built in Dreux in 1816, as the final resting place for the two families, Bourbon-Penthièvre and Orléans.[18][21]

The original Bourbon-Penthièvre family crypt in the Collégiale de Saint-Étienne de Dreux had been violated during the Revolution and the bodies thrown together into a grave in the Chanoines Cemetery of the Collégiale. She was buried in the new chapel which, after the accession to the throne of her son Louis Philippe, was enlarged, embellished and renamed Chapelle royale de Dreux, becoming the necropolis for the now royal Orléans family. Marie Adélaïde did not live to see her son Louis Philippe become King of the French in 1830.

Cultural references

In the 2006 film, Marie Antoinette, Marie-Adélaïde had a minor role played by actress Aurore Clément.

Issue

 
The Duchess of Chartres by Charles Lepeintre, 1786.

The couple had six children:

  1. A daughter (died at birth, 10 October 1771)
  2. Louis Philippe d'Orléans (future King Louis Philippe I of the French), (Palais Royal, 1773–1850, Claremont) Duke of Valois (1773–1785) **Duke of Chartres (1785–1793) Duke of Orléans (1793–1830) married Maria Amalia of Naples and had issue.
  3. Louis Antoine Philippe d'Orléans, Duke of Montpensier, (Palais Royal, 1775–1807, Salthill),
  4. Françoise d'Orléans, Mademoiselle d'Orléans (Palais Royal, 1777–1782, Palais Royal), twin sister of (below),
  5. Louise Marie Adélaïde Eugénie d'Orléans, Mademoiselle de Chartres (Palais Royal, 1777–1847, Palais de Tuileries) never married.
  6. Louis Charles Alphonse Léodgard d'Orléans, Count of Beaujolais (Palais Royal, 1779–1808, Malta) never married

The painting

On the eve of the French Revolution, in 1789, she was painted by Élisabeth-Louise Vigée-Le Brun, the favourite portrait painter of Queen Marie Antoinette. The painting was titled Madame la Duchesse d'Orléans. Vigée-Le Brun made use of the lonely duchess' melancholia in the pose. Dressed in white, a reminder of her candor, the head of the duchess is supported on her upraised arm. She is shown with a languid, sad expression. Below the breast is a Wedgwood medallion which Colin Eisler has identified as Poor Maria, possibly a reference to the life of the duchess, which was later destroyed because of the Revolution. The painting is now at the Palace of Versailles. There is another copy in the musée de Longchamp, Marseille. Versailles has a third copy which has been incorrectly described as a replica.[citation needed]

Ancestry

References

  1. ^ Lenotre, G., Le Château de Rambouillet: six siècles d'histoire, Denoël, Paris, 1984, chapter 5: Le prince des pauvres, p. 71.
  2. ^ from seigneurie d'Ivoy-Carignan, books.google.com; accessed 14 April 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Castelot, André, Philippe Égalité le Régicide, éd. Jean Picollec, Paris, 1991, pp. 22–35, 73–80, 86–87, 95, 124, 206–210, 213, 271-274
  4. ^ Le quartier Montmartre, L'Histoire en Ligne (in French); accessed 14 April 2014.
  5. ^ Lenotre, p. 72.
  6. ^ Lenotre, chapter 8, L'ouragan, p. 102.
  7. ^ In 1775, the Duc de Penthièvre was to inherit the fortune and estates of his cousin, the Comte d'Eu, son of the Duc du Maine, making him the richest man in France.
  8. ^ Vous avez tort, mon cousin, lui dit-il, le duc de Chartres a un mauvais caractère, de mauvaises habitudes; c'est un libertin, votre fille ne sera pas heureuse. Ne vous pressez pas, attendez!, Castelot, p. 29.
  9. ^ Nubile
  10. ^ Delille, E. (1822). "Journal de la vie de S.A.S. Madame la Dsse. d'Orléans, douairière".
  11. ^ Memoirs of Baronne d'Oberkirch (Paris, 1869, II, 67–68)
  12. ^ Giverny Vernon Chateau; accessed 14 April 2014.
  13. ^ Vernon, France website; accessed 14 April 2014.
  14. ^ Tournai, within the Netherlands, which had become Austrian territory at the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, was occupied by French troops since 1792.
  15. ^ Étienne Léon de La Mothe-Langon, Jean Théodore Laurent-Gousse, Biographie toulousaine, ou Dictionnaire historique des personnages qui, par des vertus, des talens, des écrits, de grandes actions, des fondations utiles, des opinions singulières, des erreurs, etc. se sont rendus célèbres dans la ville de Toulouse, ou qui ont contribué à son illustration, Paris, Chez L. G. Michaud, 1823, tome 2, pp. 338–343
  16. ^ Dufresne, Claude, Les Orléans, Criterion, Paris, 1991, p. 314.
  17. ^ Upon their liberation, Montpensier and Beaujolais joined their brother Chartres in the United States until sailing for England, where they landed in January 1800 (Dufresne, pp. 325–326)
  18. ^ a b Étienne Léon de La Mothe-Langon, Jean Théodore Laurent-Gousse
  19. ^ Ivry-sur-Seine, a former village a little over 5 km south of the center of Paris, which is now a suburb of the French capital.
  20. ^ sites.google.com/site/nobleadelaides/adelaide-research
  21. ^ Adolphe Robert, Gaston Cougny, Dictionnaire des parlementaires français de 1789 à 1889, Paris, Bourloton, 1889, tome 5, de Roussin à Royer, pp. 216–217

External links

  • , madameguillotine.org.uk; accessed 16 April 2014.

louise, marie, adélaïde, bourbon, duchess, orléans, march, 1753, june, 1821, daughter, louis, jean, marie, bourbon, duke, penthièvre, princess, maria, teresa, este, death, brother, louis, alexandre, prince, lamballe, became, wealthiest, heiress, france, prior,. Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon Duchess of Orleans 13 March 1753 23 June 1821 was the daughter of Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthievre and Princess Maria Teresa d Este At the death of her brother Louis Alexandre Prince of Lamballe she became the wealthiest heiress in France prior to the French Revolution She married Louis Philippe II Duke of Orleans the regicide Philippe Egalite and was the mother of France s last king Louis Philippe I She was sister in law to Marie Therese Louise Princess of Lamballe and was the last member of the Bourbon Penthievre family Louise Marie Adelaide de BourbonDuchess of OrleansPortrait by Elisabeth Louise Vigee Le BrunBorn13 March 1753Hotel de Toulouse Paris FranceDied23 June 1821 1821 06 23 aged 68 Chateau d Ivry sur Seine FranceBurialChapelle royale de DreuxSpouseLouis Philippe II Duke of Orleans m 1769 died 1793 wbr IssueDetailLouis Philippe I King of the FrenchAntoine Philippe Duke of MontpensierFrancoise d OrleansAdelaide d OrleansLouis Charles Count of BeaujolaisHouseBourbonFatherLouis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of PenthievreMotherPrincess Maria Teresa d EsteReligionRoman Catholic Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Marriage 3 1 The Comtesse de Genlis 4 Revolution 5 Widow Egalite 6 Cultural references 7 Issue 8 The painting 9 Ancestry 10 References 11 External linksEarly life EditMarie Adelaide was born on 13 March 1753 at the Hotel de Toulouse the family residence in Paris since 1712 when her grandfather Louis Alexandre de Bourbon comte de Toulouse bought it from Louis Phelypeaux de La Vrilliere She was the youngest daughter of Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthievre and his wife Princess Maria Teresa d Este Her mother died in childbirth the following year 1 Styled Mademoiselle d Ivoy 2 initially and as a young girl until her marriage Mademoiselle de Penthievre derived from the duchy inherited by her father The style of Mademoiselle de Penthievre had been previously borne by her sister Marie Louise de Bourbon 1751 1753 who died six months after Marie Adelaide s birth Education EditAt birth she was put in the care of Madame de Sourcy and as was the custom for many girls of the nobility she was later raised at the Abbaye de Montmartre convent overlooking Paris 3 4 where she spent twelve years As a child she was encouraged to take an active part in the charities for which her father had become known as Prince of the Poor 5 His reputation for beneficence made him popular throughout France and subsequently saved him during the Revolution 6 Marriage EditUpon the death of her brother and only sibling the Prince de Lamballe on 8 May 1768 Marie Adelaide became heiress to what was to become the largest fortune of France 7 Her marriage to Louis Philippe Joseph d Orleans Duke of Chartres son of the Duke of Orleans had been envisaged earlier and while the Duke of Penthievre saw in it the opportunity for his daughter to marry the First Prince of the Blood Royal the Orleanses did not want another union with an illegitimate branch of the royal family However when the Prince de Lamballe s death left his sister sole heiress to the family fortune the bar sinister on her inescutcheon was overlooked Although Marie Adelaide was much in love with her Orleans cousin Louis XV warned Penthievre against such a marriage because of the reputation of the young Duke of Chartres as a libertine Louis XV was also fearful of the powerful leverage given the Orleans branch should it inherit the Penthievre fortune 3 You are wrong my cousin said Louis XV to Penthievre the Duke of Chartres has a bad temper bad habits he is a libertine your daughter will not be happy Do not rush wait 8 Mademoiselle de Penthievre was presented to the King on 7 December 1768 in a ceremony called de nubilite 3 9 by her maternal aunt Maria Fortunata d Este Comtesse de la Marche She was greeted by Louis XV the Dauphin and other members of the royal family On that day she was baptised by Charles Antoine de La Roche Aymon Grand Almoner of France and given the names Louise Marie Adelaide 10 Her marriage to the Duke of Chartres took place at the Palace of Versailles on 5 April 1769 in a ceremony which all of the princes du sang attended The marriage contract was signed by all members of the royal family Afterwards Louis XV hosted a wedding supper which included the entire royal family Mlle de Penthievre brought to the already wealthy House of Orleans a dowry of six million livres an annual income of 240 000 livres later increased to 400 000 and the expectation of much more upon her father s death citation needed The Comtesse de Genlis Edit La famille du Duc de Penthievre ou La tasse de chocolat painting by Jean Baptiste Charpentier le Vieux 1768 From left to right seated Duc de Penthievre prince de Lamballe Princesse de Lamballe Comtesse de Toulouse standing in background Mlle de Penthievre During the first few months of their marriage the couple appeared devoted to each other but the duke went back to the life of libertinage he had led before his marriage In the summer of 1772 a few months after his wife had given birth to a stillborn daughter Philippe s secret liaison began with one of her ladies in waiting Stephanie Felicite Ducrest de St Albin Comtesse de Genlis the niece of Madame de Montesson the morganatic wife of Philippe s father Passionate at first the liaison cooled within a few months and by the spring of 1773 was reported to be dead 3 After the romantic affair was over Felicite remained in the service of Marie Adelaide at the Palais Royal a trusted friend to both Marie Adelaide and Philippe They both appreciated her intelligence and in July 1779 she became the governess of the couple s twin daughters born in 1777 3 In 1782 the young Louis Philippe was nine and in need of discipline However the Duke of Chartres could not think of someone better qualified to turn his sons over to than Mme de Genlis Thus she became the gouverneur of the Duc and Duchesse de Chartres children Teacher and pupils left the Palais Royal and went to live in a house built specially for them on the grounds of the Couvent des Dames de Bellechasse in Paris Mme de Genlis was an excellent teacher but like those of her former lover the Duc de Chartres her liberal political views made her unpopular with Queen Marie Antoinette In the dissemination of her ideas de Genlis managed to alienate her charges from their mother citation needed Marie Adelaide began to object to the education given her children by her former lady in waiting The relationship between the two women became unbearable when Louis Philippe on 2 November 1790 one month after his seventeenth birthday joined the revolutionary Jacobin Club Marie Adelaide s relationship with her husband was also at its worst at this point and the only way the two would communicate was through letters 3 In the memoirs of the Baronne d Oberkirch Marie Adelaide is described as always wearing a melancholic expression which nothing could cure She sometimes smiled she never laughed 11 Upon the death of her father in law Louis Philippe d Orleans in November 1785 her husband became the new Duke of Orleans and First Prince of the Blood taking rank only after the immediate family of the king As the wife of a prince du sang she was entitled to be addressed as Your Serene Highness a style to which her own illegitimate branch of the Bourbons had no right Revolution EditOn 5 April 1791 Marie Adelaide left her husband 3 and went to live with her father at the chateau de Bizy 12 overlooking Vernon Eure in Normandy 13 In September 1792 having sided with the Revolution the Duke of Orleans was elected to the National Convention under the name of Philippe Egalite Siding with the radical group called La Montagne he was from the very beginning suspect in the eyes of the Girondists who wanted all the Bourbons to be banished from France The fate of the Orleans family was sealed when Marie Adelaide s eldest son the duc de Chartres General Egalite in the Army of the North commanded by Charles Francois Dumouriez sought political asylum from the Austrians in March 1793 On 6 April all the members of the Orleans family still remaining in France were arrested After their arrest in Paris Philippe Egalite and his son the comte de Beaujolais were imprisoned in the prison de l Abbaye in Paris 3 Later the two were transferred to the prison of Fort Saint Jean in Marseille where they were soon joined by the duc de Montpensier who had been arrested while serving as an officer in the Army of the Alps The day before his father and brothers were arrested in France the duc de Chartres rushed to Tournai near the French border 14 where his sister Adelaide and Mme de Genlis had been living since Philippe Egalite had made them emigrate in November 1792 The duc de Chartres accompanied them to safety in Switzerland 3 In the meantime due to her poor health Marie Adelaide was allowed to stay in France under guard at the chateau de Bizy where her father had died a month earlier Her inheritance however was confiscated by the revolutionary government Despite having voted for the death of his cousin Louis XVI of France and having denounced his son s defection Philippe Egalite was guillotined on 6 November 1793 citation needed Widow Egalite Edit The Palais du Luxembourg where Marie Adelaide was imprisoned from November 1793 to July 1794 Upon the execution of her husband Marie Adelaide now known as the Veuve Egalite Widow Egalite was incarcerated at the Luxembourg Palace which had been transformed into a prison during the Revolution There she met the man who was to become the love of her life a former member of the National Convention named Jacques Marie Rouzet 15 who had been imprisoned at the fall of the Girondins Nearly executed before the fall of Robespierre in July 1794 at the end of the Reign of Terror she was transferred to the Pension Belhomme a former mental institution turned into a prison for the rich during the Revolution 16 After Rouzet who after his liberation had become a member of the Council of Five Hundred succeeded in 1796 to secure her liberation and that of her two sons still imprisoned in Marseille 17 the two always remained together and lived in Paris until 1797 when a decree banished the remaining members of the House of Bourbon from France Marie Adelaide was exiled to Spain as was her sister in law Bathilde d Orleans the last princesse de Conde Rouzet accompanied them to the Spanish border and managed to secretly join them in Barcelona where he became her chancellor and she obtained for him the title of comte de Folmont 18 Marie Adelaide was never to see her two younger sons again Montpensier and Beaujolais who died in exile before the 1814 Bourbon Restoration She Rouzet and the Orleans exiled in Spain returned to France in 1814 at the time of the first Bourbon Restoration After legal battles which lasted until her death the bulk of her inheritance was eventually recovered She died in her castle at Ivry sur Seine 19 on 23 June 1821 after battling breast cancer 20 Rouzet had died nine months before on 25 October 1820 and she had him inhumed in the new family chapel she had built in Dreux in 1816 as the final resting place for the two families Bourbon Penthievre and Orleans 18 21 The original Bourbon Penthievre family crypt in the Collegiale de Saint Etienne de Dreux had been violated during the Revolution and the bodies thrown together into a grave in the Chanoines Cemetery of the Collegiale She was buried in the new chapel which after the accession to the throne of her son Louis Philippe was enlarged embellished and renamed Chapelle royale de Dreux becoming the necropolis for the now royal Orleans family Marie Adelaide did not live to see her son Louis Philippe become King of the French in 1830 Cultural references EditIn the 2006 film Marie Antoinette Marie Adelaide had a minor role played by actress Aurore Clement Issue Edit The Duchess of Chartres by Charles Lepeintre 1786 The couple had six children A daughter died at birth 10 October 1771 Louis Philippe d Orleans future King Louis Philippe I of the French Palais Royal 1773 1850 Claremont Duke of Valois 1773 1785 Duke of Chartres 1785 1793 Duke of Orleans 1793 1830 married Maria Amalia of Naples and had issue Louis Antoine Philippe d Orleans Duke of Montpensier Palais Royal 1775 1807 Salthill Francoise d Orleans Mademoiselle d Orleans Palais Royal 1777 1782 Palais Royal twin sister of below Louise Marie Adelaide Eugenie d Orleans Mademoiselle de Chartres Palais Royal 1777 1847 Palais de Tuileries never married Louis Charles Alphonse Leodgard d Orleans Count of Beaujolais Palais Royal 1779 1808 Malta never marriedThe painting EditOn the eve of the French Revolution in 1789 she was painted by Elisabeth Louise Vigee Le Brun the favourite portrait painter of Queen Marie Antoinette The painting was titled Madame la Duchesse d Orleans Vigee Le Brun made use of the lonely duchess melancholia in the pose Dressed in white a reminder of her candor the head of the duchess is supported on her upraised arm She is shown with a languid sad expression Below the breast is a Wedgwood medallion which Colin Eisler has identified as Poor Maria possibly a reference to the life of the duchess which was later destroyed because of the Revolution The painting is now at the Palace of Versailles There is another copy in the musee de Longchamp Marseille Versailles has a third copy which has been incorrectly described as a replica citation needed Ancestry EditAncestors of Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon Duchess of Orleans8 Louis XIV of France4 Louis Alexandre Count of Toulouse9 Madame de Montespan2 Louis Jean Marie Duke of Penthievre10 Anne Jules duc de Noailles5 Marie Victoire de Noailles11 Marie Francoise de Bournonville1 Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon12 Rinaldo d Este Duke of Modena6 Francesco III d Este Duke of Modena13 Charlotte Felicitas of Brunswick3 Maria Teresa Felicitas d Este14 Philippe II Duke of Orleans7 Charlotte Aglae d Orleans15 Francoise Marie de BourbonReferences Edit Biography portal Europe portal Lenotre G Le Chateau de Rambouillet six siecles d histoire Denoel Paris 1984 chapter 5 Le prince des pauvres p 71 from seigneurie d Ivoy Carignan books google com accessed 14 April 2014 a b c d e f g h i Castelot Andre Philippe Egalite le Regicide ed Jean Picollec Paris 1991 pp 22 35 73 80 86 87 95 124 206 210 213 271 274 Le quartier Montmartre L Histoire en Ligne in French accessed 14 April 2014 Lenotre p 72 Lenotre chapter 8 L ouragan p 102 In 1775 the Duc de Penthievre was to inherit the fortune and estates of his cousin the Comte d Eu son of the Duc du Maine making him the richest man in France Vous avez tort mon cousin lui dit il le duc de Chartres a un mauvais caractere de mauvaises habitudes c est un libertin votre fille ne sera pas heureuse Ne vous pressez pas attendez Castelot p 29 Nubile Delille E 1822 Journal de la vie de S A S Madame la Dsse d Orleans douairiere Memoirs of Baronne d Oberkirch Paris 1869 II 67 68 Giverny Vernon Chateau accessed 14 April 2014 Vernon France website accessed 14 April 2014 Tournai within the Netherlands which had become Austrian territory at the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 was occupied by French troops since 1792 Etienne Leon de La Mothe Langon Jean Theodore Laurent Gousse Biographie toulousaine ou Dictionnaire historique des personnages qui par des vertus des talens des ecrits de grandes actions des fondations utiles des opinions singulieres des erreurs etc se sont rendus celebres dans la ville de Toulouse ou qui ont contribue a son illustration Paris Chez L G Michaud 1823 tome 2 pp 338 343 Dufresne Claude Les Orleans Criterion Paris 1991 p 314 Upon their liberation Montpensier and Beaujolais joined their brother Chartres in the United States until sailing for England where they landed in January 1800 Dufresne pp 325 326 a b Etienne Leon de La Mothe Langon Jean Theodore Laurent Gousse Ivry sur Seine a former village a little over 5 km south of the center of Paris which is now a suburb of the French capital sites google com site nobleadelaides adelaide research Adolphe Robert Gaston Cougny Dictionnaire des parlementaires francais de 1789 a 1889 Paris Bourloton 1889 tome 5 de Roussin a Royer pp 216 217External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon Profile madameguillotine org uk accessed 16 April 2014 Titles and SuccessionLouise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon Duchess of OrleansHouse of Bourbon PenthievreCadet branch of the House of BourbonBorn 13 March 1753 Died 27 June 1821French nobilityPreceded byN A Mademoiselle d Ivoy1753 1769 Succeeded byN APreceded byMarie Louise de Bourbon Mademoiselle de Penthievre1753 1769 Succeeded byN APreceded byLouis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthievre Countess of Euwith Louis Philippe Joseph d Orleans1769 1821 Succeeded byHouse of OrleansPreceded byLouis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthievre Duchess of Aumale1793 1821 Succeeded byLouis Phillipe d OrleansPreceded byLouise Henriette de Bourbon Duchess of Chartresas spouse of Duke of Chartres1769 1785 Succeeded byPrincess Francoise Marie d OrleansPreceded byLouise Henriette de Bourbon Duchess of Orleansas spouse of Duke of Orleans1785 1793 Succeeded byPrincess Maria Amalia of the Two Siciliesafter the RevolutionPreceded byLouise Henriette de Bourbon Madame la Princesse1785 1793 Succeeded byRevolutionItalian royaltyPreceded byLouis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthievre Princess of Carignan1793 1821 Succeeded byHouse of OrleansNotes The title of Duchess of Aumale was passed from her father to her The title had been held by her grandfather s brother Louis Auguste de Bourbon duc du Maine It was then sold to Louis XV of France then to her father The title of Princess of Carignan was sold to her father by the Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia Duke of Savoy in 1751 because the Duke needed money to pay his debts It bears the name of the town of Carignano in Piedmont Italy The title was passed onto Louise Marie Adelaide through inheritance She held the title in her own right Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon Duchess of Orleans amp oldid 1093424339, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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