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Monsieur d'Orléans

Monsieur d'Orléans (16 April 1607 – 17 November 1611) was the second son and fourth child of Henry IV of France and his consort, Marie de' Medici. Commonly ascribed the names Nicolas or Nicolas Henri and the title Duke of Orléans, he was neither baptised nor invested as such during the course of his short life.

Monsieur d'Orléans
Duke of Orleans
An undated sketch of Monsieur d'Orléans.
Born(1607-04-16)16 April 1607
Château de Fontainebleau
Died17 November 1611(1611-11-17) (aged 4)
Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye
Burial25 November 1611
HouseBourbon
FatherHenry IV of France
MotherMarie de' Medici

He was betrothed to Marie de Bourbon-Montpensier, heiress to vast lands of the extended House of Bourbon. After his father's death in 1610, he was heir presumptive to his older brother, Louis XIII. Of frail health, he died of seizures brought on by hydrocephalus at the age of four, whereupon his title and betrothal were transferred to Gaston, his younger brother.

Biography edit

Birth and name edit

Marie de' Medici gave birth to her fourth child, a son, at the Palace of Fontainebleau. Like all of her other children, he was born in the Oval room, later called the "Louis XIII salon".[1] Born at 22:00 on 16 April 1607, the day after Easter, the prince's birth was a source of tremendous joy for his father, King Henry. His newborn son was said to resemble him, possessing the same large nose and "sparkle of his father's eyes".[2]

At his birth, Henry bestowed upon his son 10,000 Lt in land revenue, adding that he would be granted an annuity provided that he should serve his brother, the Dauphin, well. As it had become customary for the second son of the king to receive the title of Duke of Orléans, news of the young prince's birth described him as "Monsieur d'Orléans". Henry expressed no desire for this to be retracted, but specified that his son will only be styled as such, not invested.[3]

Monsieur d'Orléans, as he was henceforth known, was never invested as Duke of Orléans and never baptised; thus, he was never given a name. It was not uncommon in the French royal family for children to be baptised when they were much older: the Dauphin himself had only been baptised in September 1606, when he was almost 5.[4] This lack of a name is also evidenced by his death register, which only records him as "Monseigneur le duc d'Orléans".[5] He was similarly referred to by his doctor during his final illness, where no name was mentioned.[6]

In his genealogy of French royalty, Père Anselme refers to Monsieur d'Orléans as "N... de France, duc d'Orléans".[7] While "N..." initially meant "unnamed" (French: non-nommé), it has since been erroneously transcribed as Nicolas. This error, though noted by numerous historians, including Georges Lacour-Gayet,[8] Eudore Soulié and Édouard de Barthélemy,[9] seems to have been repeated by means of biographers copying the child's supposed name from other biographers.[10][11]

Life edit

 
Henry IV and his family, around 1607, attributed Frans Pourbus the Younger. Monsieur d'Orléans is depicted in a cradle behind his parents.

The playwright François Tristan l'Hermite, who, as a youngster, lived at the court of Henry IV and was often called upon to read stories to the king's own children, described Monsieur d'Orléans as extremely handsome, intelligent, sharp-witted and prone to taking pity on those around him. Once, when recounting Aesop's The Wolf and the Lamb to Monsieur, the young prince was disturbed at the thought of the wolf eating the lamb, and implored l'Hermite to stop. This touched all those present, prompting l'Hermite to change the ending of the fable. Deeply moved, l'Hermite would later describe Monsieur d'Orléans as "a divine flower" and "an incomparable wonder".[12]

In 1608, Monsieur's father, Henry IV, intended to betroth him to the slightly older Marie de Bourbon-Montpensier, who was one of the greatest heiresses of her time, having inherited numerous titles and lands on the death of her father, Henri, Duke of Montpensier.[13] Her mother, Henriette Catherine de Joyeuse, herself a rich heiress, held a high position at court as the recently widowed and wealthy mother of a princesse du sang.[14] In 1610, Henry IV was stabbed to death by a Catholic fanatic in Paris and the Dauphin succeeded as Louis XIII, with Queen Marie as regent. As the second son, Monsieur became heir presumptive to the French throne, a position he held until his death.

Health and death edit

Monsieur's health was delicate from infancy. In September 1607, one of his nursemaids died of the plague; soon afterwards, he was discovered to be feverish, but seems to have recovered quickly.[15] Louis Batiffol, Marie de' Medici's biographer, describes Monsieur as frail, with a large head set atop a very thin body, stating that he "suffered from his first days" and "dragged on in constant suffering".[16]

In November 1611, Monsieur was taken ill with seizures at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, which lasted a few days. Louis XIII was brought to visit his brother and, upon seeing him, Monsieur reportedly said: "you honour me too greatly to have come to see me". The young king ran out of the room in tears and refused to enter again.[17] Some time in the next days, Monsieur reported that a white angel had visited him and told him that his father wished to see him. After a series of seizures, he died between midnight and 1:00 on the morning of 17 November.[17] The following day, the body of Monsieur d'Orléans was subjected to an autopsy, which revealed that his brain was of a soft consistency, filled with water and pus.[18] The liquid present in his brain was judged to be the cause of his seizures. He was, otherwise, in perfect physical health.[19]

After the autopsy, Monsieur's body was sent to the Basilica of Saint-Denis, where it lay in state until 25 November, when he was buried there.[5] After his death, the duchy of Orléans was awarded to his younger brother, Gaston. In order to honour the terms of the betrothal, Marie de Bourbon-Montpensier herself was eventually married to Gaston, the new Duke of Orléans.[14]

Titles and styles edit

Although never formally invested as such, Monsieur d'Orléans was styled as duc d'Orléans[20] and had the distinction of being a fils de France (son of France).[21]

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Carmona 1981, p. 51.
  2. ^ de Malherbe 1862, p. 33.
  3. ^ de Malherbe 1862, pp. 32–3.
  4. ^ L'Estoile 1761, p. 124.
  5. ^ a b "Communal Register of Saint-Germain-en-Laye". Yvelines. Yvelines département. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  6. ^ Le Maistre 1616, p. 2.
  7. ^ Anselme de Sainte-Marie 1712, p. 83.
  8. ^ Lacour-Gayet 1898, p. 254.
  9. ^ Soulié & de Barthélemy 1868, p. 258.
  10. ^ Delorme 1998, p. 321.
  11. ^ de Montjouvent 1999, p. 318-20.
  12. ^ l'Hermite 1898, pp. 30–5.
  13. ^ Duerloo 2012, p. 230.
  14. ^ a b Spangler, Richards & Munns 2015, p. 131.
  15. ^ de Malherbe 1862, p. 48.
  16. ^ Batiffol 1931, p. 278.
  17. ^ a b Héroard 1989, p. 1971.
  18. ^ Batiffol 1931, p. 279.
  19. ^ Héroard 1989, p. 1972.
  20. ^ Carmona 1981, p. 85.
  21. ^ de Montjouvent 1999, p. 19.

Bibliography edit

  • Anselme de Sainte-Marie (1712). Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: M. Guignard & C. Robustel.
  • Batiffol, Louis (1931). La vie intime d'une reine de France au xviie siècle : Marie de Médicis (in French). Paris: Calmann-Lévy.
  • Carmona, Michel (1981). Marie de Médicis (in French). Paris: La Grand livre du mois. ISBN 2-7028-6727-8.
  • Delorme, Philippe (1998). Marie de Médicis (in French). Paris: Éditions Pygmalion. ISBN 2-85704-553-0.
  • Duerloo, Luc (2012). Dynasty and Piety: Archduke Albert (1598-1621) and Habsburg Political. Routledge.
  • l'Hermite, Tristan François (1898). Le page disgracié (in French). Paris: Éditions Plon.
  • Héroard, Jean (1989). Journal de Jean Héroard, médecin de Louis XIII (in French). Paris: Fayard. ISBN 2-21302-349-2.
  • Lacour-Gayet, Georges (1898). Revue critique d'histoire et de littérature (in French). Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Le Maistre, Rodolphe (1616). La Santé du Prince ou le soing qu'on y doibt observer (in French). Paris.
  • L'Estoile, Pierre (1761). Journal du règne de Henri IV roi de France et de Navarre (in French). Vol. 3. Paris: La Haye.
  • de Malherbe, François (1862). Œuvres de Malherbe: Préface (in French). Paris: L. Hachette et cie.
  • de Montjouvent, Philippe (1999). Éphéméride de la Maison de France de 1589 à 1848 : Henri IV et ses descendants (in French). Charenton: Éditions du Chaney. ISBN 2-913211-01-1.
  • Soulié, Eudore; de Barthélemy, Édouard (1868). Journal de Jean Héroard sur l'enfance et la jeunesse de Louis XIII (in French). Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Spangler, Jonathan W.; Richards, Penny; Munns, Jessica, eds. (2015). Aspiration, Representation and Memory: The Guise in Europe, 1506–1688. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4724-1934-7.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Nicolas Henri, Duke of Orléans at Wikimedia Commons
Monsieur d'Orléans
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 16 April 1607 Died: 17 November 1611
French royalty
Preceded by
First
Heir to the Throne
as Heir presumptive
14 May 1610 — 17 November 1611
Succeeded by
French nobility
Vacant
Title last held by
Alexandre Édouard de Valois
Duke of Orléans
1607–1611
Succeeded by

monsieur, orléans, april, 1607, november, 1611, second, fourth, child, henry, france, consort, marie, medici, commonly, ascribed, names, nicolas, nicolas, henri, title, duke, orléans, neither, baptised, invested, such, during, course, short, life, duke, orlean. Monsieur d Orleans 16 April 1607 17 November 1611 was the second son and fourth child of Henry IV of France and his consort Marie de Medici Commonly ascribed the names Nicolas or Nicolas Henri and the title Duke of Orleans he was neither baptised nor invested as such during the course of his short life Monsieur d OrleansDuke of OrleansAn undated sketch of Monsieur d Orleans Born 1607 04 16 16 April 1607Chateau de FontainebleauDied17 November 1611 1611 11 17 aged 4 Chateau de Saint Germain en LayeBurial25 November 1611Basilica of Saint DenisHouseBourbonFatherHenry IV of FranceMotherMarie de MediciHe was betrothed to Marie de Bourbon Montpensier heiress to vast lands of the extended House of Bourbon After his father s death in 1610 he was heir presumptive to his older brother Louis XIII Of frail health he died of seizures brought on by hydrocephalus at the age of four whereupon his title and betrothal were transferred to Gaston his younger brother Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Birth and name 1 2 Life 1 3 Health and death 2 Titles and styles 3 Ancestry 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksBiography editBirth and name edit Marie de Medici gave birth to her fourth child a son at the Palace of Fontainebleau Like all of her other children he was born in the Oval room later called the Louis XIII salon 1 Born at 22 00 on 16 April 1607 the day after Easter the prince s birth was a source of tremendous joy for his father King Henry His newborn son was said to resemble him possessing the same large nose and sparkle of his father s eyes 2 At his birth Henry bestowed upon his son 10 000 Lt in land revenue adding that he would be granted an annuity provided that he should serve his brother the Dauphin well As it had become customary for the second son of the king to receive the title of Duke of Orleans news of the young prince s birth described him as Monsieur d Orleans Henry expressed no desire for this to be retracted but specified that his son will only be styled as such not invested 3 Monsieur d Orleans as he was henceforth known was never invested as Duke of Orleans and never baptised thus he was never given a name It was not uncommon in the French royal family for children to be baptised when they were much older the Dauphin himself had only been baptised in September 1606 when he was almost 5 4 This lack of a name is also evidenced by his death register which only records him as Monseigneur le duc d Orleans 5 He was similarly referred to by his doctor during his final illness where no name was mentioned 6 In his genealogy of French royalty Pere Anselme refers to Monsieur d Orleans as N de France duc d Orleans 7 While N initially meant unnamed French non nomme it has since been erroneously transcribed as Nicolas This error though noted by numerous historians including Georges Lacour Gayet 8 Eudore Soulie and Edouard de Barthelemy 9 seems to have been repeated by means of biographers copying the child s supposed name from other biographers 10 11 Life edit nbsp Henry IV and his family around 1607 attributed Frans Pourbus the Younger Monsieur d Orleans is depicted in a cradle behind his parents The playwright Francois Tristan l Hermite who as a youngster lived at the court of Henry IV and was often called upon to read stories to the king s own children described Monsieur d Orleans as extremely handsome intelligent sharp witted and prone to taking pity on those around him Once when recounting Aesop s The Wolf and the Lamb to Monsieur the young prince was disturbed at the thought of the wolf eating the lamb and implored l Hermite to stop This touched all those present prompting l Hermite to change the ending of the fable Deeply moved l Hermite would later describe Monsieur d Orleans as a divine flower and an incomparable wonder 12 In 1608 Monsieur s father Henry IV intended to betroth him to the slightly older Marie de Bourbon Montpensier who was one of the greatest heiresses of her time having inherited numerous titles and lands on the death of her father Henri Duke of Montpensier 13 Her mother Henriette Catherine de Joyeuse herself a rich heiress held a high position at court as the recently widowed and wealthy mother of a princesse du sang 14 In 1610 Henry IV was stabbed to death by a Catholic fanatic in Paris and the Dauphin succeeded as Louis XIII with Queen Marie as regent As the second son Monsieur became heir presumptive to the French throne a position he held until his death Health and death edit Monsieur s health was delicate from infancy In September 1607 one of his nursemaids died of the plague soon afterwards he was discovered to be feverish but seems to have recovered quickly 15 Louis Batiffol Marie de Medici s biographer describes Monsieur as frail with a large head set atop a very thin body stating that he suffered from his first days and dragged on in constant suffering 16 In November 1611 Monsieur was taken ill with seizures at the Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye which lasted a few days Louis XIII was brought to visit his brother and upon seeing him Monsieur reportedly said you honour me too greatly to have come to see me The young king ran out of the room in tears and refused to enter again 17 Some time in the next days Monsieur reported that a white angel had visited him and told him that his father wished to see him After a series of seizures he died between midnight and 1 00 on the morning of 17 November 17 The following day the body of Monsieur d Orleans was subjected to an autopsy which revealed that his brain was of a soft consistency filled with water and pus 18 The liquid present in his brain was judged to be the cause of his seizures He was otherwise in perfect physical health 19 After the autopsy Monsieur s body was sent to the Basilica of Saint Denis where it lay in state until 25 November when he was buried there 5 After his death the duchy of Orleans was awarded to his younger brother Gaston In order to honour the terms of the betrothal Marie de Bourbon Montpensier herself was eventually married to Gaston the new Duke of Orleans 14 Titles and styles editAlthough never formally invested as such Monsieur d Orleans was styled as duc d Orleans 20 and had the distinction of being a fils de France son of France 21 Ancestry editAncestors of Monsieur d Orleans8 Charles Duke of Vendome4 Antoine of Navarre9 Francoise of Alencon2 Henry IV of France10 Henry II of Navarre5 Jeanne III of Navarre11 Marguerite of Angouleme1 Nicolas Henri of France12 Cosimo I de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany6 Francesco I de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany13 Eleanor of Toledo3 Marie de Medici14 Ferdinand I Holy Roman Emperor7 Joanna of Austria15 Anne of Bohemia and HungaryReferences edit nbsp Biography portal Carmona 1981 p 51 de Malherbe 1862 p 33 de Malherbe 1862 pp 32 3 L Estoile 1761 p 124 a b Communal Register of Saint Germain en Laye Yvelines Yvelines departement Retrieved 10 March 2021 Le Maistre 1616 p 2 Anselme de Sainte Marie 1712 p 83 Lacour Gayet 1898 p 254 Soulie amp de Barthelemy 1868 p 258 Delorme 1998 p 321 de Montjouvent 1999 p 318 20 l Hermite 1898 pp 30 5 Duerloo 2012 p 230 a b Spangler Richards amp Munns 2015 p 131 de Malherbe 1862 p 48 Batiffol 1931 p 278 a b Heroard 1989 p 1971 Batiffol 1931 p 279 Heroard 1989 p 1972 Carmona 1981 p 85 de Montjouvent 1999 p 19 Bibliography editAnselme de Sainte Marie 1712 Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France in French Vol 1 Paris M Guignard amp C Robustel Batiffol Louis 1931 La vie intime d une reine de France au xviie siecle Marie de Medicis in French Paris Calmann Levy Carmona Michel 1981 Marie de Medicis in French Paris La Grand livre du mois ISBN 2 7028 6727 8 Delorme Philippe 1998 Marie de Medicis in French Paris Editions Pygmalion ISBN 2 85704 553 0 Duerloo Luc 2012 Dynasty and Piety Archduke Albert 1598 1621 and Habsburg Political Routledge l Hermite Tristan Francois 1898 Le page disgracie in French Paris Editions Plon Heroard Jean 1989 Journal de Jean Heroard medecin de Louis XIII in French Paris Fayard ISBN 2 21302 349 2 Lacour Gayet Georges 1898 Revue critique d histoire et de litterature in French Paris a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Le Maistre Rodolphe 1616 La Sante du Prince ou le soing qu on y doibt observer in French Paris L Estoile Pierre 1761 Journal du regne de Henri IV roi de France et de Navarre in French Vol 3 Paris La Haye de Malherbe Francois 1862 Œuvres de Malherbe Preface in French Paris L Hachette et cie de Montjouvent Philippe 1999 Ephemeride de la Maison de France de 1589 a 1848 Henri IV et ses descendants in French Charenton Editions du Chaney ISBN 2 913211 01 1 Soulie Eudore de Barthelemy Edouard 1868 Journal de Jean Heroard sur l enfance et la jeunesse de Louis XIII in French Paris a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Spangler Jonathan W Richards Penny Munns Jessica eds 2015 Aspiration Representation and Memory The Guise in Europe 1506 1688 Farnham Surrey Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1 4724 1934 7 External links edit nbsp Media related to Nicolas Henri Duke of Orleans at Wikimedia CommonsMonsieur d OrleansHouse of BourbonCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyBorn 16 April 1607 Died 17 November 1611French royaltyPreceded byFirst Heir to the Throneas Heir presumptive 14 May 1610 17 November 1611 Succeeded byGaston Duke of AnjouFrench nobilityVacantTitle last held byAlexandre Edouard de Valois Duke of Orleans1607 1611 Succeeded byGaston de France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monsieur d 27Orleans amp oldid 1177991056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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