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Orléanist

Orléanist (French: Orléaniste) was a 19th-century French political label originally used by those who supported a constitutional monarchy expressed by the House of Orléans.[1] Due to the radical political changes that occurred during that century in France, three different phases of Orléanism can be identified:

  • The "pure" Orléanism: constituted by those who supported the constitutional reign of Louis Philippe I (1830–1848) after the 1830 July Revolution, and who showed liberal and moderate ideas.[2]
  • The "fusionist" (or "unionist") Orléanism: the movement formed by pure Orléanists and by those Legitimists who after the childless death of Henri, Count of Chambord in 1883 endorsed Philippe, Count of Paris, grandson of Louis Philippe, as his successor.[3] The fusion drove the Orleanist movement to more conservative stances, emphasising French nationality (rejecting claims to France of the Spanish Bourbons on account of their "foreigness") and Catholicism.[4]
  • The "progressive" Orléanism: the majority of "fusionists" who, after the decline of monarchist sentiment in the 1890s, joined into moderate republicans, who showed progressive and secular-minded goals,[5] or into Catholic rally, like the Liberal Action.[6]
Coat of arms of the House of Orléans at the start of the July Monarchy

Orleanism was opposed by the two other monarchist trends: the more conservative Legitimism that was loyal to the eldest branch of the House of Bourbon after 1830, and the Bonapartism that supported Napoleon’s legacy and heirs.

Under the July Monarchy edit

 
Louis Philippe portrait by Winterhalter

On 26 July 1830, the revolution of the so-called Three Glorious Days (or July Revolution) erupted due to the authoritarian and anti-Gallican tendencies showed by Charles X and his Prime Minister Jules de Polignac, expressed by the recently approved Saint-Cloud Ordinances.[7][8] Despite the abdication of Charles X and the Dauphin Louis in favor to Charles X's grandson Henri, Duke of Bordeaux, on 2 August 1830, only seven days later Louis Philippe I, still Duke of Orléans, was elected by the Chamber of Deputies as new "King of the French".[9] The enthronement of Louis Philippe was strongly wanted by Doctrinaires, the liberal opposition to Charles X's ministries, under the concept "nationalize the monarchy and royalize France".[10] On 14 August 1830, the Chamber approved a new Constitution, who became the de facto political manifesto for the Orléanists, containing the basis for a constitutional monarchy with a central Parliament. The Orléanism, became the dominant tendency within political life, easily divided inside the Chamber of Deputies between the centre-left of Adolphe Thiers[11] and the centre-right of François Guizot.[12] Louis Philippe showed himself more aligned with Guizot, entrusted to the higher offices of government, and rapidly became associated with the rising "new men" of the banks, industries and finance,[13] gaining the epithet of "Roi bourgeois".[14] In the early 1840s, Louis Philippe's popularity decreased, due to his strong connection to upper classes and repression against workers' strikes, and showed few concerns for his weakened position, leading the writer Victor Hugo to describe him as "a man with many little qualities".[15] The Orléanist regime finally fell in 1848, when a revolution erupted and on 24 February Louis Philippe abdicated in favor to his grandson Philippe, Count of Paris, under regency of his mother Helene, Duchess of Orléans, who was quickly ousted out from the Chamber of Deputies during the regency's formalization, who was interrupted by republican deputies who instead proclaimed the Second Republic.[16]

After 18 years of reign, Louis Philippe left the Orléanist base well-defined inside the magistrature, the press, universities and academies, especially the Académie française.[6] However, also some great aristocratic families joined the court, like the Dukes of Broglie,[17] as well former Bonapartist officers like the Marshal Soult and Édouard Mortier. This establishment constituted the majority of the Party of Order, led by Thiers, who represented the conservatives and monarchists under the Second Republic.[18]

Under the Third Republic edit

Fusion and restoration project edit

Electoral results
Year No. of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
No. of
overall seats won
National Assembly
1871 Unknown (1st) 33.5%
214 / 638
Chamber of Deputies
1876 554,117 (6th) 7.5%
40 / 533
1877 169,834 (5th) 2.1%
11 / 521
1881 552,971 (5th) 7.7%
42 / 545
1885 991,188 (4th) 12.2%
73 / 584
1889 994,173 (4th) 12.5%
72 / 576
1893 816,789 (3rd) 10.5%
63 / 574
1898 607,960 (5th) 7.5%
44 / 585
 
The Duke of Orléans, son of the Count of Paris, espoused conservative stances, also reviving the Order of the Holy Spirit to support his claim.[19]
 
Satirical cartoon of 1871: Orléanists stand on the ruined December Empire and attempt to enter the "Défense Nationale" building, while Adolphe Thiers looks on.

Orléanism revived after the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871 which caused the fall of the Second Empire which had succeeded to the Second Republic under Emperor Napoleon III, the former president of France who had been enthroned after the coup d'état of 1851.[6] The Second Empire was succeeded itself officially in 1871 by the Third Republic. A National Assembly, composed by 638 on 778 seats, was formed and new elections were called for the 8 February of the same year, which resulted in a victory for the monarchist right: 396 seats won, divided to 214 Orléanists and 182 Legitimists, nicknamed "cavalrymen".[20] Initially divided about the dynastic issue, the Orléanists found a compromise with the Legitimists, supporting the rights of Henri, Count of Chambord (former Duke of Bordeaux, currently childless) in return of the recognition of the Count of Paris as his heir, echoing an 1862 statement of Chambord.[21] Although Chambord never mentioned the Count of Paris as his heir, probably fearing the defection of his ultraconservative supporters,[22] the informal agreement sanctioned the "fusion" of Legitimists and Orléanists, who quite easily formed a conservative coalition. The monarchist majority, led by the Duke of Aumale (son of Louis Philippe), and the centre-left endorsed the centre-right candidate Thiers as president of the Republic, but due to the continued arguments between Legitimists and Orléanists and the memory of the dynastic divisions of the past 40 years, Thiers moved to support a "conservative republic" instead of a divided monarchy.[23]

Due to Chambord's dislike toward Aumale,[24] the "fusionists" rapidly passed under the leadership of the Duke of Broglie, who in 1873 successfully managed the election of President Patrice de MacMahon, former general and national hero who showed Legitimist sympathies, considering him as a kind of "lieutenant-general of the kingdom" before the fully restoration of Chambord on the throne.[25] Broglie was shortly after awarded with the premiership by MacMahon, supported by monarchists and the centre-right. Restoration appeared imminent when a parliamentary commission was established in October 1873 to adopt a monarchist constitution. But in the same month the majority was weakened by the refusal of Chambord to accept the French Tricolour, used since 1830, preferring instead the return of the royal white flag, symbol of the Ancien Régime.[24] The question was apparently resolved with a compromise between Broglie and Chambord: the last will accept the tricolour flag while a future agreement about a new flag will be considered. In October the majority was shocked when the centre-right representative Charles Savary rashly misinformed the press of Chambord's full acceptance of the tricolour flag,[24]. The pretender had to harshly clarify his position, causing the left of the centre-right, Orléanists disappointment and the dissolution of the "restoration" commission on 31 October 1873. A last attempt by Chambord was made on 12 November, when he asked President MacMahon via the Duke of Blacas to join with him into the National Assembly and spoke toward the representatives, hoping to convince them to restore the monarchy, but MacMahon refused due to his institutional position, toward he was formally even if not ideologically attached, causing the project's failure.[26] Due to the impossibility to restore the monarchy in a short time, the Orléanists waited the death of the sickly Chambord, occurred in 1883, but by that time, enthusiasm for a monarchy had faded, and as a result the Count of Paris was never offered the French throne.[27]

The monarchists, however, still controlled the National Assembly, and under MacMahon's partisan presidency they launched the so-called "moral order government", in reference to the Paris Commune, whose political and social innovations were viewed as morally degenerate by large conservative segments of the French population.[28] In February 1875, a series of parliamentary acts established the constitutional laws of the new republic. At its head was a President of the Republic. A two-chamber parliament consisting of a directly elected Chamber of Deputies and an indirectly-elected Senate was created, along with a ministry under the President of the council (prime minister), who was nominally answerable to both the President of the Republic and the legislature. Throughout the 1870s, the issue of whether a monarchy should replace the republic dominated public debate. On 16 May 1877, with public opinion swinging heavily in favour of a republic after the election of March, President MacMahon made one last desperate attempt to salvage the monarchical cause by dismissing the "conservative republican" prime minister Jules Simon and appointing the Duke of Broglie to office. He then dissolved parliament and called a general election for the following October. If his hope had been to halt the move towards republicanism, it backfired spectacularly, with the president being accused of having staged a constitutional coup d'état known as "16 May Crisis" after the date on which it happened. Republicans returned triumphantly after the October elections for the Chamber of Deputies. The crisis ultimately sealed the defeat of the royalist movement, and was instrumental in creating the conditions of the longevity of the Third Republic:[29] in January 1879 the Republicans gained control of the Senate, formerly monopolized by monarchists. MacMahon himself resigned on 30 January 1879, leaving a seriously weakened presidency in the hands of Jules Grévy, leader of the Republican Left.[30][31]

The end of the presidency of MacMahon and the Senate's loss caused the end of the monarchist bloc. Although there were Orléanist deputies in the Chamber for all the 19th century, they were only a minority. At the end, many monarchists accepted the republic, moving toward the centre. Some Orléanists, especially from their bourgeoise core base, accepted the republic even since the 1870s, like Thiers and press baron Émile de Girardin. In 1892, after Pope Leo XIII's approval to the Third Republic, breaking the historical alliance between Church and Crown,[32] some monarchists led by Orléanist Jacques Piou and Legitimist Albert de Mun formed the group of the "ralliés" ("supporters"), that in 1901 constituted the base of the first Christian Democratic party in France, the Liberal Action,[33] while many other royalists were still attached to the Crown.

Association with the far-right edit

 
Charles Maurras in 1937

The elections of 1898 confirmed the exclusion of the monarchists from any possible government. However, 4 years earlier, the Dreyfus affair shook public opinion, dividing the republican camp: socialists, radicals and liberals defended the innocence of Dreyfus,[34] while other republicans joined the nationalists and monarchists against Dreyfus.[35] The election also introduced 10 overtly anti-Semitic representatives, led by Édouard Drumont.[36] The following year, on 20 June 1899, the academic Henri Vaugeois and journalist Maurice Pujo founded the nationalist association Action française, initially absent of any specific ideology.[6] However, the Action was joined by many Catholics and monarchists who were anti-Dreyfus, contributing to the move of the association toward the right. Particularly, the adhesion of Charles Maurras, considered a "pragmatic" anti-Dreyfusard rather than a true anti-Semite,[37] contributed to the creation of the ideology of the Action, which rapidly became the main monarchist group. Maurras, despite becoming the movement's ideologist, supported not a classical monarchy on religious term (divine right) but a positivist one, stating that a monarchy would grant more order and stability than a parliamentary republic.[6] The largest group of French monarchists, after the death of Chambord in 1883, endorsed the Count of Paris until his death in 1894, recognizing the claim of his son Philippe, Duke of Orléans, who was also supported by the Action.[6] However, monarchism inside the Action was always integrated secondary to its semi-official ideology of "integral nationalism" theorized by Maurras,[38] and many Action activists were still republicans, like the founder Vaugeois.[6] The movement grew to be one of the largest organizations in France, but in 1926 a condemnation from Pope Pius XI against the Action caused the defection of many Catholic sympathizers. The Pope judged that it was folly for the French Church to continue to tie its fortunes to the unlikely dream of a monarchist restoration, and distrusted the movement's tendency to defend the Catholic religion in merely utilitarian and nationalistic terms,[39] and the Action Française never recovered from the condemnation.[40]

By 1934, the Action was still a considerable force, with over 60,000 members across France.[41] In that year, they joined other far-right leagues on 6 February demonstrations against political corruption and the Parliament, causing the resignation of Prime Minister Édouard Daladier the day after and provoking fear of a nationalist coup d'état.[42] The papal condemnation, the aggressive tactics, and Maurras's disrespectful attitude toward constitutional monarchists finally ended the organization as a major power. The Orléanist pretender Jean, Duke of Guise, who in 1937 broken ties with the Action, also lost many supporters. From this moment, Orléanism ceased to be associated with the Action or the far-right.[16] Instead, the Duke of Guise's son and heir Henri, Count of Paris, launched his own magazine Courier Royale and secretly dealt with anti-fascist conservative General La Rocque, leader of the French Social Party, about the possibility of a restoration.[43]

Hope during the Fourth Republic edit

 
Front page of Courier 50 announcing the end of the exile of Orléans

In 1946, the Count of Paris (who succeeded his father in 1940) moved to Portugal due to the ban on former royals still present in France. As a result of the unstable situation of the Fourth Republic, characterized like its predecessor by short governments and a high number of political parties, the Count of Paris made a serious attempt to restore the French monarchy. He endorsed the Christian Democratic Popular Republican Movement (MPR), and formed a kind of political committee composed of the academics Bertrand de Jouvenel, Gustave Thibon and Michel de Saint Pierre,[44] publishing on 5 February 1948 the manifesto Esquisse d'une constitution monarchique et démocratique, that promoted the idea of a constitutional monarchy.[44] Thanks to the MPR deputy Paul Hutin-Desgrées (co-founder of Ouest-France), the exile law was abrogated on 24 June 1950, permitting the return of the Count of Paris to the capital, where he met with President Vincent Auriol.[44] The count and his family made their home in the Parisian suburbs of Louveciennes, and quickly became media darlings. Orléans frequently went to parties and meetings which were attended by prominent French politicians of the Fourth Republic, such as Antoine Pinay, Jacques Soustelle, Pierre Mendès France and Maurice Schumann.[44] Through his newsletter Courier 50, the Count of Paris expressed support for the policies of Mendès France, like the peace in Indochina, the refusal of a US-controlled European Defence Community (EDC) and decolonization of French Africa.[44]

Orléans' relationship with Charles de Gaulle was also promising, as the general and the pretender had similar political views and were both devout Roman Catholics.[44] When De Gaulle became prime minister in 1958, it was expected by the Count of Paris that the general would move to restore the French monarchy, but instead De Gaulle preferred to strengthen the republican institutions, eventually becoming the driving force behind the establishment of the present-day Fifth Republic. De Gaulle was elected president of the new government in 1959, and seems to have promised the Count of Paris that he wouldn't run again in the election of 1965, instead supporting the candidacy of the pretender that would promote a campaign to transform the republic into a constitutional monarchy.[45] However, in 1963 De Gaulle confided to his minister Alain Peyrefitte that, despite his respect and esteem for the Count of Paris, he never considered him to be his successor as the head of state, stating that the idea of a monarchy was incompatible with the modern world.[46] Disappointed by the false hopes and unfulfilled promises, the Count of Paris retired from French political life in 1967, ending also the publications of his newsletter.

Principles of succession edit

Orléanist pretenders from 1883 to the present follow these principles:

  • The Crown passes by primogeniture to males born in the male line of Hugh Capet.
  • Only children born of legal marriages conforming with the canon law of the Catholic Church are dynasts.
  • The Sovereign or Head of the House can neither abdicate nor alter the line of succession. The Princes of the blood likewise cannot personally renounce theirs succession rights. Those rights can however be permanently lost under specific circumstances (see below).
  • The throne is never vacant; upon the death of the Sovereign or Head of the House, the first in line automatically succeeds, regardless of any coronation or whether actually reigning.
  • The Sovereign or Head of the House must be Catholic.
  • The Sovereign or Head of the House must be both French and born of an unbroken line of French dynasts descending from Hugh Capet. Any prince of the blood that leaves France to claim a foreign throne or a position subject to which permanently loses his rights of succession, as do his descendants.[47] It is this rule that separates the Orléanist rule from the Legitimist one.

List of claimants to the French throne since 1848 edit

Claimant Portrait Birth Marriages Death
Philippe, Count of Paris
(Louis Philippe II)
1848–1873
Orléanist pretender
(Philippe VII)
1883–1894
Unionist pretender
  24 August 1838
Paris
Son of Prince Ferdinand Philippe, Duke of Orléans and Duchess Helen of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
Princess Marie Isabelle of Orléans
30 May 1864
8 children
8 September 1894
Stowe House
Aged 56
Philippe, Duke of Orléans
(Philippe VIII)
1894–1926
  24 August 1869
York House, Twickenham
Son of Philippe, Count of Paris and Princess Marie Isabelle of Orléans
Archduchess Maria Dorothea of Austria
5 November 1896
No children
28 March 1926
Palermo
Aged 56
Jean, Duke of Guise
(Jean III)
1926–1940
  4 September 1874
France
Son of Robert, Duke of Chartres and Marie-Françoise of Orléans
Isabelle of Orléans
30 October 1899
4 children
25 August 1940
Larache, Spanish Morocco
Aged 65
Henri, Count of Paris
(Henri VI)
1940–1999
  5 July 1908
Chateau de Nouvion-en-Thiérache, Aisne, France
Son of Jean, Duke of Guise and Isabelle of Orléans
Isabelle of Orléans-Braganza
8 April 1931
11 children
19 June 1999
Chérisy
Aged 90
Henri d'Orléans, Count of Paris
(Henri VII)
1999–2019
  June 14, 1933
Woluwe-Saint-Pierre, Belgium
Son of Henri, Count of Paris and Isabelle of Orléans-Braganza
Marie Thérèse, Duchess of Montpensier
5 July 1957
5 children
Micaëla Cousiño Quiñones de León
31 October 1984
(Civil)
26 September 2009
(Religious)
21 January 2019
Paris
Aged 85
Jean, Count of Paris
(Jean IV)
2019–present
  May 19, 1965
Boulogne-Billancourt, Paris, France
Son of Henri, Count of Paris and Marie-Thérèse of Württemberg
Philomena de Tornos Steinhart
19 March 2009
5 children

Orléanist political parties edit

Legacy edit

The Orléanist party, despite the different regimes, maintained its bourgeois platform, constituted by those academics, journalists and financiers who backed Louis Philippe during his reign, and was intended as the liberal centre of politics, far from reactionary Legitimists and revolutionary republicans.[48][49] However, for all the span of Louis Philippe's reign, the Orléanists were not a homogeneous party, but simply the majority who supported the constitutional system. It was only after the establishment of the Second French Republic in 1848 and the division inside right-wing factions over the monarchy that the Orléanist party found unity, supporting a parliamentary system instead of an executive one.

In the early 20th century, the majority of Orléanists accepted the republican institutions, approving the parliamentary system and pro-business policy realized by the republican majority, who reflected the historical Orléanist purposes.[6] French historian René Rémond included the presidency of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing as part of the Orléanist tradition, due to his liberal views and equidistance from the nationalist right (descending from Bonapartism) and the conservative right (from Legitimism).[50] The term "Orléanist parliamentarism" was also used by jurist and sociologist Maurice Duverger to define the form of government of the Fifth Republic, which presents a parliamentary system with a powerful head of state.[51]

In 1974, before the presidential election, the New Royal Action (NAR), born by a moderate faction spilled from the Action française, endorsed Bertrand Renouvin for the presidency, with the purpose of restoring a constitutional monarchy led by Orléans, followed by centrist and liberal positions on other issues. Renouvin gained only 43,722 votes (0.17%).

Bibliography edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Orleanists". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Aston, Nigel (1988). Orleanism, 1780–1830. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Broglie, Gabriel de (1981). Perrin (ed.). L'Orléanisme: La ressource libérale de la France (in French). Perrin (réédition numérique FeniXX). ISBN 9782262054014.
  • Broglie, Gabriel de (2011). Fayard (ed.). La Monarchie de Juillet (in French).
  • Robert, Hervé (1992). PUF (ed.). L'orléanisme (in French). (Presses universitaires de France) réédition numérique FeniXX. ISBN 9782705928605.
  • Beik, Paul (1965). Van Nostrand Reinhold (ed.). Louis Philippe and the July Monarchy.
  • Collingham, H. A. C. (1988). Longman (ed.). The July Monarchy: A Political History of France, 1830–1848.
  • Howarth, T. E. B. (1962). Citizen-King: The Life of Louis Philippe, King of the French.
  • Poisson, Georges (1999). Perrin (ed.). Les Orléans, Une famille en quête d'un trône (in French).
  • Newman, Edgar; Simpson, Robert (1987). Greenwood Press (ed.). Historical Dictionary of France from the 1815 Restoration to the Second Empire.
  • Rémond, René (1966). University of Pennsylvania Press (ed.). The Right Wing in France: From 1815 to de Gaulle.
  • Passmore, Kevin (2013). The Right in France from the Third Republic to Vichy. Oxford University Press. pp. 25–26.
  • Montplaisir, Daniel de (2008). Perrin (ed.). Le Comte de Chambord, dernier roi de France (in French).
  • Montplaisir, Daniel de (2011). Jacob-Duvernet (ed.). Louis XX, petit-fils du roi Soleil (in French).

References edit

  1. ^ "Le dictionnaire de l'Histoire - Légitimiste, orléaniste". Herodote.net (in French).
  2. ^ Broglie 2011, p. 464.
  3. ^ Poisson, Georges (2009). Pygmalion (ed.). Le comte de Chambord: Henri V (in French). p. 316.
  4. ^ Robert 1992, pp. 39–40.
  5. ^ Rémond 1966, pp. 163–169.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Rémond (1966).
  7. ^ Brown, Bradford C. (2009), "France, 1830 Revolution", The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest, American Cancer Society, pp. 1–8, doi:10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp0573, ISBN 9781405198073
  8. ^ Europe 1789 to 1914 : encyclopedia of the age of industry and empire. Merriman, John M., Winter, J. M. Detroit, Mich.: Charles Scribner's Sons. 2006. ISBN 978-0684314969. OCLC 76769541.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  9. ^ "Louis-Philippe Biography". The Biography.com Website. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  10. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Doctrinaires". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 367.
  11. ^ Agulhon, Maurice (1983). The Republican Experiment, 1848–1852. Cambridge University Press. p. 135.
  12. ^ Passmore 2013, pp. 25–26.
  13. ^ Demeester, Emma (2016). "François Guizot, du libéralisme au conservatisme". La Nouvelle Revue d'histoire, n.89 (in French). pp. 32–34.
  14. ^ Bienfait, Bérangère (October 30, 2018). . Point de Vue (in French). Archived from the original on November 5, 2018. Retrieved April 25, 2019.
  15. ^ Hugo, Victor (1972). Gallimard (ed.). Choses vues 1847–1848 (in French). p. 248.
  16. ^ a b Poisson (1999).
  17. ^ Lancien, Didier (2007). Maison des Sciences de l'Homme (ed.). Anciennes et nouvelles aristocraties: De 1880 à nos jours (in French). pp. 100–101.
  18. ^ "Parti de l'Ordre". Larousse.
  19. ^ Pinoteau, Hervé (1983). Nouvelles Editions Latines (ed.). Etat de l'Ordre du Saint-Esprit en 1830 ; et, La survivance des ordres du roi (in French).
  20. ^ Lejeune, Dominique (1994). Armand Colin (ed.). La France des débuts de la IIIe République, 1870–1896 (in French). p. 10.
  21. ^ La Besge, Émile de (1971). Perrin (ed.). Souvenir et récits de chasse (in French).
  22. ^ Dreux-Brézé, Henri de (1899). Perrin (ed.). Notes et Souvenirs pour servir à l'histoire du parti royaliste (in French). pp. 227–234.
  23. ^ Mayeur, Jean-Marie (1984). Seuil (ed.). La Vie politique sous la IIIe République. p. 44.
  24. ^ a b c Montplaisir (2008).
  25. ^ Broglie, Albert de (1929). La Revue des Deux Mondes (ed.). Mémoires, IIIe partie, l'avènement de la République (II) (in French). Vol. LIV. p. 594.
  26. ^ Broglie, Gabriel (2000). Perrin (ed.). MacMahon (in French). pp. 247–251.
  27. ^ Dale, Steven D. (1988). The Monarchy According to the King: The Ideological Content of the 'Drapeau Blanc,' 1871–1873. pp. 399–426. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  28. ^ Brogan, D.W. Brogan (1940). Greenwood Press (ed.). France Under the Republic: The Development of Modern France (1870–1939). pp. 106–13.
  29. ^ Brogan (1940) pp. 127–43.
  30. ^ "François Paul Jules Grévy is Born". Masonry Today. 2017.
  31. ^ "Jules Grevy". World Presidents DB. 2017.
  32. ^ Pope Leo XIII (February 16, 1892). Inter Sollicitudines.
  33. ^ Piou, Jacques (1914). Hachette (ed.). Le comte Albert de Mun (in French). p. 206.
  34. ^ Jaurès, Jean (1933). Rieder (ed.). Études socialistes II, 1897–1901 (in French). pp. 189–218.
  35. ^ Bredin, Jean-Denis (1983). France Loisirs (ed.). L'Affaire (in French). p. 475.
  36. ^ Levy, Richard S. (2005). ABC-CLIO (ed.). Antisemitism: A historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution. p. 191.
  37. ^ Giocanti, Stéphane (2006). Flammarion (ed.). Charles Maurras: le chaos et l'ordre (in French). p. 167.
  38. ^ Rouvillois, Frédéric (2005). Flammarion (ed.). Droit constitutionnel: Fondements et pratiques (in French). p. 191.
  39. ^ Latourette, Kenneth (1969). Zondervan (ed.). Christianity in a Revolutionary Age. pp. 37–38.
  40. ^ Weber, Weber (1962). Action Française: Royalism and Reaction in Twentieth-Century France. Stanford U.P. p. 249. ISBN 9780804701341. from the original on 5 May 2016.
  41. ^ Schor, Ralph (2005). Complexe (ed.). L'antisémitisme en France dans l'entre-deux-guerres: prélude à Vichy (in French). p. 29.
  42. ^ Colton, Joel (1969). Warner (ed.). From the Ancien Regime to the Popular Front. p. 183.
  43. ^ J. F. (October 22, 1938). "Comment j'ai été "kidnappé" par le comte de Paris". Le Populaire (in French).
  44. ^ a b c d e f Montplaisir (2011).
  45. ^ Natal, Frederic (October 1, 2016). La couronne (ed.). "Le général Charles de Gaulle a-t-il voulu restaurer la monarchie?" (in French).
  46. ^ Peyrefitte, Alain (1997). Fayard (ed.). C'était de Gaulle. Vol. II. pp. 531–533.
  47. ^ If however, the prince receives certain letters patent from the king or head of house prior to their departure (the purpose of which is to preserve the French nationality of the prince in question, as well as granting it to his male descendants despite their potential births abroad) they maintain their position in the line of succession. These documents can however be revoked if parliament deem necessary, at which point the prince in question and his branch of the house irrevocably lose their nationality, and by extension their rights of succession.
  48. ^ Craiutu, Aurelian (2003). Liberalism under Siege: The Political Thought of the French Doctrinaires. Lexington Books. p. 9.
  49. ^ Takeda, Chinatsu (2018). Mme de Staël and Political Liberalism in France. Springer. pp. 226–227.
  50. ^ Slama, Alain-Gérard Slama (2006). Vous avez dit bonapartiste?. pp. 60–63. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  51. ^ Duverger, Maurice (1959). "Les institutions de la Ve République". Revue française de science politique, n. 1.

See also edit

External links edit

  • The French Unionist Project (representing fusionist Orléanism)

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This article is about the faction that arose during the Bourbon Restoration For the faction that evolved into the Armagnac party in 1407 see Armagnac party Orleanist French Orleaniste was a 19th century French political label originally used by those who supported a constitutional monarchy expressed by the House of Orleans 1 Due to the radical political changes that occurred during that century in France three different phases of Orleanism can be identified The pure Orleanism constituted by those who supported the constitutional reign of Louis Philippe I 1830 1848 after the 1830 July Revolution and who showed liberal and moderate ideas 2 The fusionist or unionist Orleanism the movement formed by pure Orleanists and by those Legitimists who after the childless death of Henri Count of Chambord in 1883 endorsed Philippe Count of Paris grandson of Louis Philippe as his successor 3 The fusion drove the Orleanist movement to more conservative stances emphasising French nationality rejecting claims to France of the Spanish Bourbons on account of their foreigness and Catholicism 4 The progressive Orleanism the majority of fusionists who after the decline of monarchist sentiment in the 1890s joined into moderate republicans who showed progressive and secular minded goals 5 or into Catholic rally like the Liberal Action 6 Coat of arms of the House of Orleans at the start of the July Monarchy Orleanism was opposed by the two other monarchist trends the more conservative Legitimism that was loyal to the eldest branch of the House of Bourbon after 1830 and the Bonapartism that supported Napoleon s legacy and heirs Contents 1 Under the July Monarchy 2 Under the Third Republic 2 1 Fusion and restoration project 2 2 Association with the far right 3 Hope during the Fourth Republic 4 Principles of succession 5 List of claimants to the French throne since 1848 6 Orleanist political parties 7 Legacy 8 Bibliography 9 References 10 See also 11 External linksUnder the July Monarchy edit nbsp Louis Philippe portrait by WinterhalterMain article July Monarchy On 26 July 1830 the revolution of the so called Three Glorious Days or July Revolution erupted due to the authoritarian and anti Gallican tendencies showed by Charles X and his Prime Minister Jules de Polignac expressed by the recently approved Saint Cloud Ordinances 7 8 Despite the abdication of Charles X and the Dauphin Louis in favor to Charles X s grandson Henri Duke of Bordeaux on 2 August 1830 only seven days later Louis Philippe I still Duke of Orleans was elected by the Chamber of Deputies as new King of the French 9 The enthronement of Louis Philippe was strongly wanted by Doctrinaires the liberal opposition to Charles X s ministries under the concept nationalize the monarchy and royalize France 10 On 14 August 1830 the Chamber approved a new Constitution who became the de facto political manifesto for the Orleanists containing the basis for a constitutional monarchy with a central Parliament The Orleanism became the dominant tendency within political life easily divided inside the Chamber of Deputies between the centre left of Adolphe Thiers 11 and the centre right of Francois Guizot 12 Louis Philippe showed himself more aligned with Guizot entrusted to the higher offices of government and rapidly became associated with the rising new men of the banks industries and finance 13 gaining the epithet of Roi bourgeois 14 In the early 1840s Louis Philippe s popularity decreased due to his strong connection to upper classes and repression against workers strikes and showed few concerns for his weakened position leading the writer Victor Hugo to describe him as a man with many little qualities 15 The Orleanist regime finally fell in 1848 when a revolution erupted and on 24 February Louis Philippe abdicated in favor to his grandson Philippe Count of Paris under regency of his mother Helene Duchess of Orleans who was quickly ousted out from the Chamber of Deputies during the regency s formalization who was interrupted by republican deputies who instead proclaimed the Second Republic 16 After 18 years of reign Louis Philippe left the Orleanist base well defined inside the magistrature the press universities and academies especially the Academie francaise 6 However also some great aristocratic families joined the court like the Dukes of Broglie 17 as well former Bonapartist officers like the Marshal Soult and Edouard Mortier This establishment constituted the majority of the Party of Order led by Thiers who represented the conservatives and monarchists under the Second Republic 18 Under the Third Republic editFusion and restoration project edit Electoral resultsYear No ofoverall votes ofoverall vote No ofoverall seats wonNational Assembly1871 Unknown 1st 33 5 214 638Chamber of Deputies1876 554 117 6th 7 5 40 5331877 169 834 5th 2 1 11 5211881 552 971 5th 7 7 42 5451885 991 188 4th 12 2 73 5841889 994 173 4th 12 5 72 5761893 816 789 3rd 10 5 63 5741898 607 960 5th 7 5 44 585 nbsp The Duke of Orleans son of the Count of Paris espoused conservative stances also reviving the Order of the Holy Spirit to support his claim 19 nbsp Satirical cartoon of 1871 Orleanists stand on the ruined December Empire and attempt to enter the Defense Nationale building while Adolphe Thiers looks on Orleanism revived after the French defeat in the Franco Prussian War of 1870 1871 which caused the fall of the Second Empire which had succeeded to the Second Republic under Emperor Napoleon III the former president of France who had been enthroned after the coup d etat of 1851 6 The Second Empire was succeeded itself officially in 1871 by the Third Republic A National Assembly composed by 638 on 778 seats was formed and new elections were called for the 8 February of the same year which resulted in a victory for the monarchist right 396 seats won divided to 214 Orleanists and 182 Legitimists nicknamed cavalrymen 20 Initially divided about the dynastic issue the Orleanists found a compromise with the Legitimists supporting the rights of Henri Count of Chambord former Duke of Bordeaux currently childless in return of the recognition of the Count of Paris as his heir echoing an 1862 statement of Chambord 21 Although Chambord never mentioned the Count of Paris as his heir probably fearing the defection of his ultraconservative supporters 22 the informal agreement sanctioned the fusion of Legitimists and Orleanists who quite easily formed a conservative coalition The monarchist majority led by the Duke of Aumale son of Louis Philippe and the centre left endorsed the centre right candidate Thiers as president of the Republic but due to the continued arguments between Legitimists and Orleanists and the memory of the dynastic divisions of the past 40 years Thiers moved to support a conservative republic instead of a divided monarchy 23 Due to Chambord s dislike toward Aumale 24 the fusionists rapidly passed under the leadership of the Duke of Broglie who in 1873 successfully managed the election of President Patrice de MacMahon former general and national hero who showed Legitimist sympathies considering him as a kind of lieutenant general of the kingdom before the fully restoration of Chambord on the throne 25 Broglie was shortly after awarded with the premiership by MacMahon supported by monarchists and the centre right Restoration appeared imminent when a parliamentary commission was established in October 1873 to adopt a monarchist constitution But in the same month the majority was weakened by the refusal of Chambord to accept the French Tricolour used since 1830 preferring instead the return of the royal white flag symbol of the Ancien Regime 24 The question was apparently resolved with a compromise between Broglie and Chambord the last will accept the tricolour flag while a future agreement about a new flag will be considered In October the majority was shocked when the centre right representative Charles Savary rashly misinformed the press of Chambord s full acceptance of the tricolour flag 24 The pretender had to harshly clarify his position causing the left of the centre right Orleanists disappointment and the dissolution of the restoration commission on 31 October 1873 A last attempt by Chambord was made on 12 November when he asked President MacMahon via the Duke of Blacas to join with him into the National Assembly and spoke toward the representatives hoping to convince them to restore the monarchy but MacMahon refused due to his institutional position toward he was formally even if not ideologically attached causing the project s failure 26 Due to the impossibility to restore the monarchy in a short time the Orleanists waited the death of the sickly Chambord occurred in 1883 but by that time enthusiasm for a monarchy had faded and as a result the Count of Paris was never offered the French throne 27 The monarchists however still controlled the National Assembly and under MacMahon s partisan presidency they launched the so called moral order government in reference to the Paris Commune whose political and social innovations were viewed as morally degenerate by large conservative segments of the French population 28 In February 1875 a series of parliamentary acts established the constitutional laws of the new republic At its head was a President of the Republic A two chamber parliament consisting of a directly elected Chamber of Deputies and an indirectly elected Senate was created along with a ministry under the President of the council prime minister who was nominally answerable to both the President of the Republic and the legislature Throughout the 1870s the issue of whether a monarchy should replace the republic dominated public debate On 16 May 1877 with public opinion swinging heavily in favour of a republic after the election of March President MacMahon made one last desperate attempt to salvage the monarchical cause by dismissing the conservative republican prime minister Jules Simon and appointing the Duke of Broglie to office He then dissolved parliament and called a general election for the following October If his hope had been to halt the move towards republicanism it backfired spectacularly with the president being accused of having staged a constitutional coup d etat known as 16 May Crisis after the date on which it happened Republicans returned triumphantly after the October elections for the Chamber of Deputies The crisis ultimately sealed the defeat of the royalist movement and was instrumental in creating the conditions of the longevity of the Third Republic 29 in January 1879 the Republicans gained control of the Senate formerly monopolized by monarchists MacMahon himself resigned on 30 January 1879 leaving a seriously weakened presidency in the hands of Jules Grevy leader of the Republican Left 30 31 The end of the presidency of MacMahon and the Senate s loss caused the end of the monarchist bloc Although there were Orleanist deputies in the Chamber for all the 19th century they were only a minority At the end many monarchists accepted the republic moving toward the centre Some Orleanists especially from their bourgeoise core base accepted the republic even since the 1870s like Thiers and press baron Emile de Girardin In 1892 after Pope Leo XIII s approval to the Third Republic breaking the historical alliance between Church and Crown 32 some monarchists led by Orleanist Jacques Piou and Legitimist Albert de Mun formed the group of the rallies supporters that in 1901 constituted the base of the first Christian Democratic party in France the Liberal Action 33 while many other royalists were still attached to the Crown Association with the far right edit nbsp Charles Maurras in 1937The elections of 1898 confirmed the exclusion of the monarchists from any possible government However 4 years earlier the Dreyfus affair shook public opinion dividing the republican camp socialists radicals and liberals defended the innocence of Dreyfus 34 while other republicans joined the nationalists and monarchists against Dreyfus 35 The election also introduced 10 overtly anti Semitic representatives led by Edouard Drumont 36 The following year on 20 June 1899 the academic Henri Vaugeois and journalist Maurice Pujo founded the nationalist association Action francaise initially absent of any specific ideology 6 However the Action was joined by many Catholics and monarchists who were anti Dreyfus contributing to the move of the association toward the right Particularly the adhesion of Charles Maurras considered a pragmatic anti Dreyfusard rather than a true anti Semite 37 contributed to the creation of the ideology of the Action which rapidly became the main monarchist group Maurras despite becoming the movement s ideologist supported not a classical monarchy on religious term divine right but a positivist one stating that a monarchy would grant more order and stability than a parliamentary republic 6 The largest group of French monarchists after the death of Chambord in 1883 endorsed the Count of Paris until his death in 1894 recognizing the claim of his son Philippe Duke of Orleans who was also supported by the Action 6 However monarchism inside the Action was always integrated secondary to its semi official ideology of integral nationalism theorized by Maurras 38 and many Action activists were still republicans like the founder Vaugeois 6 The movement grew to be one of the largest organizations in France but in 1926 a condemnation from Pope Pius XI against the Action caused the defection of many Catholic sympathizers The Pope judged that it was folly for the French Church to continue to tie its fortunes to the unlikely dream of a monarchist restoration and distrusted the movement s tendency to defend the Catholic religion in merely utilitarian and nationalistic terms 39 and the Action Francaise never recovered from the condemnation 40 By 1934 the Action was still a considerable force with over 60 000 members across France 41 In that year they joined other far right leagues on 6 February demonstrations against political corruption and the Parliament causing the resignation of Prime Minister Edouard Daladier the day after and provoking fear of a nationalist coup d etat 42 The papal condemnation the aggressive tactics and Maurras s disrespectful attitude toward constitutional monarchists finally ended the organization as a major power The Orleanist pretender Jean Duke of Guise who in 1937 broken ties with the Action also lost many supporters From this moment Orleanism ceased to be associated with the Action or the far right 16 Instead the Duke of Guise s son and heir Henri Count of Paris launched his own magazine Courier Royale and secretly dealt with anti fascist conservative General La Rocque leader of the French Social Party about the possibility of a restoration 43 Hope during the Fourth Republic editMain article French Fourth Republic nbsp Front page of Courier 50 announcing the end of the exile of OrleansIn 1946 the Count of Paris who succeeded his father in 1940 moved to Portugal due to the ban on former royals still present in France As a result of the unstable situation of the Fourth Republic characterized like its predecessor by short governments and a high number of political parties the Count of Paris made a serious attempt to restore the French monarchy He endorsed the Christian Democratic Popular Republican Movement MPR and formed a kind of political committee composed of the academics Bertrand de Jouvenel Gustave Thibon and Michel de Saint Pierre 44 publishing on 5 February 1948 the manifesto Esquisse d une constitution monarchique et democratique that promoted the idea of a constitutional monarchy 44 Thanks to the MPR deputy Paul Hutin Desgrees co founder of Ouest France the exile law was abrogated on 24 June 1950 permitting the return of the Count of Paris to the capital where he met with President Vincent Auriol 44 The count and his family made their home in the Parisian suburbs of Louveciennes and quickly became media darlings Orleans frequently went to parties and meetings which were attended by prominent French politicians of the Fourth Republic such as Antoine Pinay Jacques Soustelle Pierre Mendes France and Maurice Schumann 44 Through his newsletter Courier 50 the Count of Paris expressed support for the policies of Mendes France like the peace in Indochina the refusal of a US controlled European Defence Community EDC and decolonization of French Africa 44 Orleans relationship with Charles de Gaulle was also promising as the general and the pretender had similar political views and were both devout Roman Catholics 44 When De Gaulle became prime minister in 1958 it was expected by the Count of Paris that the general would move to restore the French monarchy but instead De Gaulle preferred to strengthen the republican institutions eventually becoming the driving force behind the establishment of the present day Fifth Republic De Gaulle was elected president of the new government in 1959 and seems to have promised the Count of Paris that he wouldn t run again in the election of 1965 instead supporting the candidacy of the pretender that would promote a campaign to transform the republic into a constitutional monarchy 45 However in 1963 De Gaulle confided to his minister Alain Peyrefitte that despite his respect and esteem for the Count of Paris he never considered him to be his successor as the head of state stating that the idea of a monarchy was incompatible with the modern world 46 Disappointed by the false hopes and unfulfilled promises the Count of Paris retired from French political life in 1967 ending also the publications of his newsletter Principles of succession editMain article Line of succession to the French throne Orleanist Orleanist pretenders from 1883 to the present follow these principles The Crown passes by primogeniture to males born in the male line of Hugh Capet Only children born of legal marriages conforming with the canon law of the Catholic Church are dynasts The Sovereign or Head of the House can neither abdicate nor alter the line of succession The Princes of the blood likewise cannot personally renounce theirs succession rights Those rights can however be permanently lost under specific circumstances see below The throne is never vacant upon the death of the Sovereign or Head of the House the first in line automatically succeeds regardless of any coronation or whether actually reigning The Sovereign or Head of the House must be Catholic The Sovereign or Head of the House must be both French and born of an unbroken line of French dynasts descending from Hugh Capet Any prince of the blood that leaves France to claim a foreign throne or a position subject to which permanently loses his rights of succession as do his descendants 47 It is this rule that separates the Orleanist rule from the Legitimist one List of claimants to the French throne since 1848 editClaimant Portrait Birth Marriages DeathPhilippe Count of Paris Louis Philippe II 1848 1873Orleanist pretender Philippe VII 1883 1894Unionist pretender nbsp 24 August 1838ParisSon of Prince Ferdinand Philippe Duke of Orleans and Duchess Helen of Mecklenburg Schwerin Princess Marie Isabelle of Orleans30 May 18648 children 8 September 1894Stowe HouseAged 56Philippe Duke of Orleans Philippe VIII 1894 1926 nbsp 24 August 1869York House TwickenhamSon of Philippe Count of Paris and Princess Marie Isabelle of Orleans Archduchess Maria Dorothea of Austria5 November 1896No children 28 March 1926PalermoAged 56Jean Duke of Guise Jean III 1926 1940 nbsp 4 September 1874FranceSon of Robert Duke of Chartres and Marie Francoise of Orleans Isabelle of Orleans30 October 18994 children 25 August 1940Larache Spanish MoroccoAged 65Henri Count of Paris Henri VI 1940 1999 nbsp 5 July 1908Chateau de Nouvion en Thierache Aisne FranceSon of Jean Duke of Guise and Isabelle of Orleans Isabelle of Orleans Braganza8 April 193111 children 19 June 1999CherisyAged 90Henri d Orleans Count of Paris Henri VII 1999 2019 nbsp June 14 1933Woluwe Saint Pierre BelgiumSon of Henri Count of Paris and Isabelle of Orleans Braganza Marie Therese Duchess of Montpensier5 July 19575 childrenMicaela Cousino Quinones de Leon31 October 1984 Civil 26 September 2009 Religious 21 January 2019ParisAged 85Jean Count of Paris Jean IV 2019 present nbsp May 19 1965Boulogne Billancourt Paris FranceSon of Henri Count of Paris and Marie Therese of Wurttemberg Philomena de Tornos Steinhart19 March 20095 childrenOrleanist political parties editDoctrinaires 1815 1848 Resistance Party 1832 1848 Movement Party 1831 1848 Party of Order 1848 1852 Action Francaise 1899 Legacy editThe Orleanist party despite the different regimes maintained its bourgeois platform constituted by those academics journalists and financiers who backed Louis Philippe during his reign and was intended as the liberal centre of politics far from reactionary Legitimists and revolutionary republicans 48 49 However for all the span of Louis Philippe s reign the Orleanists were not a homogeneous party but simply the majority who supported the constitutional system It was only after the establishment of the Second French Republic in 1848 and the division inside right wing factions over the monarchy that the Orleanist party found unity supporting a parliamentary system instead of an executive one In the early 20th century the majority of Orleanists accepted the republican institutions approving the parliamentary system and pro business policy realized by the republican majority who reflected the historical Orleanist purposes 6 French historian Rene Remond included the presidency of Valery Giscard d Estaing as part of the Orleanist tradition due to his liberal views and equidistance from the nationalist right descending from Bonapartism and the conservative right from Legitimism 50 The term Orleanist parliamentarism was also used by jurist and sociologist Maurice Duverger to define the form of government of the Fifth Republic which presents a parliamentary system with a powerful head of state 51 In 1974 before the presidential election the New Royal Action NAR born by a moderate faction spilled from the Action francaise endorsed Bertrand Renouvin for the presidency with the purpose of restoring a constitutional monarchy led by Orleans followed by centrist and liberal positions on other issues Renouvin gained only 43 722 votes 0 17 Bibliography edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Orleanists Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Aston Nigel 1988 Orleanism 1780 1830 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Broglie Gabriel de 1981 Perrin ed L Orleanisme La ressource liberale de la France in French Perrin reedition numerique FeniXX ISBN 9782262054014 Broglie Gabriel de 2011 Fayard ed La Monarchie de Juillet in French Robert Herve 1992 PUF ed L orleanisme in French Presses universitaires de France reedition numerique FeniXX ISBN 9782705928605 Beik Paul 1965 Van Nostrand Reinhold ed Louis Philippe and the July Monarchy Collingham H A C 1988 Longman ed The July Monarchy A Political History of France 1830 1848 Howarth T E B 1962 Citizen King The Life of Louis Philippe King of the French Poisson Georges 1999 Perrin ed Les Orleans Une famille en quete d un trone in French Newman Edgar Simpson Robert 1987 Greenwood Press ed Historical Dictionary of France from the 1815 Restoration to the Second Empire Remond Rene 1966 University of Pennsylvania Press ed The Right Wing in France From 1815 to de Gaulle Passmore Kevin 2013 The Right in France from the Third Republic to Vichy Oxford University Press pp 25 26 Montplaisir Daniel de 2008 Perrin ed Le Comte de Chambord dernier roi de France in French Montplaisir Daniel de 2011 Jacob Duvernet ed Louis XX petit fils du roi Soleil in French References edit Le dictionnaire de l Histoire Legitimiste orleaniste Herodote net in French Broglie 2011 p 464 Poisson Georges 2009 Pygmalion ed Le comte de Chambord Henri V in French p 316 Robert 1992 pp 39 40 Remond 1966 pp 163 169 a b c d e f g h Remond 1966 Brown Bradford C 2009 France 1830 Revolution The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest American Cancer Society pp 1 8 doi 10 1002 9781405198073 wbierp0573 ISBN 9781405198073 Europe 1789 to 1914 encyclopedia of the age of industry and empire Merriman John M Winter J M Detroit Mich Charles Scribner s Sons 2006 ISBN 978 0684314969 OCLC 76769541 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Louis Philippe Biography The Biography com Website Retrieved 13 May 2014 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Doctrinaires Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 367 Agulhon Maurice 1983 The Republican Experiment 1848 1852 Cambridge University Press p 135 Passmore 2013 pp 25 26 Demeester Emma 2016 Francois Guizot du liberalisme au conservatisme La Nouvelle Revue d histoire n 89 in French pp 32 34 Bienfait Berangere October 30 2018 Louis Philippe un roi bourgeois batisseur et entrepreneur Point de Vue in French Archived from the original on November 5 2018 Retrieved April 25 2019 Hugo Victor 1972 Gallimard ed Choses vues 1847 1848 in French p 248 a b Poisson 1999 Lancien Didier 2007 Maison des Sciences de l Homme ed Anciennes et nouvelles aristocraties De 1880 a nos jours in French pp 100 101 Parti de l Ordre Larousse Pinoteau Herve 1983 Nouvelles Editions Latines ed Etat de l Ordre du Saint Esprit en 1830 et La survivance des ordres du roi in French Lejeune Dominique 1994 Armand Colin ed La France des debuts de la IIIe Republique 1870 1896 in French p 10 La Besge Emile de 1971 Perrin ed Souvenir et recits de chasse in French Dreux Breze Henri de 1899 Perrin ed Notes et Souvenirs pour servir a l histoire du parti royaliste in French pp 227 234 Mayeur Jean Marie 1984 Seuil ed La Vie politique sous la IIIe Republique p 44 a b c Montplaisir 2008 Broglie Albert de 1929 La Revue des Deux Mondes ed Memoires IIIe partie l avenement de la Republique II in French Vol LIV p 594 Broglie Gabriel 2000 Perrin ed MacMahon in French pp 247 251 Dale Steven D 1988 The Monarchy According to the King The Ideological Content of the Drapeau Blanc 1871 1873 pp 399 426 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Brogan D W Brogan 1940 Greenwood Press ed France Under the Republic The Development of Modern France 1870 1939 pp 106 13 Brogan 1940 pp 127 43 Francois Paul Jules Grevy is Born Masonry Today 2017 Jules Grevy World Presidents DB 2017 Pope Leo XIII February 16 1892 Inter Sollicitudines Piou Jacques 1914 Hachette ed Le comte Albert de Mun in French p 206 Jaures Jean 1933 Rieder ed Etudes socialistes II 1897 1901 in French pp 189 218 Bredin Jean Denis 1983 France Loisirs ed L Affaire in French p 475 Levy Richard S 2005 ABC CLIO ed Antisemitism A historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution p 191 Giocanti Stephane 2006 Flammarion ed Charles Maurras le chaos et l ordre in French p 167 Rouvillois Frederic 2005 Flammarion ed Droit constitutionnel Fondements et pratiques in French p 191 Latourette Kenneth 1969 Zondervan ed Christianity in a Revolutionary Age pp 37 38 Weber Weber 1962 Action Francaise Royalism and Reaction in Twentieth Century France Stanford U P p 249 ISBN 9780804701341 Archived from the original on 5 May 2016 Schor Ralph 2005 Complexe ed L antisemitisme en France dans l entre deux guerres prelude a Vichy in French p 29 Colton Joel 1969 Warner ed From the Ancien Regime to the Popular Front p 183 J F October 22 1938 Comment j ai ete kidnappe par le comte de Paris Le Populaire in French a b c d e f Montplaisir 2011 Natal Frederic October 1 2016 La couronne ed Le general Charles de Gaulle a t il voulu restaurer la monarchie in French Peyrefitte Alain 1997 Fayard ed C etait de Gaulle Vol II pp 531 533 If however the prince receives certain letters patent from the king or head of house prior to their departure the purpose of which is to preserve the French nationality of the prince in question as well as granting it to his male descendants despite their potential births abroad they maintain their position in the line of succession These documents can however be revoked if parliament deem necessary at which point the prince in question and his branch of the house irrevocably lose their nationality and by extension their rights of succession Craiutu Aurelian 2003 Liberalism under Siege The Political Thought of the French Doctrinaires Lexington Books p 9 Takeda Chinatsu 2018 Mme de Stael and Political Liberalism in France Springer pp 226 227 Slama Alain Gerard Slama 2006 Vous avez dit bonapartiste pp 60 63 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Duverger Maurice 1959 Les institutions de la Ve Republique Revue francaise de science politique n 1 See also edit nbsp France portal nbsp Monarchy portal Succession to the former French throne Orleanist Succession to the French throne French dynastic disputes Alliance Royale New Royalist Action French ActionExternal links editThe French Unionist Project representing fusionist Orleanism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orleanist amp oldid 1173961279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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