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Succession to the former French throne (Bonapartist)

The succession to the throne of the French Empire was vested by Bonapartist emperors in the descendants and selected male relatives of Napoleon I (r. 1804–1814/15). Following the end of the Second French Empire in 1870, Bonapartist pretenders descended from Napoleon I's brothers have maintained theoretical claims to the imperial office.

Coat of arms of the First French Empire

Origins of the French Empire edit

The French Empire formally existed during two periods when the head of the French state was a monarch who held the title of Emperor of the French.

The First French Empire was the regime established by Napoleon I in France. This empire lasted from 1804 to 1814, from the Consulate of the French First Republic to the Bourbon Restoration, and was briefly restored during the Hundred Days in 1815.

The Second French Empire was the regime established in France by Napoleon III from 1852 to 1870, between the French Second Republic and the French Third Republic. Napoleon III was the third son of Louis Bonaparte, a younger brother of Napoleon I, and Hortense de Beauharnais, the daughter of Napoleon I's wife, Joséphine de Beauharnais, by her first marriage.

Bonapartism had its followers from 1815 onward among those who never accepted the defeat at Waterloo or the Congress of Vienna. Napoleon I's death in exile on Saint Helena in 1821 only transferred the allegiance of many of his loyalists to other members of the House of Bonaparte.

After the death in 1832 of Napoleon I's son, known to Bonapartists as Napoleon II, Bonapartist hopes rested in several different members of the family.

The disturbances of 1848 gave this group hope. Bonapartists were essential in the election of Napoleon I's nephew Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte as president of the Second Republic. They also gave him crucial political support for the 1852 coup d'état, which overthrew the Republic and paved the way for the proclamation of the Second French Empire the following year, with Napoleon III as emperor.

In 1870, Napoleon III led France to a disastrous defeat at the hands of Prussia in the Franco-Prussian War, and he subsequently abdicated.

Following the definite overthrow of the Second Empire, the Third Republic was established. Bonapartism faded from a civic faith and monarchist bloc to an obscure predilection, more akin to a hobby than a practical political philosophy or movement. The death knell for Bonapartism was probably sounded when Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, the only son of Napoleon III, was killed in action while serving as a British Army officer in Zululand in 1879. Thereafter, Bonapartism ceased to be a political force.

First Napoleonic law of succession edit

The law of succession that Napoleon I established on becoming emperor in 1804 provided that the imperial throne should pass firstly to Napoleon's own legitimate male descendants through the male line, to the perpetual exclusion of women.

It further provided that if Napoleon's own direct line died out, the claim passed first to his older brother Joseph Bonaparte and to his legitimate male descendants through the male line, then to his younger brother Louis and his legitimate male descendants through the male line. His other brothers, Lucien and Jérôme, and their descendants, were omitted from the succession, even though Lucien was older than Louis, because they had politically defied the emperor, made marriages of which he disapproved, or both.

Upon the extinction of legitimate natural and adopted male, agnatic descendants of Napoleon I, and those of two of his brothers, Joseph and Louis, the throne was to be awarded to a man selected by the non-dynastic princely and ducal dignitaries of the empire, as ratified by a plebiscite.

At the time the law of succession was decreed, Napoleon I had no legitimate sons, and it seemed unlikely that he would have any due to the age of his wife, Joséphine de Beauharnais. His eventual response was to have his marriage to Joséphine annulled and to undertake a second marriage with Roman Catholic rites to Archduchess Marie Louise, daughter of Emperor Francis I of Austria. Their only child was Napoleon, King of Rome, known in exile as "Napoleon II" and as the Duke of Reichstadt. He died unmarried, thereby extinguishing the legitimate descent of Napoleon I.

Second Napoleonic law of succession edit

 
Jérôme Bonaparte, progenitor of the current legitimate line

Meanwhile, Napoleon I's older brother, Joseph, recognised upon establishment of the First Empire as first in line to succeed and (after the birth of the King of Rome) as second in line, died on 28 July 1844 without ever having had a legitimate son. Although two of Joseph's daughters married in exile, when the Bonaparte dynasty was restored by the 1851 French coup d'état in France in December 1851, the man who soon became emperor as Napoleon III was the only living, legally legitimate son of Louis Bonaparte, former King of Holland.

In December 1852, with the imperial crown on his head, Napoleon III, still a bachelor, exercised the authority granted him by a decree in the form of a Sénatus-consulte (and confirmed by plebiscite), to enact a new organic law on the succession (in the event he himself were to leave no legitimate descendants). Napoleon III recognised Napoleon I's last surviving brother, Jérôme, as the heir presumptive. (During Napoleon I's reign, Jérôme had been one of the Bonaparte brothers who was bypassed in the order of succession, his first marriage having been an elopement with the American commoner Elizabeth Patterson over the emperor's objections. The Second Empire, however, empowered the new emperor to choose an heir among any of Napoleon I's nephews.) After Jérôme came Jérôme's male descendants by his second, dynastic marriage to Princess Catharina of Württemberg.[1]

Napoleon III, hitherto a bachelor, began to look for a wife to produce a legitimate heir. Most of the royal families of Europe were unwilling to intermarry with the parvenu House of Bonaparte. After several rebuffs, including from Princess Carola of Sweden and Princess Adelaide von Hohenlohe-Langenburg, Napoleon III decided to lower his sights somewhat and marry for love instead, choosing Countess of Teba, Eugénie de Montijo, a Spanish noblewoman who had been brought up in Paris.

In 1856, Eugénie gave birth to a legitimate son and heir, Napoléon Eugène Louis, the Prince Imperial who, upon his father's defeat in battle and deposition in September 1870, went into exile. He became the claimant to the throne of the Second Empire when his father died in 1873. Like the King of Rome, the Prince Imperial died unwed and childless. All Bonapartist claimants since 1879 have been descendants of Jérôme Bonaparte in the male line.

List of Bonapartist claimants to the French throne edit

This branch of claimants was established by Napoleon Joseph Charles Bonaparte,[1] nicknamed Plon-Plon. He was the only legitimate male descendant of Jérôme Bonaparte from his second marriage to Princess Catharina of Württemberg. He married Princess Clothilde of Savoy and died in 1891. His son, Victor, Prince Napoléon, the next claimant, wed Princess Clémentine of Belgium, and died in 1926.[1]

He was succeeded by his son, Louis Jérôme Bonaparte, husband of Alix de Foresta, daughter of Count Albéric de Foresta, who died in 1997.[1] He was succeeded by his son, Charles Marie Jérôme Victor Napoléon Bonaparte. He married, civilly, Princess Béatrice of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, from whom he was divorced, being subsequently declared excluded as Napoleonic heir in his father's will for divorcing her and remarrying a commoner without paternal permission.[1] His heir apparent (recognised by some as head of the House of Bonaparte since 1997) is his son, Jean-Christophe Napoléon.[1]

There are no surviving descendants in the legitimate male line of any of Napoleon's brothers except Jérôme.[1] This branch of the House of Bonaparte is recognised by Bonapartists as Napoleon I's dynastic heirs, being excluded from residence in France or service in its military by law, along with the heads of the House of Orléans, between 1883 and 1950.

The head and dynastic members of the family bear the title of Prince with the name Napoléon (Bonaparte) and the style of Imperial Highness.[1]

Claimant Portrait Birth Marriages Death Claim
Napoleon I
1814–1815
(Emperor of the French, 1804–1814)
  15 August 1769, Ajaccio
son of Carlo Buonaparte
and Letizia Ramolino
 • Joséphine de Beauharnais
9 March 1796
No children
 • Marie Louise of Parma
11 March 1810
1 son
5 May 1821
Saint Helena
aged 51
Declared Emperor of the French on May 18, 1804
Napoléon François, King of Rome
(Napoleon II)
1815–1832
  20 March 1811, Paris
son of Napoleon I
and Marie Louise of Parma
Unmarried 22 July 1832
Vienna

aged 21

Son of Napoleon I
Joseph, Count of Survilliers
(Joseph I)
1832–1844
  7 January 1768, Corte
son of Carlo Buonaparte
and Letizia Ramolino
Julie Clary
1 August 1794
2 children
28 July 1844
Florence
aged 76
Brother of Napoleon I, uncle of Napoleon II
Louis, Count of Saint-Leu
(Louis I)
1844–1846
  2 September 1778, Ajaccio
son of Carlo Buonaparte
and Letizia Ramolino
Hortense de Beauharnais
4 January 1802
3 children
25 July 1846
Livorno
aged 67
Brother of Joseph I
Napoleon III
1846–1852; 1870–1873
(Emperor of the French, 1852–1870)
  20 April 1808, Paris
son of Louis, Count of Saint-Leu
and Hortense de Beauharnais
Eugénie de Montijo
29 January 1853
1 son
9 January 1873
Chislehurst, London
aged 64
Son of Louis I
Napoléon, Prince Imperial
(Napoleon IV)
1873–1879
  16 March 1856, Paris
son of Napoleon III
and Eugénie de Montijo
Unmarried 1 June 1879
Zulu Kingdom (present-day KwaZulu-Natal)
aged 23
Son of Napoleon III
Victor, Prince Napoléon
(Napoleon V)
1879–1926
  18 July 1862, Paris
son of Jérôme, Prince Napoléon
and Maria Clotilde of Savoy
Clémentine of Belgium
10 November 1910
2 children
3 May 1926
Brussels
aged 63
Grandnephew of Napoleon I, 2nd cousin of Napoleon IV
Louis, Prince Napoléon
(Napoleon VI)
1926–1997
  23 January 1914, Brussels
son of Prince Victor Napoléon
and Clémentine of Belgium
Alix de Foresta
16 August 1949
4 children
3 May 1997
Prangins
aged 83
Son of Napoleon V
Jean-Christophe, Prince Napoléon
(Napoleon VII)
1997–present[2]
  11 July 1986, Saint-Raphaël
son of Charles, Prince Napoléon
and Béatrice of Bourbon-Two Sicilies
Countess Olympia von und zu Arco-Zinneberg
17 October 2019
1 son
Grandson of Napoleon VI

Line of succession edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Fürstliche Häuser XVIII. "Haus Bonaparte". C.A. Starke Verlag, 2007, pp. 17-18. (German). ISBN 978-3-7980-0841-0.
  2. ^ Chantal de Badts de Cugnac; Guy Coutant de Saisseval (2003). Le Petit Gotha (in French). Paris: Petit Gotha. p. 441. ISBN 2-9507974-0-7. I, the undersigned Louis, Prince Napoléon Bonaparte, head of the Imperial Family, as authorized by the Senatus Consutus of 7 November 1852, the Imperial Family statute of 21 June 1853 and tradition, to designate, in certain situations, notably by application of article 4 of the statute, the dynastic heirs in the Imperial Family for succession to the Imperial dignity, do choose, from the order of hereditary succession and according to primogeniture, my grandson, Jean-Christophe...as heir of the Imperial title and position. ("Je soussigné Louis, prince Napoléon Bonaparte, chef de la Famille Impériale, autorisé par le senatus consultus du 7 novembre 1852, le statut de la famille impériale du 21 juin 1853 et la tradition à designer dans certains hypothèses, notamment par application de l'article 4 du statut, l'héritiers dynaste dans la famille impériale pour succéder à la dignité impériale, je choisis, dans l'ordre de l'hérédité et dans le respect de primogéniture, mon petit-fils Jean-Christophe...comme héritier de la dignité et de la fonction impériale."){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

succession, former, french, throne, bonapartist, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Succession to the former French throne Bonapartist news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message The succession to the throne of the French Empire was vested by Bonapartist emperors in the descendants and selected male relatives of Napoleon I r 1804 1814 15 Following the end of the Second French Empire in 1870 Bonapartist pretenders descended from Napoleon I s brothers have maintained theoretical claims to the imperial office Coat of arms of the First French Empire Contents 1 Origins of the French Empire 2 First Napoleonic law of succession 3 Second Napoleonic law of succession 4 List of Bonapartist claimants to the French throne 5 Line of succession 6 See also 7 ReferencesOrigins of the French Empire editThe French Empire formally existed during two periods when the head of the French state was a monarch who held the title of Emperor of the French The First French Empire was the regime established by Napoleon I in France This empire lasted from 1804 to 1814 from the Consulate of the French First Republic to the Bourbon Restoration and was briefly restored during the Hundred Days in 1815 The Second French Empire was the regime established in France by Napoleon III from 1852 to 1870 between the French Second Republic and the French Third Republic Napoleon III was the third son of Louis Bonaparte a younger brother of Napoleon I and Hortense de Beauharnais the daughter of Napoleon I s wife Josephine de Beauharnais by her first marriage Bonapartism had its followers from 1815 onward among those who never accepted the defeat at Waterloo or the Congress of Vienna Napoleon I s death in exile on Saint Helena in 1821 only transferred the allegiance of many of his loyalists to other members of the House of Bonaparte After the death in 1832 of Napoleon I s son known to Bonapartists as Napoleon II Bonapartist hopes rested in several different members of the family The disturbances of 1848 gave this group hope Bonapartists were essential in the election of Napoleon I s nephew Louis Napoleon Bonaparte as president of the Second Republic They also gave him crucial political support for the 1852 coup d etat which overthrew the Republic and paved the way for the proclamation of the Second French Empire the following year with Napoleon III as emperor In 1870 Napoleon III led France to a disastrous defeat at the hands of Prussia in the Franco Prussian War and he subsequently abdicated Following the definite overthrow of the Second Empire the Third Republic was established Bonapartism faded from a civic faith and monarchist bloc to an obscure predilection more akin to a hobby than a practical political philosophy or movement The death knell for Bonapartism was probably sounded when Louis Napoleon Bonaparte the only son of Napoleon III was killed in action while serving as a British Army officer in Zululand in 1879 Thereafter Bonapartism ceased to be a political force First Napoleonic law of succession editThe law of succession that Napoleon I established on becoming emperor in 1804 provided that the imperial throne should pass firstly to Napoleon s own legitimate male descendants through the male line to the perpetual exclusion of women It further provided that if Napoleon s own direct line died out the claim passed first to his older brother Joseph Bonaparte and to his legitimate male descendants through the male line then to his younger brother Louis and his legitimate male descendants through the male line His other brothers Lucien and Jerome and their descendants were omitted from the succession even though Lucien was older than Louis because they had politically defied the emperor made marriages of which he disapproved or both Upon the extinction of legitimate natural and adopted male agnatic descendants of Napoleon I and those of two of his brothers Joseph and Louis the throne was to be awarded to a man selected by the non dynastic princely and ducal dignitaries of the empire as ratified by a plebiscite At the time the law of succession was decreed Napoleon I had no legitimate sons and it seemed unlikely that he would have any due to the age of his wife Josephine de Beauharnais His eventual response was to have his marriage to Josephine annulled and to undertake a second marriage with Roman Catholic rites to Archduchess Marie Louise daughter of Emperor Francis I of Austria Their only child was Napoleon King of Rome known in exile as Napoleon II and as the Duke of Reichstadt He died unmarried thereby extinguishing the legitimate descent of Napoleon I Second Napoleonic law of succession edit nbsp Jerome Bonaparte progenitor of the current legitimate line Meanwhile Napoleon I s older brother Joseph recognised upon establishment of the First Empire as first in line to succeed and after the birth of the King of Rome as second in line died on 28 July 1844 without ever having had a legitimate son Although two of Joseph s daughters married in exile when the Bonaparte dynasty was restored by the 1851 French coup d etat in France in December 1851 the man who soon became emperor as Napoleon III was the only living legally legitimate son of Louis Bonaparte former King of Holland In December 1852 with the imperial crown on his head Napoleon III still a bachelor exercised the authority granted him by a decree in the form of a Senatus consulte and confirmed by plebiscite to enact a new organic law on the succession in the event he himself were to leave no legitimate descendants Napoleon III recognised Napoleon I s last surviving brother Jerome as the heir presumptive During Napoleon I s reign Jerome had been one of the Bonaparte brothers who was bypassed in the order of succession his first marriage having been an elopement with the American commoner Elizabeth Patterson over the emperor s objections The Second Empire however empowered the new emperor to choose an heir among any of Napoleon I s nephews After Jerome came Jerome s male descendants by his second dynastic marriage to Princess Catharina of Wurttemberg 1 Napoleon III hitherto a bachelor began to look for a wife to produce a legitimate heir Most of the royal families of Europe were unwilling to intermarry with the parvenu House of Bonaparte After several rebuffs including from Princess Carola of Sweden and Princess Adelaide von Hohenlohe Langenburg Napoleon III decided to lower his sights somewhat and marry for love instead choosing Countess of Teba Eugenie de Montijo a Spanish noblewoman who had been brought up in Paris In 1856 Eugenie gave birth to a legitimate son and heir Napoleon Eugene Louis the Prince Imperial who upon his father s defeat in battle and deposition in September 1870 went into exile He became the claimant to the throne of the Second Empire when his father died in 1873 Like the King of Rome the Prince Imperial died unwed and childless All Bonapartist claimants since 1879 have been descendants of Jerome Bonaparte in the male line List of Bonapartist claimants to the French throne editThis branch of claimants was established by Napoleon Joseph Charles Bonaparte 1 nicknamed Plon Plon He was the only legitimate male descendant of Jerome Bonaparte from his second marriage to Princess Catharina of Wurttemberg He married Princess Clothilde of Savoy and died in 1891 His son Victor Prince Napoleon the next claimant wed Princess Clementine of Belgium and died in 1926 1 He was succeeded by his son Louis Jerome Bonaparte husband of Alix de Foresta daughter of Count Alberic de Foresta who died in 1997 1 He was succeeded by his son Charles Marie Jerome Victor Napoleon Bonaparte He married civilly Princess Beatrice of Bourbon Two Sicilies from whom he was divorced being subsequently declared excluded as Napoleonic heir in his father s will for divorcing her and remarrying a commoner without paternal permission 1 His heir apparent recognised by some as head of the House of Bonaparte since 1997 is his son Jean Christophe Napoleon 1 There are no surviving descendants in the legitimate male line of any of Napoleon s brothers except Jerome 1 This branch of the House of Bonaparte is recognised by Bonapartists as Napoleon I s dynastic heirs being excluded from residence in France or service in its military by law along with the heads of the House of Orleans between 1883 and 1950 The head and dynastic members of the family bear the title of Prince with the name Napoleon Bonaparte and the style of Imperial Highness 1 Claimant Portrait Birth Marriages Death Claim Napoleon I1814 1815 Emperor of the French 1804 1814 nbsp 15 August 1769 Ajaccioson of Carlo Buonaparteand Letizia Ramolino Josephine de Beauharnais9 March 1796No children Marie Louise of Parma11 March 18101 son 5 May 1821Saint Helenaaged 51 Declared Emperor of the French on May 18 1804 Napoleon Francois King of Rome Napoleon II 1815 1832 nbsp 20 March 1811 Parisson of Napoleon Iand Marie Louise of Parma Unmarried 22 July 1832Vienna aged 21 Son of Napoleon I Joseph Count of Survilliers Joseph I 1832 1844 nbsp 7 January 1768 Corteson of Carlo Buonaparteand Letizia Ramolino Julie Clary1 August 17942 children 28 July 1844Florenceaged 76 Brother of Napoleon I uncle of Napoleon II Louis Count of Saint Leu Louis I 1844 1846 nbsp 2 September 1778 Ajaccioson of Carlo Buonaparteand Letizia Ramolino Hortense de Beauharnais4 January 18023 children 25 July 1846Livornoaged 67 Brother of Joseph I Napoleon III1846 1852 1870 1873 Emperor of the French 1852 1870 nbsp 20 April 1808 Parisson of Louis Count of Saint Leuand Hortense de Beauharnais Eugenie de Montijo29 January 18531 son 9 January 1873Chislehurst Londonaged 64 Son of Louis I Napoleon Prince Imperial Napoleon IV 1873 1879 nbsp 16 March 1856 Parisson of Napoleon IIIand Eugenie de Montijo Unmarried 1 June 1879Zulu Kingdom present day KwaZulu Natal aged 23 Son of Napoleon III Victor Prince Napoleon Napoleon V 1879 1926 nbsp 18 July 1862 Parisson of Jerome Prince Napoleonand Maria Clotilde of Savoy Clementine of Belgium10 November 19102 children 3 May 1926Brusselsaged 63 Grandnephew of Napoleon I 2nd cousin of Napoleon IV Louis Prince Napoleon Napoleon VI 1926 1997 nbsp 23 January 1914 Brusselsson of Prince Victor Napoleonand Clementine of Belgium Alix de Foresta16 August 19494 children 3 May 1997Pranginsaged 83 Son of Napoleon V Jean Christophe Prince Napoleon Napoleon VII 1997 present 2 nbsp 11 July 1986 Saint Raphaelson of Charles Prince Napoleonand Beatrice of Bourbon Two Sicilies Countess Olympia von und zu Arco Zinneberg17 October 20191 son Grandson of Napoleon VILine of succession editCarlo Buonaparte 1746 1785 nbsp Napoleon I 1769 1821 nbsp Napoleon II 1811 1832 nbsp Joseph Bonaparte 1768 1844 nbsp Louis Bonaparte 1778 1846 nbsp Napoleon III 1808 1873 nbsp Napoleon Prince Imperial 1856 1879 Jerome Bonaparte 1784 1860 Napoleon Jerome Prince of Montfort 1822 1891 passed over in his cousin s will nbsp Victor Prince Napoleon 1862 1926 nbsp Louis Prince Napoleon 1914 1997 Charles Prince Napoleon b 1950 passed over in his father s will nbsp Jean Christophe Prince Napoleon b 1986 1 Louis Prince Napoleon b 2022 2 Jerome Prince Napoleon b 1957 See also editLegitimism Orleanism Succession to the French throneReferences edit a b c d e f g h Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels Furstliche Hauser XVIII Haus Bonaparte C A Starke Verlag 2007 pp 17 18 German ISBN 978 3 7980 0841 0 Chantal de Badts de Cugnac Guy Coutant de Saisseval 2003 Le Petit Gotha in French Paris Petit Gotha p 441 ISBN 2 9507974 0 7 I the undersigned Louis Prince Napoleon Bonaparte head of the Imperial Family as authorized by the Senatus Consutus of 7 November 1852 the Imperial Family statute of 21 June 1853 and tradition to designate in certain situations notably by application of article 4 of the statute the dynastic heirs in the Imperial Family for succession to the Imperial dignity do choose from the order of hereditary succession and according to primogeniture my grandson Jean Christophe as heir of the Imperial title and position Je soussigne Louis prince Napoleon Bonaparte chef de la Famille Imperiale autorise par le senatus consultus du 7 novembre 1852 le statut de la famille imperiale du 21 juin 1853 et la tradition a designer dans certains hypotheses notamment par application de l article 4 du statut l heritiers dynaste dans la famille imperiale pour succeder a la dignite imperiale je choisis dans l ordre de l heredite et dans le respect de primogeniture mon petit fils Jean Christophe comme heritier de la dignite et de la fonction imperiale a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Succession to the former French throne Bonapartist amp oldid 1219910822, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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