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Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême

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Parent: Charles X of France Hop 4
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Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême
NameLouis Antoine
TitleDuke of Angoulême
Birth date6 August 1775
Birth placeVersailles
Death date3 June 1844
Death placeGorizia
HouseHouse of Bourbon
FatherCharles X
MotherMarie Thérèse of Savoy
SpouseMarie Thérèse of France
Full nameLouis Antoine d'Artois

Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême (6 August 1775 – 3 June 1844) was a French prince of the House of Bourbon and the eldest son of Charles Philippe, Count of Artois who later reigned as Charles X. He served as a royalist military officer during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars, was briefly titular King as "Louis XIX" during the July Revolution succession crisis, and spent long periods in exile following the Bourbon Restoration. His life connected prominent figures and events of late 18th- and early 19th-century Europe including members of the French royal family, the Napoleon I, and the courts of Austria, Russia, and Prussia.

Early life and family

Born at Versailles in 1775, he was the eldest son of Charles Philippe and Marie Thérèse of Savoy, linking the House of Bourbon to the House of Savoy and the dynastic networks of Habsburg and House of Lorraine. During the French Revolution, his family fled France and sought refuge among royal courts including Prussia, Austria, Sardinia, and Great Britain. His siblings included notable émigré figures such as the Duchess of Berry and the Count of Artois (later Charles X), and his upbringing intersected with the political dynamics of the Ancien Régime and the émigré communities that clustered around events like the Emigration of 1791 and the Counter-revolutionary movements.

Military career and Napoleonic Wars

His early military formation was shaped by service in émigré regiments aligned with Royalist forces and coalition armies opposing the French Revolutionary government and later the First French Empire. He fought in campaigns that involved coalitions including the First Coalition and later alignments that engaged commanders such as Prince of Coburg, Duke of Wellington, and leaders from Russia and Austria. During the Napoleonic Wars his status as a Bourbon prince complicated interactions with figures like Napoleon Bonaparte and episodes such as the Treaty of Amiens and the War of the Third Coalition. After Waterloo and the fall of Napoleon, his military and political position rose alongside the restored monarchy, and he participated in the reorganizations that linked royal forces with veterans of the Bourbon Restoration.

Marriage, personal life and titles

He married Marie Thérèse, the daughter of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, uniting two branches of the Bourbon line and tying his household to the legacy of the French Revolution and the Tuileries Palace. The couple bore no surviving issue, a fact that influenced dynastic succession considerations affecting claimants such as the Count of Chambord and later the Orléanist and Legitimist disputes with figures like the Duke of Orléans and the Comte de Paris. He held traditional Bourbon titles including Duke of Angoulême, and after 1824 was heir apparent as Dauphin of France to Charles X until the events of 1830. His personal circle included émigré aristocrats from houses such as Condé, Rohan, Montmorency, and ties to courts in Vienna, Saint Petersburg, and Madrid.

Role in the Bourbon Restoration and Hundred Days

During the Bourbon Restoration he was prominent at the court of Louis XVIII and later of Charles X, participating in the politics surrounding the Charter of 1814, the White Terror, and the military measures of the period. In the crisis of the Hundred Days and the return of Napoleon from Elba, he stood with royalist forces and allied monarchs including representatives from Prussia and Austria who opposed Bonapartist resurgence. The 1830 July Revolution forced a transfer of power: during the abdication sequence he was declared king in succession for a brief period by royalists, a contested moment involving players such as Louis Philippe and leading to negotiations with actors from the National Guard, liberal deputies of the Chamber of Deputies, and revolutionary committees that shaped the July Monarchy.

Exile and later life

After 1830 he accompanied the senior Bourbon line into exile, residing in domains and cities such as Prague, Gorizia, and houses connected to families like the Spanish Bourbons and the House of Savoy. In exile he interacted with figures from the exiled courts of Charles X, diplomatic envoys from capitals like London, Vienna, and Saint Petersburg, and Legitimist supporters including veterans of the Chouannerie and émigré aristocracy. His later years were shaped by correspondence and dynastic planning involving claimants such as the Count of Chambord and negotiations over restoration prospects amidst changing European orders after the Congress of Vienna and the revolutions of 1830 and 1848. He died in 1844 at Gorizia under the surveillance of continental authorities and in the shadow of ongoing Legitimist-Orléanist tensions.

Legacy and historical assessment

Historians assess him as a symbol of the restored House of Bourbon whose life embodied the turbulence from the Ancien Régime through the Revolution and the reshaping of Europe after the Napoleonic Wars. Scholarship links his biography to debates on legitimacy, succession, and the role of royal families in post-Napoleonic Europe, involving analyses that reference figures like Metternich, Talleyrand, Fouché, and commentators of the Romanticism era. His lack of issue and brief claim during the 1830 crisis influenced later disputes involving the Legitimist movement, the claims of the Count of Chambord, and the policies of the July Monarchy under Louis Philippe I. Monographs and archival studies situate him among other Bourbon exiles, émigré networks, and the dynastic realignments that preceded mid-19th-century revolutions and the eventual reshaping of European monarchies.

Category:House of Bourbon Category:French princes Category:1775 births Category:1844 deaths