Henri d'Orléans, duc d'Aumale

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French Monarchy
House of Orléans

Louis-Philippe
Children
   Ferdinand-Philippe, Crown Prince of France
   Louise-Marie of France
   Marie of Orléans
   Louis, Duke of Nemours
   Francisca of Orléans
   Clementine of Orléans
   François, Prince of Joinville
   Charles, Duke of Penthièvre
   Henri, Duke of Aumale
   Antoine, Duke of Montpensier
Grandchildren
   Philippe (VII), Count of Paris
   Robert, Duke of Chartres
   Gaston, Count of Eu
   Ferdinand Philippe Marie, Duke of Alençon
   Margaret of Orléans
   Blanche of Orléans
   Marie-Françoise of Orléans
   Louis Philippe Marie Léopold, Prince of Condé
   François Louis, Duke of Guise
Great Grandchildren
   Amélie of Orléans
   Philippe (VIII), Duke of Orléans
   Hélène of Orléans
   Charles of Orléans
   Isabelle of Orléans
   Jacques of Orléans
   Louise of Orléans
   Ferdinand, Duke of Montpensier
   Marie of Orléans
   Robert of Orléans
   Henri of Orléans
   Marguerite of Orléans
   Jean, Duke of Guise
   Louise of Orléans
   Philippe Emmanuel, Duke of Vendôme and Alençon
Great Great Grandchildren
   Isabelle of Orléans
   Françoise of Orléans
   Anne of Orlçans
   Henri (VI), Count of Paris
Great Great Great Grandchildren
   Isabella of Orléans
   Henri (VII), Count of Paris
   Hélène of Orléans
   François, Duke of Orléans
   Anne of Orléans
   Diane of Orléans
   Michel, Count of Evreux
   Jacques, Duke of Orléans
   Claude of Orléans
   Chantal of Orléans
   Thibaut, Count of La Marche
   Marie Louise of Orléans
   Sophie Joséphine of Orléans
   Geneviève Marie of Orléans
   Charles Philippe, Duke of Nemours
Great Great Great Great Grandchildren
   Marie of Orléans
   François, Count of Clermont
   Blanche of Orléans
   Jean, Duke of Vendôme
   Eudes, Duke of Angoulême
   Clothilde of Orléans
   Adélaïde of Orléans
   Charles Philippe, Duke of Anjou
   François of Orléans
   Diane Marie of Orléans
   Charles-Louis, Duke of Chartres
   Foulques, Duke of Aumale, Count of Eu

Henri Eugène Philippe Louis d'Orléans, duc d'Aumale (January 16, 1822May 7, 1897) was born in Paris. He was the fifth and second youngest son of Louis-Philippe, King of the French and Duc d'Orléans and Marie Amalie of Bourbon-Sicilies. He took the title of Duc d'Aumale. He was a leader for the Orleanist cause of a constitutional monarchy in France.

Henri, Duke of Aumale
Henri, Duke of Aumale

While still young he inherited a large fortune, the lands and wealth of the Princes de Condé, the last Prince de Condé being his godfather, Louis Henry II. Brought up by his parents with great simplicity, he was educated at the college of Henri IV. At the age of seventeen he entered the army with the rank of a captain of infantry. He distinguished himself during the French invasion of Algeria and, in 1847, he became lieutenant-general and was appointed Governor-General of Algeria, a position he held from September 27, 1847 to February 24, 1848. In this capacity he received the submission of the emir Abdel Kadir, in December 1847. After the Revolution of 1848, he retired to England and busied himself with historical and military studies, replying in 1861 by a Letter upon History of France to the Emperor Napoleon's violent attacks upon the House of Orléans.

On the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, he volunteered for service in the French army but his offer was declined. Elected deputy for the Oise département, he returned to France, and succeeded to the fauteuil of the comte Montalembert in the French Academy. In March 1872 he resumed his place in the army as general of division and, in 1873, presided over the court-martial which condemned Marshal Bazaine to death.

At this time, having been appointed commander of the VII army corps at Besançon, he retired from political life and, in 1879, became inspector-general of the army. The act of exception, passed in 1883, deprived all members of families that had reigned in France of their military positions. Consequently, the duc d'Aumale was placed on the unemployed supernumerary list. Subsequently, in 1886, another law was promulgated which expelled from French territory the heads of former reigning families and provided that, henceforward, all members of those families should be disqualified for any public position or function and election to any public body. The duc d'Aumale protested energetically but was nonetheless expelled.

By his will of the June 3, 1884, however, he had bequeathed to the Institute of France his Chantilly estate, including the Château de Chantilly, with all the art-collection he had collected there, to become a museum. This generosity led the government to withdraw the decree of exile and the duke returned to France in 1889. He died in Zucco, Sicily and was buried in Dreux, in the chapel of the Orléans.

[edit] Children

On November 25, 1844, he married Marie-Caroline-Auguste de Bourbon-Siciles, daughter of the prince of Salerno and Archduchess Marie Clementine of Austria, in Naples. They had four children, two of whom reached adulthood:

  • Louis Philippe Marie Léopold, Prince de Condé (18451866)
  • François Louis d'Orléans, Duc de Guise (18541872)
Monarchical Styles of
Prince Henri of France, Duke of Aumale
Reference style His Royal Highness
Spoken style Your Royal Highness
Alternative style Sir

[edit] External link and references

[edit] References

Preceded by
Charles de Montalembert
Seat 21
Académie française
1871-1897
Succeeded by
Eugène Guillaume
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