Armand-Emmanuel du Plessis, Duc de Richelieu

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Duc de Richelieu
Armand-Emmanuel du Plessis, Duc de Richelieu

In office
September 26, 1815 – December 29, 1818
Preceded by Charles Maurice de Talleyrand
Succeeded by Marquis Dessolles
In office
February 20, 1820 – December 14, 1821
Preceded by Comte Decazes
Succeeded by Comte de Villèle

Born September 25, 1766(1766-09-25)
Died May 17, 1822 (aged 55)
Political party None

Armand Emmanuel Sophie Septemanie du Plessis, duc de Richelieu (September 25, 1766 - May 17, 1822) was a prominent French statesman during the Bourbon Restoration. As a Royalist aristocrat, during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars, he served as a soldier in the Russian Imperial Army.

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[edit] Early Years

He was born in Paris, the son of Louis Antoine du Plessis, duc de Fronsac and grandson of King Louis XV of France's favorite, the Maréchal de Richelieu (1696-1788). Known as the Comte de Chinon during the lifetime of his grandfather, he was married in 1782 at the tender age of fifteen to Rosalie de Rochechouart, a deformed child of twelve, with whom his relations were never more than formal. Immediately after the wedding, Chinon embarked upon the Grand Tour with his tutor, visiting the cities of Geneva, Florence and Vienna. After three years of foreign travel, he entered Queen Marie Antoinette's Regiment of Dragoons and the next year assumed his aged grandfather's place at court as a premier gentilhomme de la chambre to King Louis XVI of France. At the Palace of Versailles, it was his duty to attend the King during the highly ritualized daily lever and coucher ceremonies. Despite his young age, he had a reputation at court for puritanical austerity. When his grandfather finally died and his father succeeded to the Richelieu dukedom in 1788, Chinon became the Duc de Fronsac.

By 1789, he was a captain in the Esterhazy Regiment of Hussars. On October 5 of that year, he was in Paris when the March on Versailles began. Worried about the safety of the royal family[1], he disguised himself as one of the crowd and started out on foot to Versailles in order to warn the King and Queen. Unable to break through the large number of people on the road, he took a shortcut through the woods. He arrived just as the angry mob was converging on the palace. He went immediately to the Queen and convinced her to seek refuge in the King's apartments[2], thus arguably saving her life[3].

[edit] In Exile

On Marie Antoinette's direction, he left Paris in 1790 for Vienna in order to discuss the recent events of the French Revolution with her older brother, the Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II. Before he got there, however, Joseph died. Instead, Richelieu attended the coronation of the new Emperor, Leopold II, in Frankfurt and then followed the Hapsburg court back to Vienna. There, he renewed a friendship with Prince Charles de Ligne, the son of the famous Austrian diplomat, the Prince de Ligne. Together, they decided to join the Imperial Russian army as volunteers. Accompanied by another friend, the Comte de Langéron, they reached the Russian headquarters at Bender, Moldova on November 21. The three were present at Alexander Suvorov's capture of Izmail. For his service in that battle, Fronsac was decorated by the Russian empress Catherine the Great with the Order of St. George and given a golden sword.

On the death of his father, in February 1791, he succeeded to the title of Duc de Richelieu. Because of an unwillingness on the part of various nobles to serve in the royal household, King Louis XVI soon afterwards summoned him back to Paris in order for him to resume his position as a premier gentilhomme at the Tuileries Palace. He was not, however, sufficiently in the confidence of the court to be informed of the projected flight to Varennes on the night of June 20, 1791.

Ivan Martos's statue of the Duc de Richelieu in Odessa.
Ivan Martos's statue of the Duc de Richelieu in Odessa.

Feeling that his role at court was useless in helping the King deal with all the revolutionary agitation that was embroiling Paris, Richelieu in July obtained with royal permission a passport from the National Constituent Assembly in order to return to Vienna as a diplomat. After a short stay in Austria, however, Richelieu joined the counter-revolutionary émigré army of Louis XVI's cousin, the Prince de Condé, which was headquartered in the German frontier town of Coblenz. Later, after Condé's forces had suffered several defeats, Catherine the Great offered positions in her army to the Royalist officers serving under Condé. Richelieu accepted.

In the Russian army, he achieved the rank of Major General but later resigned his commission after what he considered an unwarranted reprimand by Catherine's unstable successor, Czar Paul I. His prospects brightened, however, after Paul was murdered in 1801. The new Russian emperor, Czar Alexander I, was one of his friends. The erasure of Richelieu's name from the list of prohibited émigrés who could not legally return to France, which Richelieu on his own had previously been unable to secure from Napoleon Bonaparte, was accorded on the request of Alexander's new imperial government, and in 1803 Alexander appointed him Governor of Odessa. Two years later, he became Governor-General of a large swathe of land recently conquered from the Ottoman Empire called New Russia, which included the territories of Chersonese, Ekaterinoslav and the Crimea. In the eleven years of his administration, Odessa rose from a miserable village to an important city, and the grateful Odessites erected a bronze monument to him in 1828. These are the famous Odessa Steps, crowned by a statue of Richelieu. He commanded a division in the Turkish War of 1806-1807, and was engaged in frequent expeditions to the Caucasus.

[edit] Return to France

Richelieu returned to France in 1814; on the return of Napoleon from Elba he accompanied Louis XVIII as far as Lille, whence he went to Vienna to rejoin the Russian army, believing that he could best serve the interests of the new King and of France by attaching himself to the headquarters of Czar Alexander.

Richelieu's character and antecedents alike marked him out as a valuable support for the monarchy at the beginning of the Bourbon Restoration. Though the bulk of his confiscated estates were lost beyond recall, he did not share the angry resentment of most of the returning émigrés, from whose company and intrigues he had held himself aloof during his long Russian exile. More specifically, he did not share their delusions as to the possibility of undoing the work of the French Revolution. As the personal friend of the Russian emperor, his influence in the councils of the Allies had been of great service. Despite this fact, however, he refused the offer of a place in the ministry of the former revolutionary and Bonapartist Talleyrand, pleading both a long absence from France and an ignorance of its conditions. Eventually, though, after Talleyrand's resignation in advance of the opening session of the new Ultraroyalist Chamber of Deputies (the famous Chambre introuvable), Richelieu decided (after much urging from Mathieu de Montmorency) to succeed Talleyrand as the Prime Minister of France, though - as he himself said - he did not know the face of a single one of his colleagues.

It was mainly due to his efforts that France was so early relieved of the burden of the allied army of occupation. It was for this purpose mainly that he attended the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1818. There he had been informed in confidence of the renewal by the Allies of their treaty binding them to interfere in case of a reprise of revolutionary trouble in France; it was partly owing to this reassuring knowledge that he left office in December of the same year, on the refusal of his colleagues to support a modification of the electoral law. After the murder of the king's nephew, the Duc de Berry, and the enforced retirement of Decazes, he was again called to the premiership (February 21, 1821); but his position was untenable owing to the attacks of the "Ultras" on the one side and the Liberals on the other and on December 12, 1821, he again resigned.

He died, of apoplexy, on May 17, 1822.

Preceded by
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand
Prime Minister of France
1815-1818
Succeeded by
Jean-Joseph, Marquis Dessolles
Preceded by
Antoine-Vincent Arnault
Seat 16
Académie française
1816-1822
Succeeded by
Bon-Joseph Dacier
Preceded by
Elie, Comte Decazes
Prime Minister of France
1820-1821
Succeeded by
Jean-Baptiste, Comte de Villèle

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Cynthia Cox, Talleyrand's Successor, London (1959) p.30
  2. ^ Cynthia Cox, Talleyrand's Successor, London (1959) p.30
  3. ^ Antonia Fraser, Marie Antoinette, The Journey, New York (2001) p.296

[edit] References

  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Cynthia Cox, Talleyrand's Successor, London (1959) [1]
  • Antonia Fraser, Marie Antoinette, The Journey, New York (2001) [2]
  • Great part of Richelieu's correspondence with Pozzo di Borgo, Capo d'Istria and others, with his journal of his travels in Germany and the Turkish campaign, and a notice by the duchesse de Richelieu, is published by the Imperial Historical Society of Russia, vol. 54.
  • There is an exhaustive study of his career by Léon de Crousaz-Crétet, Le Duc de Richelieu en Russie et en France (1897), with which compare an article by L. Rioult de Neuville in the Revue des questions historiques (Oct. 1897)
  • See also R. de Cisternes, Le Duc de Richelieu, son action aux conférences d'Aix-la-Chapelle (1898), containing copies of documents.