Louise Adélaïde d'Orléans | |
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Abbess of Chelles | |
Louise Adélaïde as Abbess of Chelles by Pierre Gobert | |
Full name | |
Marie Louise Adélaïde d'Orléans | |
Father | Philippe d'Orléans |
Mother | Françoise Marie de Bourbon |
Born | 13 August 1698 Palace of Versailles, France |
Died | 10 February 1743 Convent de la Madeleine de Traisnel, Paris, France |
(aged 44)
Louise Adélaïde d'Orléans (Marie Louise Adélaïde; 13 August 1698 – 10 February 1743) was the third daughter of Philippe d'Orléans, and Françoise Marie de Bourbon, a legitimised daughter of Louis XIV of France and his mistress, Madame de Montespan. She was Abbess of Chelles.
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Marie Louise Adélaïde d'Orléans was born at the Palace of Versailles on 13 August 1698. After the marriage of her aunt Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans, Louise Adélaïde was known at court as Mademoiselle de Chartres; she assumed the style of Mademoiselle d'Orléans in 1710 after her older sister Marie Louise Élisabeth d'Orléans married Charles, Duke of Berry.
Her siblings were:
Character
Very close to her sisters Marie Louise Élisabeth and Charlotte Aglaé, Louise Adélaïde was considered to have been the most beautiful of the Orléans daughters. Her paternal grandmother, Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate, described her in the following manner:
...[She is] well made, and is the handsomest of my granddaughters. She has a fine skin, a superb complexion, very white teeth, good eyes, and a faultless shape. Her hands are extremely delicate, the red and white are beautifully and naturally mingled in her skin. I never saw finer teeth; they are like a row of pearls.[1]
Also according to her grandmother, Louise Adélaïde was very passionate about music and showed an interest in both theology and the sciences.[2] In particular, she was intrigued with the science of surgery which was then going through an era of change and improvement.
On her entrance into a convent, Louis Racine composed a verse about her:
Louise Adélaïde and her sister Charlotte Aglaé were both placed in the Abbey of Chelles from a young age. Their education was briefly interrupted as the two were called back for the wedding of their oldest sister Marie Louise Élisabeth (1710). Louise Adélaïde and Charlotte Aglaé held her train.[4]
Initially, young Louise Adélaïde was considered as a possible bride for her cousin, Louis-Auguste de Bourbon, Prince of Dombes. He was the eldest son of her uncle, the Duke of Maine and his wife, Anne Louise Bénédicte de Bourbon. As the eldest son, he was the heir to his father's immense fortune. The young Louise Adélaïde, very pious by nature, though, refused his hand in marriage. The young prince then turned to her younger sister, Charlotte Aglaé, who also refused his hand. Both the Prince of Dombes and Louise Adélaïde eventually died unmarried.
Another possible candidate was James Francis Edward Stuart.
By 1716 Louise Adélaïde had wanted to marry the Chevalier de Saint-Maixent; he was one of the King's pages, who had saved her from an accident during a hunt at the cost of an injury which nearly proved fatal. Louise Adélaïde tried as much as she could to try to get her parents permission to marry the young Chevalier but both refused outright; The Duchess of Orléans was horrified at the suggestion of such a mesalliance and reportedly treated Louise Adélaïde so harshly due to the subject that it is what encouraged her taking of the veil.[4]
It was on 31 March 1717 that she took the veil officially; the ceremony was held in front of her parents.
Abbesse de Chelles
As a result of the scandalous life led by her older sister, the Dowager Duchess of Berry, Louise Adélaïde decided to become a nun. Her parents, as well as her paternal grandmother, were opposed to it, but she became a nun anyway. As a nun, she took the name of Sœur Sainte-Bathilde (Sister Saint Bathilde) in 1717. She held that name until the next year. While at Chelles, Louise Adélaïde showed a slight interest in Jansenism.
During the Regency of Louis XV, Louise Adélaïde was seen as the main "religious" figure in the country.
In 1719, she became the Abbess of Chelles, a post she held until her death. She was also the Abbess of Val-de-Grâce, a church built under the auspices of her maternal and paternal great-grandmother, Anne of Austria, the wife of King Louis XIII. In 1720, when Charlotte Aglaé had to leave France to meet her husband in Modena; Charlotte Aglaé insisted on seeing her sister before she left. According to their grandmother, it was a sad scene.
While at Chelles Louise Adélaïde greatly embellished the Abbey; she ordered the repaving of the cloisters; the restoration of the Chapter Room; had an infirmary constructed and even had a system where drinkable water could be accessed by the Abbey members as well as the town. Louise Adélaïde also allowed the Sisters of the Abbey of Nevers to build a house in the town in order to help educate the local girls.[5]
She was known as Madame d'Orléans while at Chelles from 1719 till 1734.[6] She died at the age of forty-four from smallpox at the Convent de la Madeleine de Traisnel in Paris.[6]
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