Victor | |
---|---|
Prince Napoléon | |
|
|
Period | 1 June 1879 – 3 May 1926 ( 46 years, 336 days) |
Predecessor | Napoléon IV Eugene |
Successor | Napoléon VI Louis |
Spouse | Princess Clémentine of Belgium |
Issue | |
Princess Marie-Clotilde Prince Louis |
|
House | House of Bonaparte |
Father | Prince Napoléon Joseph |
Mother | Princess Maria Clotilde of Savoy |
Born | 18 July 1862 Palais Royal |
Died | 3 May 1926 Brussels |
(aged 63)
Victor, Prince Napoléon, titular 4th Prince of Montfort (Napoléon Victor Jérôme Frédéric Bonaparte; 18 July 1862 – 3 May 1926) was the Bonapartist pretender to the French throne from 1879 until his death in 1926. He was known as Napoléon V by his supporters.
Contents |
He was born in the Palais Royal of Paris during the Second French Empire the son of the Prince Napoleon and his wife Princess Marie Clothilde of Savoy, daughter of Victor Emmanuel II of Italy. Two younger siblings would soon follow: Prince Louis (1864–1932) and Princess Maria Letizia (1866–1926), later the Duchess of Aosta. At the time of his birth he was third in the line of succession to the throne behind the Prince Imperial and his father. The Empire came to an end in 1870 with the abdication of Emperor Napoléon III.
He was appointed head of the house of Bonaparte at the age of 18 in the will of Napoléon Eugène, Prince Imperial, who died in 1879, and so became Napoleon V to his supporters, though his younger brother, Prince Louis, a colonel in the Russian Imperial Guard, was preferred to him by many Bonapartists.[1] The decision by the Prince Imperial to bypass Prince Victor's father led to a complete breakdown in relations between father and son. In May, 1886 the French Republic expelled the princes of the former ruling dynasties and so Prince Victor left France for exile in Belgium.[2]
At the time of the death of President Félix Faure during the Dreyfus affair, a number of political factions attempted to take advantage of the disorder and Prince Victor announced to a delegation from the Imperialist committee that he would take action to restore the French Empire when he felt that the time was favourable. In order to achieve this, he announced he would place himself at the head of the movement with his brother, Prince Louis, fighting beside him who he said would be "bringing to the Bonapartist forces his prestige and his military talents as well as his rank in the Russian army". The Duke of Orléans, rival claimant to the throne, also had forces available and they were ready to cross the French frontier at same time as the Bonapartist forces. In the end the anticipated outbreak in France didn't materialise and the French Third Republic survived one of its gravest crises.[1]
Prince Victor died on 3 May 1926 in Brussels with the French author Charles Maurras commenting on Prince Victor's time as pretender saying that he hadn't offered any new ideas since 1884 and no radical alternatives to republican governments.[3] He was succeeded as the Bonaparte heir by his only son Prince Louis.
On 10 November/14 November 1910, at Moncalieri, Prince Victor was married to Princess Clémentine of Belgium (1872–1955), daughter of Leopold II of Belgium and Marie Henriette of Austria. They had two children:
Victor, Prince Napoléon
Born: 18 July 1862 Died: 3 May 1926 |
||
Titles in pretence | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Napoléon IV Eugène |
— TITULAR — Emperor of the French 1 June 1879 – 3 May 1926 Reason for succession failure: Empire abolished in 1870 |
Succeeded by Napoléon VI Louis |
|
|