The
French Revolution of 1830, also known as the
July Revolution, saw the overthrow of King
Charles X, the French
Bourbon monarch, and the ascension of his cousin Louis-Philippe, the Duc d'Orléans, who himself, after eighteen precarious years on the throne, would in turn be overthrown. It marked the shift from one
constitutional monarchy, the
Bourbon Restoration, to another, the
July Monarchy, and the transition of power from the House of Bourbon to its cadet branch, the
House of Orléans, and the substitution of the principle of
popular sovereignty for
hereditary right. Supporters of the Bourbon would be called
Legitimists, and supporters of Louis-Philippe
Orleanists.
Background
On
September 16,
1824, Charles X ascended to the throne of
France. He was the younger brother of
Louis XVIII, who, upon the defeat of
Napoleon, and by agreement of the Allied powers, had been installed as King of France. The fact that both Louis and Charles ruled by
hereditary right rather than popular consent was the first of two triggers for
Les Trois Glorieuses, the "Three Glorious Days" of the July Revolution.
Upon the abdication of
Napoleon in 1814, continental Europe, and France in particular, was in a state of disarray. The
Congress of Vienna met to redraw the continent's political map. Although there were many European countries attending the congress, there were four major powers that controlled the decision making:
Great Britain, represented by foreign secretary
Viscount Castlereagh;
Austria, represented by chief minister (and chairman of the congress)
Klemens, Fürst von Metternich;
Russia, represented by
Emperor Alexander I; and
Prussia, represented by
King Frederick William III. Another very influential person at the congress was
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand, a French diplomat under Napoleon. Although France was considered an enemy state, Talleyrand was allowed to attend the congress because he claimed that he had only cooperated with Napoleon under duress.
Talleyrand proposed that Europe be restored to its 'legitimate' (i.e. pre-Napoleon) borders and governments; a plan that, with some changes, was accepted by members of the Congress. France returned to its 1789 borders and, the
House of Bourbon, deposed by the Revolution, was restored to the throne. In the eyes of the Congress, the political situation in France and Europe was now back to normal. However, the new king
Louis XVIII knew that ideas of nationalism and democracy still lingered in his country; hence the establishment and signing of
Charte constitutionelle Français, the French Constitution otherwise known as the
La Charte. A document both liberal and monarchical, the Charte was the second trigger of the July Revolution.
Charles X's reign
On
16 September,
1824, after a lingering illness of several months, the sixty-nine year old Louis XVIII died childless. His younger brother, Charles, age sixty-six, therefore inherited the throne of France. On
27 September Charles X, as he was now known, made his state entry into Paris to the wild acclaim of every class of people . During the ceremony, while presenting the King the keys to the city, Comte de Charbrol, Prefect of the Seine, declared: "Proud to possess its new king, Paris can aspire to become the queen of cities by its magnificence, as its people aspire to be foremost in its fidelity, its devotion, and its love."
[1]
Eight months later the mood of the capital had taken a sharp, downward turn in its opinion of the new king. The causes of this dramatic shift in public opinion, while many, were principally two:
- The imposition of the death penalty for anyone profaning the Host of the Catholic Church. see Anti-Sacrilege Act''
- The provisions for financial indemnities for properties confiscated by the 1789 Revolution and the First Republic of Napoleon. These indemnities to be paid to any one, whether noble or non-noble, who had been declared "enemies of the Revolution".
Critics of the first accused the King and his new ministry of pandering to the Catholic Church, and by so doing violating guarantees of equality of religious belief as specified in the Charte.
The second matter, that of financial indemnities, was far more opportunistic than the first. This was because since the restoration of the monarchy, there had been demands from all groups to settle matters of property ownership; to reduce, if not eliminate, the uncertainties in the real estate market
[2]
both in Paris and in France. But, despite what should have been a popular reaction to the proposal, liberal opponents, many of whom were frustrated Bonapartists, began a whispering campaign that Charles X was only proposing this in order to shame those who had not emigrated. Both measures, they claimed, were nothing more than clever subterfuge meant to bring about the destruction of the Charte.
Up to this time, thanks to the popularity of the Chamber of Peers with the people of Paris, the King's relation with the elite – both of the right and left – had remained solid. This, too, was about to change.
On
12 April, propelled by both genuine conviction and the spirit of independence, the Chamber of Deputies soundly rejected the government's proposal to change the inheritance laws. The popular leftist newspaper
Le Constitutonnel pronounced this refusal "a victory over the forces of counter-revolutionaries and reactionism"
[3]
Like compensating buckets in a well, while the popularity of both the Chamber of Peers and the Champer of Deputies skyrocketed, the popularity of the King and his ministry dropped. This became unmistakable when on
16 April 1827, while reviewing the Garde Royale in the Champ de Mars, the King was greeted with icy silence, many of the spectators refusing even to remove their hats. Charles X "later told [his cousin] Orléans that, although most people present were not too hostile, some looked at times with terrible expressions."
[4]
Because of what it perceived to be growing, relentless, and increasingly vitriolic criticism of both the government and the Church, the government of Charles X introduced into the Chamber of Deputies a proposal for a law tightening
censorship, especially in regard to the newspapers. The Chamber, for its part, objected so violently that the humiliated government had no choice but to withdraw its proposals.
Then, on the grounds that it had behaved in an offensive manner towards the crown, on
30 April the King abruptly dissolved the National Guard of Paris, a voluntary group of citizens and an ever reliable conduit between the monarchy and the people. Cooler heads were appalled. "[I] would rather have my head cut off," wrote a noble from the Rhineland upon hearing the news, "than have counseled such an act: the only further measure needed to cause a revolution is censorship."
[5]
In July 1830, it came. On Sunday,
25 July Charles X signed the
July Ordinances, also known as "Ordinances of Saint-Cloud". On Monday,
26 July they were published in the leading conservative newspaper in Paris, the
Moniteur. On Tuesday,
27 July commenced in earnest
Les trois journées de juillet, and the end of the Bourbon monarchy.
The Three Glorious Days
Monday, 26 July, 1830


Léon Cogniet,
Scenes of July 1830, a painting alluding to the July revolution of 1830.
It was a hot, dry summer, pushing those who could afford it to leave Paris for the country. Most businessmen couldn't, and so were among the first to learn of the Saint-Cloud "ordonnances" from the Monday edition of the
Moniteur. They did not like what they read, perhaps most of all because they suddenly learned they were now no longer permitted to run as candidates for the House of Deputies, membership of which was the
sine qua non of those who sought the ultimate in social prestige. In protest members of the
Bourse refused to lend money, and business owners shuttered their factories. Workers were unceremoniously turned out into the street to fend for themselves. Unemployment numbers, which had been growing through early summer, spiked upward. "Large numbers of...workers therefore had nothing to do but protest."
[6]
The few liberal politicians still in Paris gathered in private to protest, exchange notes, point fingers, and avoid any real course of action. Liberal journalists, on the other hand, took action.
While conservative newspapers such as the
Journal des débats,
Le Moniteur, and
Le Constitutionnel had already ceased publication in compliance with the new law, nearly fifty liberal and radical journalists from a dozen city newspapers met in the offices of the liberal
Le National. There they signed a collective protest, and vowed their newspapers would continue to run.
[7]
That evening, when police raided a news press and seized contraband newspapers they were greeted by a sweltering, unemployed mob angrily shouting,
"A bas les Bourbons!" "Vive la Charte!!" Armand Carrell, a Republican journalist, wrote in the next day's edition of
National:
"France...falls back into revolution by the act of the government itself...the legal regime is now interrupted, that of force has begun...in the situation in which we are now placed obedience has ceased to be a duty...It is for France to judge how far its own resistance ought to extend."[8]
As if living in a dream world, the Paris
Préfet de Police wrote on the evening, " ...the most perfect tranquility continues to reign in all parts of the capital. No event worthy of attention is recorded in the reports that have come through to me."
[9]
Tuesday, 27 July, 1830: Day One
The sun rose to a Paris awash in newspapers – radical newspapers. By noon shopkeepers in the center of the city had closed their stores and bolted the shutters; the noise and traffic on the avenues, which in the early morning had seemed to hold the promise of a typical day, began to disappear. The city grew quiet as the milling crowds grew larger. At 4:30 p.m. commanders of the troops of the First Military division of Paris and the Garde Royale were ordered to concentrate their troops, and guns, on the Place du Carrousel facing the
Tuileries, the
Vendôme, and de
Place de la Bastille. In order to maintain order and protect gunshops from looters, military patrols throughout the city were established, strengthened, and expanded. Amazingly, no special measures were taken to protect either the arms depot or gunpowder factories.
For a time it seemed the precautions seemed premature, but at 7:00 p.m., with the coming twilight, the fighting began. "Parisians, rather than soldiers, were the aggressor. Paving stones, roof tiles, and flowerpots from the upper windows...began to rain down on the soldiers in the streets"
[10] At first, for a time, soldiers fired warning shots into the air. But that did not last long; before the night was over twenty-one civilians were killed. Quick thinking rioters, knowing nothing helps along an uprising more than a martyr, paraded the corpse of one of their fallen throughout the streets shouting "
Mort aux Ministres!!" "
A bas les aristrocrates!"
One witness wrote:
"[I saw] a crowd of agitated people pass by and disappear, then a troop of cavalry succeed them...In every direction and at intervals...Indistinct noises, gunshots, and then for a time all is silent again so for a time one could believe that everything in the city was normal. But all the shops are shut; the Pont Neuf is almost completely dark, the stupefaction visible on every face reminds us all too much of the crisis we face..."[11]
In the late 1820s the city of Paris had established some 2,000
street lamps. These lanterns were hung on ropes looped-on-looped from one pole to another, the whole casting shadows like giant spiders' webs on streets and buildings. These lights were the reason the rioting lasted as late into the night as it did. But along with the sound of bullets and running feet, came the sound of smashing glass as street lamps fell in wanton or accidental destruction. By 10 p.m. nearly all of them were destroyed, and as the city slipped into darkness the crowds began to melt away; by midnight the city was quiet.
Wednesday, 28 July,1830: Day Two
Though Paris has been quiet during the night, it had not been asleep.
"It is hardly a quarter past eight," wrote an eye witness, "and already shouts and gun shots can be heard. Business is at a complete standstill...Crowds rushing through the streets... the sound of cannon and gunfire is becoming ever louder...Cries of 'A bas le roi !!', 'A la guillotine !!' can be heard..."[12]
Looking back, it is clear now that the original plan of Maréchal
Auguste Marmont, Major-General of the city's Garde Royale, to have the Garde Royale singlehandedly guard the vital thoroughfares of the city, as well as protect important buildings such as the
Palais Royale,
Palais de Justice, and the
Hôtel de Ville was both ill considered and wildly ambitious. Not only were there not enough troops but, worse, from bullets to bread to clean drinking water, there were nowhere near enough provisions for those troops...or rather for what troops remained. The Garde was comprised of Parisians, a small but growing number of whom were deserting. Some merely slipping away, others left not caring who saw them.
The seventy-three year old Charles X, prudently remaining at Saint-Cloud, was kept abreast of the events in Paris, and assured by his ministers that the troubles would end as soon as the rioters ran out of ammunition. After all, his ministers assured him, had not Marmont himself sent a report to His Majesty just the previous night assuring him all was under control?
In Paris, a committee of the liberal opposition, composed of banker-and-kingmaker
Jacques Laffitte,
Casimir Perier, Generals Gérard and Mouton Comte de Lobau, among others had drawn up and signed a petition in which, not surprisingly, they asked for the
ordonnances to be withdrawn; more surprising was their criticism "not of the King, but his ministers" – thereby disproving Charles X's conviction that his liberal opponents were enemies of his dynasty."
[13]
After signing the petition, committee members went to directly to Marmont to beg for an end to the bloodshed, and to plead with him to become a mediator between Saint-Cloud and Paris. In the near-anarchy of his headquarters, Marmont explained with tired patience that petitions and humble requests were all well and good, but that the first step lay with the people of Paris – they must lay down their arms and return to their homes. Then, and only then, could there be talk. Discouraged but not despairing, the party then sought out the King's chief minister, the haughty, eerily calm
de Polignac—"
Jeanne d'Arc en culottes" as he was whisperingly called at Saint-Cloud. From Polignac they received even less satisfaction. He refused to see them, perhaps because he knew it would be nothing but a waste of time. Like Marmont, Polignac knew that Charles X considered the
ordonnances as vital to the safety and dignity of the throne of France—
his throne. In short, the King would never withdraw the
ordonnances.
At 4 p.m. Charles X received Colonel Komierowski, one of Marmont's chief aides. The colonel was carrying a note from Marmont to his Majesty:
"Sire, it is no longer a riot, it is a revolution. It is urgent for Your Majesty to take measures for pacification. The honour of the crown can still be saved. Tomorrow, perhaps, there will be no more time...I await with impatience Your Majesty's orders."[14]
The King looked to his "Jeanne d'Arc en culottes" (Polignac) for advice, and the advice was simple: "resist". Meanwhile in Paris a group of serious men met and talked. The name of the Duc d'Orléans was mentioned for the first time.
Thursday, 29 July, 1830: Day Three
"They [the King and ministers] do not come to Paris," wrote Parisian Alfred de Vigny, "people are dying for them ... Not one prince has appeared. The poor men of the Guard abandoned without orders, without bread for two days, hunted everywhere and fighting."[15]
Perhaps for the same reason Royalists were nowhere to be found; perhaps another reason was because now the
révoltés were well organized and well armed – very well armed. In what seemed like only a day and a night over four thousand barricades had been thrown up throughout the city; nearly every tree of any size in the city had been chopped down to erect or strengthen these barricades; entire streets had had their cobble stones torn out for the same reasons. The red flag of the revolutionaries – the "people's flag" – could be seen flying over buildings, an increasing number of them important buildings. Nowhere was there the white and gold flag of the Bourbons.
Marmont was completely in over his head and was beginning to crack. He lacked either the initiative or the presence of mind to call for additional troops from Saint-Denis, Vincennes, Lunéville or Saint-Omar; neither did he ask for help from reservists or those Parisians still loyal to Charles X. Liberals swarmed to his headquarters demanding the arrest of Polignac and the other ministers; conservatives and city leaders demanding he arrest the rioters and their puppet masters. Marmont listened to them all with growing indifference, and did nothing. Instead he awaited for orders from the King, just as his King had commanded.
By 1:30 p.m. the
Tuileries had fallen. It now seemed like an over turned ant-hill of radicals, rioters, and opportunists. What could not be pillaged was smashed to bits, or sent hurling through closed windows to the ground below. "A man wearing a ball dress belonging to the Duchesse de Berri, with feathers and flowers in his hair, screamed from a palace window: "
Je reçois! Je reçois!" Others drank wine from the palace cellars."
[16] It should be noted that the amount of looting during these three days was surprisingly little; not only at the
Louvre – whose paintings and objects d'art were protected by the crowd – but the Tuileries, the
Palais de Justice, the
Archbishop's Palace, and other places as well.
Earlier that day the Louvre had fallen, and even more quickly. The Swiss Guards, seeing the mob swarming towards them, and manacled by the orders of Marmont not to fire unless fired upon first, took to their heels. They had no wish to share the fate of a similar contingent of Swiss Guards back in 1792, who had held their ground against another such mob and were torn to pieces for their valor. By mid-afternoon came the greatest, most sought after prize of them all: the
Hôtel de Ville had fallen. A few hours after its capture, liberal politicians entered the battered complex and set about establishing a provisional government. Though there would be spots of fighting throughout the city for the few days, the revolution, for all intents and purposes, was over.
Result
The revolt of 1830 created a constitutional monarchy. Charles X abdicated rather than become a limited monarch and departed for
Great Britain. In his place
Louis-Philippe of the
House of Orléans was placed on the throne, and he agreed to rule as a constitutional monarch. This period became known as the
July Monarchy.
One month later, in the
United Kingdom of the Netherlands, the
Belgian Revolution would commence, leading to the establishment of an independent
Kingdom of Belgium.
The
July Column, located on Place de la
Bastille, commemorates those three days.
References
1.
^ Mansel, Philip,
Paris Between Empires (St. Martin Press, NY 2001) p.198
2.
^ Ibid.# p.200
3.
^ Ledré, Charles
La Presse à l'assaut de la monarchie. (1960). p.70.
4.
^ Marie Amélie, 356; (17 April 1827); Antonetti, 527.
5.
^ Duc de Dolberg, Castellan, II, 176 (letter 30 April, 1827)
6.
^ Mansel, Philip,
Paris Between Empires (St. Martin Press, NY 2001) p. 238
7.
^ Mansel, 2001, p.238
8.
^ Pinkey, 83–84; Rémusat,
Mémories II, 313–314; Lendré 107
9.
^ Pickney, David.
The French Revolution of 1830 (Princeton 1972), p. 93.
10.
^ Mansel, Philip,
Paris Between Empires, (St. Martin Press NY 2001) p.239.
11.
^ Olivier, Juste,
Paris en 1830, Journal (July 27, 1830) p.244.
12.
^ Olivier, Juste,
Paris en 1830, Journal (July 28, 1830) p.247.
13.
^ Ibid.#8 p.245.
14.
^ Ibid.#6 p.247.
15.
^ de Vigny, Alfred,
Journal d'un poète, 33, (29 July 1830).
16.
^ Mémoires d'outre-tombe, III, 120; Fontaine II, 849 (letter of 9 August 1830).
Further reading
- Pilbeam, Pamela (June 1989). "The Economic Crisis of 1827-32 and the 1830 Revolution in Provincial France". The Historical Journal 32 (2): 319-338.
- Pilbeam, Pamela (December 1983). "The 'Three Glorious Days': The Revolution of 1830 in Provincial France". The Historical Journal 26 (4): 831-844.
- Price, Roger (December 1974). "Legitimist Opposition to the Revolution of 1830 in the French Provinces". The Historical Journal 17 (4): 755-778.
Charles X
King of France and Navarre
Reign 16 September, 1824 – 2 August, 1830
Coronation 28 May 1825, Reims
Full name Charles-Philippe
Titles Count of Artois (1757–1824)
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- Also see: Early Modern France
The
House of Bourbon is an important European royal house, a branch of the Capetian dynasty. Bourbon kings first ruled Navarre and France in the 16th century.
..... Click the link for more information. constitutional monarchy is a form of government established under a constitutional system which acknowledges an elected or hereditary monarch as head of state, as opposed to an absolute monarchy, where the monarch is not bound by a constitution and is the sole source of political
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Bourbon Dynasty to the French throne. The ensuing period is called the Restauration, following French usage, and is characterized by a sharp conservative reaction and the re-establishment of the Roman Catholic Church as a power in French politics.
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The July Monarchy (1830-1848) was a period of liberal monarchy rule of France. It was proclaimed on August 9, 1830 after the Three Glorious Days (or July Revolution) in France.
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Also known as the "House of Bourbon-Orléans", for many centuries, the House of Orléans was one of the most important families in France, with the Duc d'Orléans traditionally being very close to the king.
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Popular sovereignty is the belief that the state is created by and therefore subject to the will of its people, who are the source of all political power. It is closely associated to the social contract philosophers, among whom are Thomas Hobbes, John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
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Hereditary titles, in a general sense, are titles, positions or styles that are hereditary and thus tend or are bound to remain in particular families.
Some hereditary titles are inherited only by the eldest son (see primogeniture)[1]
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Legitimists are Royalists in France who believe that the King of France and Navarre must be chosen according to the simple application of the Salic Law. Called "Ultra-royalists" under the Bourbon Restoration, they are adherents of the elder branch of the Bourbon dynasty,
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The Orléanists were a French political faction or party which arose out of the French Revolution, and ceased to have a separate existence shortly after the establishment of the Third Republic in 1870.
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September 16 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
Events
- 1400 - Owain Glyndŵr declared Prince of Wales by his followers.
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1790s 1800s 1810s - 1820s - 1830s 1840s 1850s
1821 1822 1823 - 1824 - 1825 1826 1827
:
Subjects: Archaeology - Architecture -
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MottoLiberté, Égalité, Fraternité"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"
Anthem"
La Marseillaise"
..... Click the link for more information. Louis XVIII
King of France and Navarre
Reign De jure 8 June 1795 – 16 September 1824
De facto 6 April 1814 – 20 March 1815; 8 July 1815 – 16 September 1824
Coronation None
Full name
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Napoléon I
Emperor of the French
Napoleon in His Study by Jacques-Louis David (1812)
Reign 20 March 1804–6 April 1814
1 March 1815–22 June 1815
Coronation 2 December 1804
Full name Napoléon Bonaparte
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Hereditary titles, in a general sense, are titles, positions or styles that are hereditary and thus tend or are bound to remain in particular families.
Some hereditary titles are inherited only by the eldest son (see primogeniture)[1]
..... Click the link for more information.
Napoléon I
Emperor of the French
Napoleon in His Study by Jacques-Louis David (1812)
Reign 20 March 1804–6 April 1814
1 March 1815–22 June 1815
Coronation 2 December 1804
Full name Napoléon Bonaparte
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The Congress of Vienna was a conference between ambassadors from the major powers in Europe that was chaired by the Austrian statesman Klemens Wenzel von Metternich and held in Vienna, Austria, from late September, 1814, to June 9, 1815.
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Kingdom of Great Britain, also known as the United Kingdom of Great Britain, was a state in Western Europe, in existence from 1707 to 1800. It was created by the merger of the Kingdom of Scotland and the Kingdom of England, under the Acts of Union 1707, to create a single
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Robert Stewart, 2nd Marquess of Londonderry, KG, GCH, PC (18 June 1769 in Dublin – 12 August 1822 at Loring Hall, Kent), generally known by his courtesy title of Viscount Castlereagh
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Austrian empire may refer to:
- The Austrian monarchy, see Habsburg Monarchy (1526–1867)
- Austrian Empire (1804-1867)
- Austria-Hungary (1867-1918)
See also
- Holy Roman Empire (843-1806)
- Countries of the Austrian Empire (1804-1867
..... Click the link for more information. Prince Klemens Wenzel von Metternich (German: Klemens Wenzel Nepomuk Lothar Fürst[1] von Metternich-Winneburg zu Beilstein
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Russian Empire (Pre-reform Russian: Pоссiйская Имперiя, Modern Russian: Российская империя,
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Emperor Alexander I
Александр I Павлови?
Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias
Reign March 23, 1801–December 1, 1825
Coronation
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Prussia (German: (help info ) [1]; Latin: Borussia, Prutenia; Latvian: Prūsija
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Frederick William III (German: Friedrich Wilhelm III., August 3 1770 – June 7 1840) was king of Prussia from 1797 to 1840.
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Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord, Prince de Benevente (February 2, 1754 – May 17, 1838), the Prince of Diplomats, [1] was a French diplomat. He worked successfully from the regime of Louis XVI, through the French Revolution and then under Napoleon I,
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- Also see: Early Modern France
The
House of Bourbon is an important European royal house, a branch of the Capetian dynasty. Bourbon kings first ruled Navarre and France in the 16th century.
..... Click the link for more information. Louis XVIII
King of France and Navarre
Reign De jure 8 June 1795 – 16 September 1824
De facto 6 April 1814 – 20 March 1815; 8 July 1815 – 16 September 1824
Coronation None
Full name
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The French Charter of 1814 was a constitution granted by King Louis XVIII of France shortly after his restoration. The Congress of Vienna demanded that Louis bring in a constitution of some form before he was restored.
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