| The Bourbons
John Graham Royde-Smith: Associate
Editor, History

The Bourbons were one of the most
important ruling houses of Europe . Its
members were descended from Louis I, duc de Bourbon from 1327 to
1342, the grandson of the French king Louis IX (ruled 1226-70). It
provided reigning kings of France from 1589 to 1792 and from 1814 to
1830, after which another Bourbon reigned as king of the French
until 1848; kings or queens of Spain from 1700 to 1808, from 1814 to
1868, from 1874 to 1931, and since 1975; dukes of Parma from 1731 to
1735, from 1748 to 1802, and from 1847 to 1859; kings of Naples and
of Sicily from 1734 to 1808 and of the Two Sicilies from 1816 to
1860; kings of Etruria from 1801 to 1807; and ducal sovereigns of
Lucca from 1815 to 1847.
The present article attempts a
rapid survey of the dynasty as a whole, relying mainly on
genealogical tables to display necessary details. In these tables
the names and titles of sovereigns are mostly anglicized, but those
of other persons are mostly given in the original form, except where
princesses, having married into another country, are better known
under that country's name for them. The tables also omit perforce
the Bourbon bastards, whose multitude lends some color to the
popular notion that the "Bourbon nose" (larger and more prominent
than the normal aquiline) betokens a "Bourbon temperament" or
enormous appetite for sexual intercourse.
Origins
The House of Bourbon is a branch
of the House of Capet, which constituted the so-called third race of
France 's kings.
King Louis IX, a Capetian of the "direct line," was the ancestor of
all the Bourbons through his sixth son, Robert
, comte de Clermont. When the "direct line" died out in 1328, the
House of Valois, genealogically senior to the Bourbons, prevented
the latter from accession to the French crown until 1589. The
Valois , however, established the so-called Salic Law of
Succession, under which the crown passed through males according to
primogeniture, not through females. On this principle, the senior
Bourbon became the rightful king of
France on the
extinction of the legitimate male line of the Valois
.
Robert
de Clermont had married the heiress of the lordship of Bourbon
(Bourbon-l'Archambault, in the modern d&;partement of
Allier ). This lordship was made a duchy for his son
Louis I in 1327 and so gave its name to the dynasty. From this
duchy, the nucleus of the future
province of
Bourbonnais , the elder Bourbons,
mainly through marriages, expanded their territory southeastward and
southward. On their western frontier, meanwhile, the countship of La
Marche (acquired by Louis I in
1322 in exchange for Clermont) was held from 1327 by a junior line
of Louis I's descendants, who soon added the distant countship of
Vendôme to their holdings.
The title of duc de Bourbon passed
in 1503 to Charles de Bourbon-Montpensier, who was to become famous
as constable of France
. His later treason led to the confiscation of his lands by
the French crown in the year of his death, 1527. Headship of the
House of Bourbon then passed to the line of La Marche-Vendôme.
The line of La Marche-Vendôme had
been subdivided since the end of the 15th century between a senior
line, that of Vendôme (with ducal rank from 1515 onward), and a
junior one, that of La Roche-sur-Yon. The latter line obtained
Montpensier from the constable's forfeited heritage (with ducal rank
from 1539).
Antoine de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme
and head of the House of Bourbon from 1537, became titular
king-consort of Navarre
in 1555 through his marriage in 1548 to Jeanne d'Albret. The son of
that marriage, titular king of
Navarre
in succession to his mother from 1572, became king of
France , as
Henry IV, on the death of the last Valois
king in 1589. From Henry IV descend all the Bourbon sovereigns. The
great House of Condé, with its ramifications of
Soissons and of Conti, was descended from
Louis, prince de Condé, one of Henry IV's uncles.
The Bourbon sovereignties
Henry IV's heirs were kings of
France
uninterruptedly from 1610 to 1792, when the monarchy was
"suspended" during the first Revolution. Most illustrious among them
was Louis XIV, who brought absolute monarchy to its zenith in
Western Europe . During the Revolution Louis XVII was
made titular king (1793-95), but never reigned. Following the
restoration of the monarchy in 1814, Louis XVIII was brought to the
throne. He was followed by Charles X and the pretender Henry V (the
comte de Chambord ). With the accession of
Louis-Philippe in 1830, the House of Orléans came to power. His
descendants included not only the potential pretenders to the French
succession but also the Bourbon descendants of the heiress of the
last emperor of
Brazil . Later
princes constituted the House of Bourbon-Brazil, or of
Orléans-Braganza, which is not to be confused with the House of
Borbón-Braganza, a Spanish branch originating in the Portuguese
marriage of the infante Don Gabriel (a son of Charles III of
Spain
).
The Bourbon accession to Spain
came about partly because the descendants of Louis XIV's consort,
the Spanish infanta Marie-Thérèse, were in 1700 the closest
surviving relatives of the childless Charles II of Spain and partly
because, although at her marriage the Infanta had renounced her
Spanish rights, Charles by his testament named one of her
descendants as his successor. Since the other powers, however, would
not have tolerated the union of the Spanish kingdom with the French,
Charles named neither Louis XIV's heir apparent nor the latter's
eldest son but, rather, the second of Louis XIV's grandsons, namely
Philippe duc d'Anjou, who became king of Spain as Philip V. After
the War of the Spanish Succession, the Peace of Utrecht (1713) left
Philip in possession of
Spain and
Spanish America but obliged him to renounce any natural
right that he or his descendants might have to
France .
The infante Don Carlos, the future
Charles III of Spain
, was the founder of the Bourbon fortunes in
Italy . The
eldest son of Philip V's second marriage, he became duke of Parma in
1731 by right of his mother, heiress of the last Farnese dukes; and
in 1734, during the War of the Polish Succession, he conquered the
Kingdom of Naples-Sicily (Kingdom of the Two Sicilies) for himself.
Though the settlement of 1735-38 obliged him to renounce
Parma in order to win international
recognition as king of Naples-Sicily,
Parma was eventually secured for his
brother Philip (Don Felipe) under the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in
1748--with the proviso, however, that he and his heirs should
renounce it in the event that they succeeded to Naples-Sicily or to
Spain . Finally,
when Don Carlos became king of Spain
as Charles III in 1759, he resigned Naples-Sicily to his
third son Ferdinand on the express condition that that kingdom and
Spain should
never be united under one sovereign.
The
Kingdom of
Etruria (1801-07) was a contrivance
of the Napoleonic period. Devised by the French for the House of
Bourbon-Parma in compensation for the impending annexation of
Parma to
France at a time
when France
still needed the goodwill of the Spanish Bourbons, it was
dissolved as soon as Napoleon was ready to depose the latter. The
Bourbon Duchy of Lucca (1815-47), on the other hand, was a creation
of the Congress of Vienna: having assigned
Parma to Napoleon's estranged consort
Marie-Louise for her lifetime, the Congress had to find some
alternative compensation for the still-dispossessed Bourbons. The
Treaty of Paris of 1817, however, prescribed that on Marie-Louise's
death
Parma should revert to the Bourbons,
who in 1847 renounced Lucca
to the Habsburgs of Tuscany nine weeks before succeeding her.
In
France , the
senior or "legitimate" line of the Bourbons, restored to sovereignty
in
France after the
Napoleonic Wars, was deposed at the Revolution of 1830. The House of
Orléans, which took the legitimate line's place, was in turn deposed
in the Revolution of 1848. The Bourbons of
Parma and of the Two Sicilies were dethroned
in 1859-60, in the course of the unification of
Italy under the
House of Savoy. The Spanish Bourbons, after many disturbances in the
19th century, lost their sovereignty in 1931; but the Law of
Succession promulgated in Spain
in 1947 and General Franco's subsequent choice of Don Juan Carlos as
his successor resulted in the reign of Juan Carlos I, beginning in
1975.
Solidarity and discord
The accession of the duc d'Anjou
to Spain
would never have been secured without the resolute support
of his grandfather, the French king; and similarly the Bourbon
sovereignties in
Italy owed their
establishment chiefly to the Bourbon power in
Spain . Dynastic
harmony between France
and Spain
, however, was momentarily suspended in 1718-20, when
France took part
in the War of the Quadruple Alliance against
Spain --for
reasons arising in part from the internal affairs of the House of
Bourbon. A series of sudden deaths in the French Royal House between
1704 and 1714 had produced a situation in which, on Louis XIV's
death in 1715, no one but a five-year-old child, Louis XV, stood
before Philip V of Spain in the natural line of succession of
France; and Philip, though he had renounced that succession, still
felt himself better entitled, as the child's uncle, to exercise the
regency in France than the child's cousin twice removed, Philippe
duc d'Orléans, against whom Spanish agents promoted a plot. The
marriage (1722) of the Spanish king's son to a daughter of the
French regent sealed the reconciliation.
In 1733 the Treaty of the
Escorial pledged the French and the Spanish Bourbons to
collaborate with each other notwithstanding any previous
obligations. This treaty and the similarly conceived Treaty of
Fontainebleau (1743) are sometimes called the "First" and the
"Second Family Compact"; and the term Family Compact, or Pacte de
Famille, was actually used in a third treaty, signed in Paris in
1761, during the Seven Years' War. By this last treaty
France and
Spain not only
guaranteed one another against all enemies but also promised like
protection to the Bourbon states in
Italy
in the event of their acceding to the compact; and no state
not belonging to the House of Bourbon was to be allowed to accede.
The cooperation between the French
and Spanish Bourbons came to a miserable end during the French
Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, and the later decades of the 19th
century brought new complications. A French Bourbon prince led a
force into
Spain in 1823 to
crush the liberalism to which Ferdinand VII was succumbing; but such
Bourbon solidarity could not survive two events which were to rend
both the Spanish and the French houses.
First, in March 1830, Ferdinand
VII of Spain
announced the revocation of the Salic Law of Succession,
which Philip V had introduced into
Spain in 1713.
This meant that the sonless Ferdinand could be succeeded not by his
brother Don Carlos conde de Molina but by his elder daughter
Isabella (born after the revocation); and though Ferdinand
temporarily reinstated the Salic Law in September 1832, he revoked
it again 13 days later. On his death in 1833 the partisans of the
disappointed Don Carlos started the first of the Carlist Wars in
protest against Isabella's accession.
Secondly, in
France , the
July Revolution of 1830 overthrew the "legitimate" Bourbon monarchy
and transferred the throne to Louis-Philippe, head of the collateral
line of Orléans. Odious enough already because Louis-Philippe's
father, the self-styled Philippe Égalité, had voted in 1793 for the
death sentence on Louis XVI, the House of Orléans became, by the
usurpation of 1830, so much more odious to the Legitimists that some
of the latter, when the "legitimate" male of France died out with
the comte de Chambord in 1883, declined to recognize the head of the
House of Orléans as the rightful pretender to France, as indeed he
now was if the renunciation of 1713 was still to be observed;
instead they preferred to disregard that renunciation and so to
regard a Spanish prince as their rightful king. These Legitimists
were known in
France as "Blancs
d'Espagne" ("Spanish Whites"). Most Legitimists, however, followed
the final advice of the comte de Chambord by
recognizing the rights of the House of Orléans to
France .
While the dispossessed
Bourbons--Spanish Carlists and French Legitimists--naturally
sympathized with each other, their opponents--Queen Isabella and the
House of Orléans--conversely gravitated together. One result was the
crisis of the " Spanish Marriages" in the 1840s. While both Queen
Isabella and her sister Luisa remained unmarried, the Spanish
succession was an open prospect of great interest to governments
concerned with maintaining the balance of power in Europe
. If both sisters had married princes of the House of Orléans, as
Louis-Philippe and the sister's mother, Maria Cristina, had
originally suggested, French influence over
Spain
would have become too strong for the liking of the British
government, which proposed instead that Isabella should marry Prince
Leopold of Saxe-Coburg (more intimately linked with
Great Britain than with
France ). Then,
in 1843, the French and the British came to an understanding:
Isabella should marry some "neutral" prince, preferably a Spanish
Bourbon cousin; and only after the birth of a child to Isabella
should Luisa marry Louis-Philippe's son Antoine duc de Montpensier.
Of Isabella's eligible cousins, the conte de Montemolín was
disfavoured by the Spanish government as a Carlist; the next senior
was the doubtfully virile Don Francisco de Asis, who was generally
thought unlikely to become a father; the third was Don Enrique duque
de Sevilla, whose outspoken liberalism recommended him to the
British government but not to the Spanish. Inadvertently, however,
the British government in 1846 gave the French the impression that
it was still secretly trying to press Prince Leopold on Spain, and
the French reacted by arranging the Spanish marriages in a way quite
contrary to British desire: Isabella and Luisa were married on the
same day, October 10, 1846, to Don Francisco de Asis and to
Montpensier, respectively. The immediate upshot was that the House
of Orléans, apparently intending that Montpensier or a son of his
should eventually be king of
Spain , incurred
the serious resentment of its former friends in
Great Britain
.
Isabella, who would have preferred
to marry Don Enrique, spent conspicuously long periods apart from
her consort and behaved indiscreetly with other men. When she bore a
son in 1857, ill-wishers had little difficulty in casting doubts on
his paternity. These doubts served the purposes of the extreme
Carlists when the male line of Don Carlos died out in 1936, because
they could argue that Isabella's male descendants were not those of
Don Francisco de Asis--whose issue, under Salic Law, would have been
the next male heirs. Nearly all the other Bourbon princes, however,
either had already recognized Isabella's rights or were maintaining
incompatible pretensions to other thrones. The Carlists therefore
had to look far afield in their search for a new pretender.
Certain princes of Bourbon-Parma
responded to Carlist overtures but did not at the same time renounce
their Parmesan titles, which under the settlement of 1748 were
incompatible with claims to sovereignty over
Spain . Thus
they incurred the displeasure of the House of Orléans, which had to
respect the settlement of 1748 because its own pretension to
France depended
on the analogous settlement of 1713.
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