L a - b e a u t é - s a u v e r a - l e - m o n d e ~ D o s t o ï e v s k i

L a - b e a u t é - s a u v e r a - l e - m o n d e  ~  D o s t o ï e v s k i



Showing posts with label Victoire duchesse de Nemours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victoire duchesse de Nemours. Show all posts

Sunday, March 1, 2020

The second son - portraits of Louis d'Orléans, duc de Nemours


Attributed to Léon Jan van Ysendyck, 1835.
By Michel Martin Drolling. This is usually dated 1835 on the internet, but I think it more likely 1825, when he would have been eleven.
From the Album du Bal costumé donnée par S.A.R. Madame, Duchesse de Berry le 2 mars 1829 aux appartements des Enfants de France aux Tuileries,
colored lithograph after Eugéne Lami, 1829.
Louis-Philippe, duc d'Orléans en uniforme de colonel-général des Hussards, et de ses fils le duc de Chartres et le duc de Nemours, by Louis Hersent, circa 1830.
Le duc de Nemours et le maréchal Gérard dans la tranchée de la citadelle d'Anvers, décembre 1832, by Victor-Amédée Faure, 1837.
The artist, Faure, was the brother of my wife's great-great-great-great-grandfather.
Le roi Louis-Philippe entouré de ses cinq fils sortant par la grille d'honneur du château de Versailles après avoir passé une revue militaire 
dans les cours, 10 juin 1837, by Horace Vernet, 1848. Left to right: François, prince de Joinville; Antoine, duc de Montpensier; Ferdinand-
Philippe, duc d'Orléans; Louis-Philippe; Louis, duc de Nemours; Henri, duc d'Aumale.
By Franz Xaver Winterhalter, 1939.
Miniature by Sir William Ross, 1840. 
Marriage of the duc and duchesse de Nemours in the chapel of the château de Saint-Cloud, 27 April 1840, by Félix-Henri-Emmanuel Philippoteaux, 1847.
The couple surrounded by his parents and family, including Léopold I, King of the Belgians; he was married to Louise d'Orléans, eldest daughter of Louis-Philippe.
By Franz Xaver Winterhalter, 1843.
 In a costume worn to a ball at Buckingham Palace, 6 June 1845, watercolor by Eugéne Lami, 1845.
1870.
Circa 1880s.
Circa 1890s.

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Louis Charles Philippe Raphaël d'Orléans, duc de Nemours (25 October 1814, Paris – 26 June 1896, Versailles), second son of Louis-Philippe, King of the French, and his wife Marie-Amélie de Bourbon-Siciles. Born at the Palais Royal during the first year of the Bourbon Restoration, at the age of twelve he was nominated colonel of the first regiment of chasseurs. And after his father had assumed the throne, in 1830 - only sixteen - he was made a chevalier of the Ordre du Saint-Esprit and entered the Chambre des Pairs. The following year he was nominated to become the first king of the Belgians, a prize which would go to his brother-in-law Leopold, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. He fought in Algeria on three separate occasions - 1836, 1837, 1841 - as a commander during the latter two. He also made official visits to other royal courts - particularly that of Great Britain - during the 1830s and '40s. In 1840, he married Victoire of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha - niece of Léopold, King of the Belgians, first cousin of both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert - at the château de Saint-Cloud. They would have four children. After the revolution of 1848, and his father's abdication, he joined the extended Orléans family in England. His great aim in the first decade of exile - especially after the death of his father in 1850 - was to broker a reconciliation between the two branches of the House of Bourbon, something he saw as necessary if there were to be any hope of restoring a French monarchy. Negotiations continued until 1857, but were ultimately fruitless. In that same year, his wife died after giving birth to their fourth child; her husband never remarried. In 1871, after the fall of the Second Empire, the exile imposed on the french princes was lifted and his rank in the army was restored. After his retirement, he continued to act as president of the Red Cross until 1886, when the government imposed new restrictions on the princes of the blood and he withdrew from Parisian society. He died ten years later at the age of eighty-one, having outlived his wife, a daughter, and almost all of his siblings. He was interred in the necropolis of the Orléans family, the Chapelle royale de Dreux.



Sunday, July 28, 2019

Victoria's relations - a selection of portraits by Winterhalter from the Royal Collection



Children, mothers, aunts, half-sisters, cousins, in-laws.... (And what's the daughter of a half-sister? A "half-niece"...?)

Prince Leopold (1853-1884), 1854. Victoria and Albert's fourth son, the eighth of nine children.
Prince Leopold suffered from hemophilia - the first occurrence in the family of the disease - and would die aged only thirty.
George, Duke of Cambridge (1819-1904), 1852. Victoria's first cousin on her father's side.
(And to those who say Winterhalter wasn't adept at portraits of men...?)
Princess Mary of Cambridge (1833-1897), 1846. Victoria's first cousin on her father's side. 
Princess Mary was only thirteen when this portrait was painted. She was later the mother of Queen Mary.
 Count Alexander of Mensdorff-Pouilly (1813-71), 1847. First cousin of both Victoria and Albert, on her mother's and his father's side.
Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1824-1884), 1850. First cousin of both Victoria and Albert, on her mother's and his father's side.
Queen Victoria, 1845.
Prince Albert, 1845. Of course Victoria and Albert were first cousins as well; her mother and his father were siblings.
Augusta of Saxe-Weimar, Princess of Prussia, later Queen of Prussia and German Empress (1811-1890), 1853. Mother-in-law of the Princess Royal.
Princess Louise of Prussia, later Grand Duchess of Baden (1838-1923), 1851. Daughter of the above.
Friedrich Wilhelm, Crown Prince of Prussia, later Emperor Friedrich III of Germany (1831-88), 1867. Brother of the above and husband of the Princess Royal.
Victoria, Princess Royal, later Crown Princess of Prussia and Empress Friedrich of Germany (1840-1901), 1857. Victoria and Albert's first born.
The Duchess of Kent (1786-1861), 1844. Queen Victoria's mother. A study for Winterhalter's painting "The Reception of King Louis Philippe."
The Duchess of Kent, 1857.
Prince Arthur (1850-1942), 1851. Victoria and Albert's third son, seventh of nine children.
Princess Helena, later Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein (1846-1923), 1861. Victoria and Albert's third daughter and fifth child.
Princess Helena, 1865. 
Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein (1831-1917), 1866. Husband of Princess Helena.
Juliane, Princess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfield, Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna of Russia (1781-1860), 1848. Aunt to both Victoria and Albert.
Prince Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1845-1907), 1849. First cousin once removed of both Victoria and Albert.
"The Cousins": Queen Victoria and Victoire, duchesse de Nemours (1822-1857), 1852. The duchesse de Nemours was first cousin to both Victoria and Albert.
Princess Alice, later Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine (1843-1878), 1861. Victoria and Albert's second daughter and third child.
Prince Louis of Hesse, later Grand Duke Louis IV of Hesse (1837-1892), 1861. Princes Alice's husband.
Feodora, Princess of Hohenlohe-Langenburg (1807-72), 1872. Queen Victoria's half-sister. (Painted in the year of her death.)
Princess Adelheid of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, later Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein (1835-1900), 1853. Daughter of the above.
Princess Feodora of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, later Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen (1839-1872), 1855. Sister of the above.