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As the wife for 68
years of the Pretender to the throne of France, Isabelle Countess of
Paris was a central figure in the hopes of French royalists from the
1930s onwards. Her husband, Henri Robert Ferdinand Marie Louis
Philippe, Count of Paris, who died in 1999, was regarded by most
legitimists as the rightful King Henri VI of France and Navarre — in
the fervently hoped-for event of the French Republic and its people
coming to their senses and restoring the monarchy.
Isabelle
was a stylish woman, the ideal consort to such aspirations. The ex-King
Ferdinand of Bulgaria (who abdicated in 1918) thought her “the most
beautiful princess alive”, and into old age she retained a great and
photogenic elegance. Pictures of her frequently appeared in magazines
throughout the world. She was also a literate individual, and her
loyalty to her husband’s cause led her to publish a number of
biographies of her ancestors. Among these was Moi, a study of
Marie Antoinette, written almost as if she had been its protagonist.
Isabelle
Marie Amélie Louise Victoire Thérèse Jeanne was
born in 1911 at the Château d’Eu, in Normandy, the daughter of
Prince Pedro de Alcántara of Orléans and Bragança.
The son of Dona Isabel of Brazil, he was also styled Prince of
Grão and Pará. (The Brazilian royal family were at that
time living in exile in France). On her mother’s side she was descended
from Bohemian aristocracy.
Both she
and her cousin Henri, whom she first met at the age of eight, were
descended from King Louis-Philippe, whose reign had been ended by the
revolution of 1848. Her childhood was spent between the Chateau d’Eu,
her mother’s family in Czechoslovakia, and Brazil, where the exiled
Brazilian royal family was allowed to return in 1922. It was at the
chateau that she told her husband, at the age of 11 that she would
marry him.
Their
engagement was announced in 1930, but there were immediate impediments
to their marriage being celebrated in France. By a law enacted in 1886
those claiming descent from the French monarchy were not allowed to
live in France, so they were eventually married in the Sicilian
capital, Palermo, on April 8, 1931. Several thousand French monarchists
flocked to the city where the cry “Vive le roi” echoed in the streets.
From then
on, and during the war years, the couple lived in Belgium, Brazil,
Morocco and Spain. Their first son, Henri, was born in 1932, to be
followed by another four boys and six girls.
In 1950 the
law of 1886 was rescinded and they were able to return to France,
settling just outside Paris in that year, at a manor house at
Louveciennes. Her husband became active as a proselytiser for the
royalist cause, publishing news bulletins and canvassing widely for
support. At one point he seems even to have nursed the fantastic hope
of succeeding Charles de Gaulle as French leader. Her own contribution
to the debate tended to be biographical and historical rather than
political.
Alas,
neither their common cause nor a large family could hold the marriage
together, and since the mid-1970s they had lived apart. In the
mid-1980s she shocked those whose vision of French glory still rested
on the House of Orléans by filing for a judicial separation.
There was a highly publicised dispute between them, with her husband
declaring that her action was “informal contradiction with the
tradition of the House of France”. It was all, perhaps, a sad reminder
of the frailty of such grand aspirations, once exposed to the rough and
tumble of a world which no longer regarded their claims as having any
theological foundation. On his death, the Comte de Paris nevertheless
bequeathed her all his worldly goods — though it was a legacy much
reduced by his profligate spending.
As well as
historical works she published two volumes of autobiography: Tout
m’est Bonheur and Les Chemins Creux.
Two of her
sons predeceased her, one while serving with the French Army in
Algeria, a second in a hunting accident in Africa. She is survived by
nine of her 11 children, the eldest of whom, her son Henri Philippe
Pierre Marie, Count of Clermont, succeeded to the title of Count of
Paris on his father’s death.
Source: The
Times, August 4, 2003.
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