Marriage(s) and Relationships: Married to: Prince d'Orleans+Count de Paris Henri 8 APR 1931, Palermo, SICILY
Child:Princess d'Orleans Isabel Child:Ct de Mortain+Clermont Henri d'Orleans Child:Princess d'Orleans Helene Child:Prince+Duke d'Orleans Francois Child:Princess d'Orleans Anna Child:Princess d'Orleans Diane Child:Prince d'Orleans+Duke d'Evreux Michael Child:Duke d'Orleans Jacques Child:Princess d'Orleans Claude Child:Princess d'Orleans Chantal Child:Prince d'Orleans+Ct de la Marche TheobaldNotes: Source: Leo van de Pas.
By Arturo Beeche about her death:
Born Princess Isabelle of Orléans-Braganca on August 13, 1911, at the
Chateau d'Eu, Normandy, she was the eldest daughter of Prince Pedro
d'Alcantara of Orléans-Braganca and his wife Countess Elisabeth Dobrzensky
de Dobrzenicz. Princess Elisabeth's other siblings included: Prince Pedro
Gaston, married to Princess María de la Esperanza of Bourbon-Two Sicilies;
Princess Francisca, married to HRH the Duke of Braganca; Prince Joao,
married firstly to Fatimah Sherifa Chirine; and Princess Theresa, Mrs.
Martorell.
Princess Isabelle, who was educated at home, spent most of her childhood
and
early years living between the marvelous Chateau d'Eu (the home of her
grandparents, Prince Gaston of Orléans, Count d'Eu, and Princess Imperial
Izabel of Brazil, heiress to the throne of Brazil), the Hotel Lambert
(Parisian home of a Polish cousin) and her maternal relations in Bohemia.
In 1922 the family returned to Brazil after more than thirty years of
exile.
Sadly the Count d'Eu died on the ship while en route to Rio de Janeiro.
The
Princess Imperial had died the year before.
She first made the acquaintance of her future husband, Prince Henri of
Orléans when a young girl. The marriage of Prince Henri of France
(1908-1999), Count of Paris, and Princess Isabelle d¹Orléans-Braganca was
yet another union between descendants of King Louis Philippe of the French
and his consort, the former Princess Marie-Amelie of Bourbon-Two Sicilies.
Prince Henri was the only son of Prince Jean, Duke of Guise (1874-1940)
and
his wife, the former Princess Isabelle of Orléans (1878-1961). The
Duchess
of Guise is the daughter of Prince Louis Philippe (1838-1894)), Count of
Paris -eldest son of Prince Ferdinand d¹Orléans (1810-1842), Duke of
Orléans,- and his first cousin Infanta Marie-Isabelle d¹Orléans
(1848-1919), eldest daughter of Prince Antoine d"Orléans (1824-1890), Duke
of Montpensier, a son of King Louis-Philippe and Queen Marie-Amélie, and
his
wife the Infanta Luisa Fernanda of Spain. The Duke of Guise was the only
surviving son of Prince Robert, Duke of Chartres (1840-1910) and his first
cousin Princess Françoise of Orléans (1844-1925), the only surviving
daughter of Prince François d¹Orléans (1818-1900), Prince de Joinville, a
son of King Louis Philippe and Queen Marie-Amélie, and his wife Princess
Françoise of Brazil (1824-1898), Infanta of Portugal. The Duke of
Chartres
was the second son of the prematurely deceased Prince Ferdinand d¹Orléans
(1810-1842), Duke d¹Orléans, and his wife, the former Duchess Hélène of
Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1814-1858). The Duke d¹Orléans, who died in a
carriage accident in 1842, was the eldest son of King Louis Philippe and
Queen Marie-Amélie.
Princess Isabelle d¹Orléans-Braganca was the eldest daughter of the late
Prince Pedro d¹Alcantara d¹Orléans-Braganca (1875-1940), Prince of Grão
Pará, and his wife the former Countess Elisabeth Dobrzensky von Dobrzenicz
(1875-1951). This union was considered unequal (morganatic), by the
Princess Imperial of Brazil, mother of Prince Pedro d¹Alcantara. The
Prince
of Grão Pará¹s parents were Prince Gaston d¹Orléans (1842-1922), Count
d¹Eu,
and Princess Izabel of Brazil (1846-1921), Princess Imperial of Brazil,
eldest surviving child of Emperor Pedro II (1825-1891) and his consort,
the
former Princess Theresa of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (1822-1889). The Count
d¹Eu
was the eldest son of Prince Louis d¹Orléans (1814-1896), Duke de Nemours,
and his wife, the former Princess Victoire of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
(1822-1857), Kohary line. The Duke de Nemours was also a son of King
Louise
Philippe and Queen Marie-Amélie of the French.
Prince Henri of France, the late Count of Paris, first met his future
wife,
Princess Isabelle, when both were children. Princess Isabelle had spent
most of her life at her family¹s imposing Château d¹Eu in Normandy, a
private residence owned by her parents in Boulogne-sur-Seine, and at the
magnificent Parisian residence of her relation Prince Czartoryski, the
Hôtel
Lambert. Henri and Isabelle¹s first meeting took place in 1920, at the
Château de Vinieul-Saint-Firmin, which at the time was the residence of
the
Duchess of Chartres, Prince Henri¹s grandmother. Three years later Prince
Henri spent a summer vacation at the Château d¹Eu with his Brazilian
cousins. It was then when Princess Isabelle was smitten by her dashing
cousin and promised that she would marry him when older. Four years later
the couple met once more at the Neapolitan wedding of Princess Anne of
France, Henri¹s sister, and Prince Amadeo of Savoy-Aosta, Duke of Puglie.
The following year Isabelle and her parents visited Henri¹s family at
their
Belgian residence, the Manoir d¹Anjou. Having succeeded his cousin Prince
Philippe, Duke d¹Orléans, as Head of the Royal House of France in 1926,
the
Duke of Guise was condemned to live outside France¹s borders by a law
responsible for keeping the pretender to the French throne and his heir
living in exile.
Henri and Isabelle had several other meetings prior to their engagement.
One took place in Chotebor, Bohemia, the home of one of her Dobrzensky
uncles, in the summer of 1930. On August 10, 1930, Prince Henri of France
asked his cousin Princess Isabelle d¹Orléans-Braganca for her hand in
marriage. For a few days the couple kept their agreement from the family.
Then when the family was headed to spend a vacation in Attersee, Austria,
Henri and Isabelle made their engagement known to their delighted family.
However, this happy announcement caused some political problems for the
family. Living in Belgium, the Duke of Guise wanted to host the marriage
of
his son and heir at their countryside residence, the Manoir d¹Anjou.
French
authorities were aghast at the possibility of having a major royalist
demonstration taking place just across the republic¹s border with the
kingdom of Belgium. To avoid any such gathering from turning into a
political embarrassment France asked Belgium to notify the Duke of Guise
that his son¹s wedding could not take place in Belgium. Once told of this
sad news, the Duke of Guise, not wanting to cause any problems in Belgium
decided to host the wedding at his Sicilian residence, the Palais
d¹Orléans,
which had been given to Prince Louis Philippe d¹Orléans and his wife
Princess Marie-Amélie of Bourbon-Two Sicilies when they married in 1809.
In the meantime French royalists flocked to the Hôtel Lambert on March 14
and 15, 1931, to pay their respects to Princess Isabelle. The Count of
Paris, as Prince Henri was known since 1929 when his father granted him
this
title, was kept from attending by the law of exile. Some sixty thousand
people went through the Hôtel Lambert during those two days.
The wedding of the Count of Paris and Princess Isabelle took place at the
Church of Santa Rosalia, Palermo, on April 8, 1931. A large number royal
guests attended the wedding from France, Portugal. Spain, Italy, Greece
and
Denmark. Several thousand French citizens also traveled to Palermo to
witness the glorious event.
Princess Isabelle, of whom King Ferdinand I of Bulgaria had once said, was
"the most beautiful princess alive," looked resplendent in her wedding
gown,
which was designed by the renowned couture house of Worth in Paris. She
wore a magnificent diadem designed for the occasion with diamonds from the
jewel collection of the late Duchess of Guise. The couple¹s sponsors were
Infante Carlos of Bourbon-Two Sicilies and the Duke of Puglie for the
Count
of Paris; Prince Pedro-Henrique of Brazil and Prince Adam Czartoryski for
Princess Isabelle.
After the ceremony the wedding procession returned to the Palais d¹Orléans
in Palermo, with the crowd cheering wildly as the many royal guests left
the
church. Chants of "Long Live the King," "Long live the Dauphin and
Dauphine," deafened those in attendance. At the Palais d¹Orléans twelve
hundred guests sat down for lunch on that day. After the luncheon the
newlyweds alighted on the balcony and greeted the cheering crowds. The
Count and Countess of Paris were a magical image of happiness and hope.
The
Countess once told the author of this study that "my wedding and honeymoon
are the most beautiful images I have of my long life."
The marriage of the Count and Countess of Paris lasted until his death on
June 19, 1999. Interestingly enough that same day his own grandson,
Prince
Eudes, third son of the Count de Clermont, himself the eldest son of the
Count of Paris, married in a civil ceremony the very lovely Marie-Liesse
de
Rohan-Chabot.
During the last few decades Madame dedicated a considerable amount of her
time to writing history books, all centered around members of her family.
Her own memoirs, which were written in two volumes, a third one was added
later, are filled with amazing family stories and wonderful vignettes and
are a must read for anyone interested in XXth century royalty. Her last
book was published last year and it was a photographic story of her
amazing
life, one book the I have always thoroughly enjoyed and highly recommend.
I was honored with having made Madame's acquaintance and will always
treasure the time I spent in her presence. She was one of the doyennes of
the Gotha, a symbol of majesty, simplicity, tenacity, humility and duty
all
in the same being. I remember fondly receiving a signed copy of her last
book some months ago. Included inside was a note from Madame in which she
asked that I not hesitate to visit her again when in Paris. That is not
going to be possible, unfortunately. But the memories I have of this
august
lady will last me a lifetime.
The Count of Paris and Madame the Countess of Paris had eleven
children: Princes Henri, François, Michel, Jacques and Thibaut; as well as
Princesses Isabelle, Hélène, Anne, Diane, Claude and Chantal. Their
living
descendants today number more than 100, an impressive number to say the
least.
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