Louis XVIII of France

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Louis XVIII
King of France and Navarre
Reign De jure 8 June 179516 September 1824
De facto 6 April 181420 March 1815; 8 July 181516 September 1824
Coronation None
Full name Louis-Stanislas-Xavier
Titles Count of Provence (1755–95)
Duke of Anjou etc (1771–90)
Duke of Vendome
Born 17 November 1755(1755-11-17)
Palace of Versailles, France
Died 16 September 1824 (aged 68)
Paris, France
Buried Saint Denis Basilica, France
Predecessor De jure Louis XVII
De facto: 1st, Emperor Napoleon I;
2nd Emperor Napoleon II
Successor Charles X
Consort Marie Josephine Louise of Savoy (1753–1810)
Royal House House of Bourbon
Father Louis, Dauphin of France (1729–65)
Mother Marie-Josèphe of Saxony (1731–67)

Louis XVIII (November 17, 1755September 16, 1824), was a King of France and Navarre. The brother of Louis XVI, and uncle of Louis XVII, he ruled the kingdom from 1814 (although he dated his reign from 1795) until his death in 1824, with a brief break in 1815 due to Napoleon's return in the Hundred Days. He was a member of the House of Bourbon.

Contents

Louis-Stanislas-Xavier was born on 17 November 1755 in the Palace of Versailles in France, the fourth son of Louis, Dauphin of France, and his wife, Marie-Josèphe of Saxony. His paternal grandparents were King Louis XV of France and his consort, Queen Maria Leszczyńska. His maternal grandparents were King Augustus III of Poland, also the Elector of Saxony, and his wife, the Archduchess Maria Josepha, daughter of the Holy Roman Emperor Joseph I. At birth, he received the title of Comte de Provence, but after the death of his two elder brothers and the accession of his remaining elder brother as Louis XVI of France in 1774, he became heir presumptive and was generally known as Monsieur, the traditional title of the eldest brother of the King. The later birth of two sons to Louis XVI left him third in line to the throne of France.

On 14 May 1771, Louis married Marie Josephine Louise of Savoy, princess of Sardinia and of the Piedmont (1753–1810), third child and second daughter of Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia and Maria Antonieta of Bourbon, Infanta of Spain. Her maternal grandparents were Philip V of Spain and Elizabeth Farnese. Marie Josephine suffered two miscarriages, in 1774 and 1781. After this, the couple remained childless.

During the events leading up to the French Revolution, the Comte de Provence initially took a moderately liberal line opposing his brother, but the increasing radicalism of the Revolution very soon alienated him. In 1789, he initiated a plan to save the King and end the French Revolution. In order to finance this venture, the Comte de Provence (using one of his gentlemen, the Comte de la Châtre, as an intermediary) commissioned the Marquis de Favras to negotiate a loan of two million francs from the bankers Schaumel and Sartorius. Unfortunately, Favras took into his confidence certain officers by whom he was betrayed.

It was stated in a leaflet circulated throughout Paris on 23 December 1789 that Favras had been hired by the Comte de Provence to organize an elaborate plot against the people of France. In this plot, the King, Queen and their children were to be rescued from the Tuileries Palace and spirited out of the country. Then the Comte de Provence was to be declared regent of the kingdom with absolute power.

Simultaneously, a force of 30,000 soldiers was to encircle Paris. In the ensuing confusion, the city's three main liberal leaders (Jacques Necker, the popular Finance Minister of France, Jean Sylvain Bailly, the mayor of Paris, and the Marquis de La Fayette, the commander of the city's new National Guard), were to be assassinated.

Afterwards, the revolutionary city was to be starved into royal submission by cutting off its food supplies. As a consequence of the leaflet, Favras and his wife were arrested the next day, and imprisoned in the L'Abbaye Prison. Terrified of the consequences of the arrest, the Comte de Provence hastened to publicly disavow Favras, in a speech delivered before the Commune of Paris, and in a letter to the National Constituent Assembly. Favras was eventually executed in February, 1790.

In coordination with his brother's unsuccessful flight to Varennes, the Comte de Provence fled France in 1791. He was living in exile in Westphalia when King Louis XVI was guillotined in 1793. On the king's death, the Comte de Provence declared himself regent for his nephew Louis XVII, although the boy was being held in custody by the revolutionary government and never actually reigned.

On the 10-year-old king's death in prison on 8 June 1795, the Comte de Provence proclaimed himself King Louis XVIII, despite claims that Louis XVI had written papers shortly before his execution and given them to his lawyer, Malesherbes, accusing his brother of having betrayed the royal cause out of personal ambition and barring him from the succession to the throne.

Gold 20-franc coin of Louis XVIII from 1815
Gold 20-franc coin of Louis XVIII from 1815

In 1794, the Comte de Provence had established a court-in-exile in the Italian town of Verona, which at the time was controlled by the Republic of Venice. There, he issued a declaration, written in part by Louis-Alexandre de Launay, comte d'Antraigues, that he rejected all the changes that had been made in France since 1789, which effectively destroyed the position of moderate constitutional monarchists in France, who had hoped to restore the monarchy under a limited constitution which would codify most of the changes since the Revolution began. This prompted the famous remark that the exiled Bourbons had learned nothing and forgotten nothing. Due to complaints from the French Directory, the Venetians expelled the pretender to the French throne from their territories in 1796.

House of Bourbon

Henri IV
Sister
   Catherine of Navarre, Duchess of Lorraine
Children
   Louis XIII
   Elisabeth, Queen of Spain
   Christine Marie, Duchess of Savoy
   Nicholas Henri
   Gaston, Duke of Orléans
   Henriette-Marie, Queen of England and Scotland
Louis XIII
Children
   Louis XIV
   Philippe, Duke of Orléans
Louis XIV
Children
   Louis, Dauphin
   Marie-Anne
   Marie-Therèse
   Philippe-Charles, Duc d'Anjou
   Louis-François, Duc d'Anjou
Grandchildren
   Louis, Dauphin
   King Felipe V of Spain
   Charles, Duke of Berry
Great Grandchildren
   Louis, Dauphin
   Louis XV
Louis XV
Children
   Louise-Elisabeth, Duchess of Parma
   Madame Henriette
   Louis, Dauphin
   Madame Marie Adélaïde
   Madame Victoire
   Madame Sophie
   Madame Louise
Grandchildren
   Marie Clotilde, Queen of Sardinia
   Louis XVI
   Louis XVIII
   Charles X
   Madame Élisabeth
Louis XVI
Children
   Marie-Thérèse-Charlotte, Duchess of Angouleme
   Louis-Joseph, Dauphin
   Louis XVII
   Sophie-Beatrix
Louis XVII
Louis XVIII
Charles X
Children
   Louis XIX
   Charles, Duke of Berry
Grandchildren
   Henri V
   Louise, Duchess of Parma

In the years that followed, Louis XVIII moved all over Europe, living for a time in Russia, before he settled in England. From 1804 to 1805 Louis XVIII lived in Latvia, in the councellor baron Andreas v. Königfel's estate Blankenfeld.[1] By this time, the conquests and success of Napoleon, who had established himself as Emperor of the French, made any Bourbon restoration seem unlikely.

Louis in fact corresponded with Napoleon during the Consulate, offering to renounce the declaration he had made in Verona, to pardon all regicides, to give titles and ennoblements to Bonaparte and his family, and even not to rescind any of the changes made since 1789. Napoleon's response was that the return of any Bourbon king to France would be accompanied by another civil war with at least another 100,000 dead bodies. With the army solidly behind him, Bonaparte likely could have restored the Bourbon monarchy while still being the power behind the throne. However, he preferred to rule in name as well as substance. As he put it, "I will not play the role of Monck, nor will I let anyone else play it. Nor will I be a second Washington."

"Robe à dix-huit Remplis" (dress with 18 tucks) worn by supporters of Louis XVIII in 1815
"Robe à dix-huit Remplis" (dress with 18 tucks) worn by supporters of Louis XVIII in 1815

However, in 1815, following the defeat of Napoleon, Louis XVIII was finally able to secure the French throne, thanks to the support of the Allied Powers and, within France, Napoleon's old foreign minister Charles Maurice de Talleyrand. Louis was forced by Talleyrand and the Napoleonic elites to grant a written constitution, the Charter of 1814, which would guarantee a bicameral legislature. The Charter created a hereditary/appointive Chamber of Peers and an elected Chamber of Deputies, although the franchise was extremely limited. Louis's regime also allowed much greater freedom of expression than the Napoleonic regime which had preceded it.

Monarchical Styles of
Louis XVIII
Par la grâce de Dieu, Roi de France et Navarre
Reference style His Most Christian Majesty
Spoken style Your Most Christian Majesty
Alternative style Monsieur Le Roi

Louis's (largely symbolic) efforts to reverse the results of the French Revolution quickly made him unpopular. Within a year, he fled from Paris to Ghent on the news of the return of Napoleon, of whom he held a modest opinion, from Elba, but returned after the Battle of Waterloo brought Napoleon's Hundred Days of renewed rule to an end. This Second Restoration led to the atrocities of the White Terror, largely in the south, when supporters of the monarchy murdered many who had supported Napoleon's return. Although the King and his ministers opposed the violence, they were ineffectual in taking active steps to stop it.

Louis's chief ministers were at first politically moderate, including Talleyrand, the Duc de Richelieu, and Élie Decazes, and Louis himself followed a cautious, moderate policy, hoping that moderation would ensure the continuation of the dynasty. The parliament elected in 1815, dominated by ultraroyalists (or Ultras) was dissolved by Richelieu for being impossible to work with, and electoral gerrymandering resulted in a more liberal chamber in 1816. However, the liberals ultimately proved just as unmanageable, and by 1820 Decazes and the King were looking to revise the electoral laws again to ensure a more conservative majority. However, the assassination in February 1820 of the Duc de Berry, the ultrareactionary son of Louis's equally ultrareactionary brother (and heir presumptive) the Comte d'Artois, led to Decazes's fall from power and the Triumph of the Ultras. After an interval in which Richelieu returned to power from 1820 to 1821, a new Ultra ministry was formed, headed by the Comte de Villèle, a leading Ultra. Soon, however, Villèle proved himself to be nearly as cautious as his master, and, so long as Louis lived, overtly reactionary policies were kept to a minimum.

Louis XVIII suffered from a severe case of gout, which worsened with the years. At the end of his life, the King was wheelchair-bound most of the time.

Louis XVIII died on 16 September 1824, and was interred in the Saint Denis Basilica. His brother, the Comte d'Artois, succeeded him as Charles X. It was to be the only fully regular transfer of power in France from one head of state to another of the entire 19th century. (Charles X, Louis Philippe, and Napoleon III were ousted by revolution or military defeat, while the French Second Republic ended with a presidential coup d'état. No Third Republic President would serve out his whole term until Émile Loubet finished his term in 1906 and was succeeded by Armand Fallières.)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
16. Louis, Dauphin of France
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8. Louis, Dauphin of France and Duke of Burgundy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
17. Maria Anna of Bavaria
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
4. Louis XV of France
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
18. Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
9. Princess Marie-Adélaïde of Savoy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
19. Anne Marie of Orléans
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2. Louis, Dauphin of France
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
20. Rafał Leszczyński
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
10. Stanisław Leszczyński
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
21. Anna Jabłonowska
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
5. Maria Leszczyńska
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
22. Jean-Charles Opaliński
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
11. Katarzyna Opalińska
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
23. Catherine-Sophie-Anne Czarnkowska
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1. Louis XVIII of France
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
24. John George III, Elector of Saxony
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
12. Augustus II of Poland
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
25. Princess Anne Sophie of Denmark
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
6. Augustus III of Poland
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
26. Christian Ernst, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
13. Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
27. Sofie Luise of Württemberg
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
3. Princess Marie-Josèphe of Saxony
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
28. Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
14. Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
29. Eleonore-Magdalena of Neuburg
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
7. Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
30. John Frederick, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
15. Wilhelmina Amalia of Brunswick
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
31. Benedicta-Henrietta of Simmern
 
 
 
 
 
 

  • Mansel, Philip. Louis XVIII. Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: Sutton Publishing, 1999 (paperback, ISBN 0-7509-2217-6).
Louis XVIII of France
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: November 17 1755 Died: September 16 1824
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Napoléon I
as Emperor of the French
King of France and Navarre
6 April 1814 – 20 March 1815
Succeeded by
Napoléon I
as Emperor of the French
Preceded by
Napoléon II
as Emperor of the French
King of France and Navarre
8 July 1815 – 16 September 1824
Succeeded by
Charles X
French nobility
Vacant
Title last held by
Philippe, duc d'Anjou
Duke of Anjou
1771 – 1790
Vacant
Title next held by
Jacques
Titles in pretence
Preceded by
Louis XVII
— TITULAR —
King of France and Navarre
8 June 1795 – 6 April 1814
Reason for succession failure:
French Revolution (1789 – 1799)
Became king
Chronology of French monarchs from 987 to 1870
Medieval France
House of Capet

Hugues (987-996) • Robert II (996-1031) • Henri I (1031-1060) • Philippe I (1060-1108) • Louis VI (1108-1137) • Louis VII (1137-1180) • Philippe II (1180-1223) • Louis VIII (1223-1226) • Louis IX (1226-1270) • Philippe III (1270-1285) • Philippe IV (1285-1314) • Louis X (1314-1316) • Jean I (1316) • Philippe V (1316-1322) • Charles IV (1322-1328)

Medieval France
House of Valois

Philippe VI (1328-1350) • Jean II (1350-1364) • Charles V (1364-1380) • Charles VI (1380-1422) • Charles VII (1422-1461) • Louis XI (1461-1483) • Charles VIII (1483-1498)

Early Modern France
House of Valois

Louis XII (1498-1515) • François I (1515-1547) • Henri II (1547-1559) • François II (1559-1560) • Charles IX (1560-1574) • Henri III (1574-1589)

Early Modern France
House of Bourbon

Henri IV (1589-1610) • Louis XIII (1610-1643) • Louis XIV (1643-1715) • Louis XV (1715-1774) • Louis XVI (1774-1792)

First Republic
First Empire
House of Bonaparte

Napoléon I (1804-1814)

Bourbon Restoration I
House of Bourbon

Louis XVIII (1814-1815)

Hundred Days
House of Bonaparte

Napoléon I (1815) • Napoléon II (1815)

Bourbon Restoration II
House of Bourbon

Louis XVIII (1815-1824) • Charles X (1824-1830) • Louis XIX (1830) • Henri V (1830)

July Monarchy
House of Orléans

Louis-Philippe (1830-1848)

Second Republic
Second Empire
House of Bonaparte

Napoléon III (1852-1870)

Third, Fourth and Fifth Republic
List of French monarchsList of Queens and Empresses of FranceHistory of France
Pretenders to the French throne since 1792
Legitimist pretenders
House of Bourbon
Orléanist pretenders
House of Orléans
Bonapartist pretenders
House of Bonaparte
Louis XVI (1792-1793)
Louis XVII (1793-1795)
Louis XVIII (1795-1814)
First Empire
1804-1814
Bourbon Restoration I
1814-1815
Napoléon I (1814-1815)
Louis XVIII (1815)
Reign of the Hundred Days
1815
Bourbon Restoration II
1815-1830
Napoléon II (1815-1832)
Joseph (1832-1844)
Louis (1844-1846)
Napoléon III (1846-1852)
Charles X (1830-1836)
Louis XIX (1836-1844)
Henri V (1844-1883)
Jean III (1883-1887)
Charles XI (1887-1909)
Jacques I (1909-1931)
Alphonse I (1931-1936)
Alphonse II (1936-1941)
Jacques II (1941-1975)
Alphonse III (1975-1989)
Louis XX (1989-)
July Monarchy
1830-1848
Louis-Philippe I (1848-1850)
Philippe VII (1850-1894)
Philippe VIII (1894-1926)
Jean III (1926-1940)
Henri VI (1940-1999)
Henri VII (1999-)
Second Empire
1852-1870
Napoléon III (1870-1873)
Napoléon IV Eugène (1873-1879)
Napoléon V Victor (1879-1926)
Napoléon VI Louis (1926-1997)
Napoléon VII Charles (1997-)
List of French monarchsList of Queens and Empresses of FranceHistory of France
Royal coat of Arms of France (House of Bourbon)
Legitimist Pretenders
to the French throne
since 1792
French Revolution

Louis XVI (1792-1793)
Louis XVII (1793-1795)
Louis XVIII (1795-1814)

Bourbon Restoration I

Louis XVIII (1815)

Bourbon Restoration II

Charles X (1830-1836)
Louis XIX (1836-1844)
Henri V (1844-1883)
Jean III (1883-1887)
Charles XI (1887-1909)
Jacques I (1909-1931)
Alphonse I (1931-1936)
Alphonse II (1936-1941)
Jacques II (1941-1975)
Alphonse III (1975-1989)
Louis XX (1989-)