Notes
Louis-Philippe Albert d'Orléans
LE COMTE DE PARIS
Born in Paris on 24 August 1838 to Ferdinand, Duc d'Orléans and Princess Hélène of Mecklenburg-
Schwerin, he was the grandson of King Louis Philippe. Following the death of his father in 1842 and
the 1848 revolution, which overthrew a reigning family with few roots in France, he accompanied his
mother and brother, the Duc de Chartres, to settle in Eisenach in Germany, where he finished his
studies, concentrating on literature and science, and undertook several journies in Europe and the
Orient. The outbreak of the Civil War in America prompted the two brothers to set sail for the New
World, where, in a gesture probably designed to attract general attention, Louis-Philippe Albert
volunteered to serve under the Confederate Hag. Given the rank of Captain to the Chief of Staff in 1861,
he was appointed aide-de-camp to MacClellan, then leading the army of the Potomac. He participated
in a fruitless campaign against Richmond, was present at the siege of Yorktown and the battles of
Williamsburg, Fair Oaks and Gaine's Mill, before joining the general retreat to the James River. His
decision to abandon the ranks of the Army and return to Europe in 1862 prompted mixed feelings in
the minds of those close to him.
Back in Europe, he devoted himself to writing, publishing a variety of articles in the Revue des Deux-
Mondes. In 1864, he travelled to Spain to visit his uncle, the Duc de Montpensier, and married his
daughter, Princess Marie-Isabelle, by whom he had one son, Prince Louis-Philippe-Robert (1869) and
two daughters (1865 and 1871).
In early 1870, he and other members of the family made their first appeal against the 1848 legislation
which had driven the Bourbons into exile, but without success. The disastrous war against Prussia
which broke out shortly thereafter, saw the Comte de Paris living in Twickenham, England, whilst his
uncle, the Prince de Joinville, and his brother, the Duc de Chartres, returned to France to serve in the
army of the Loire. The 1871 National Assembly finally abrogated the 1848 legislation, prompting the
Comte de Paris to return to France, where he continued to lead a relatively discreet existence, going to
the theatre, the reviews and being seen in the large receptions hosted by Monsieur Thiers, the President
of the French Republic. In the background, the monarchist factions were once more agitating for the
restauration of the monarchy in France and the Comte de Paris was on numerous occasions vainly
solicited to approach the Comte de Chambord with a view to recognizing him as the head of the royal
family and propelling him back to the throne, whereby the Comte de Paris would have become his heir
presumptive. This refusal was less a reflection of any profound republican beliefs than of his conviction
that only a publicly recognized, hereditary and constitutional monarchy in the style of the British royal
family, not one sustained by notions of divine right, could be reinstalled in France.
His father, the Duc d'Orléans, had written in his will : "Whether the Comte de Paris becomes King or
whether he remains the unknown and obscure defender of a cause to which we all adhere, he must
above all be a man of his time and of his nation, a passionate and dedicated servant of France and of
the Revolution". Paying apparently little heed to these views, the Comte de Paris chose to visit the
Comte de Chambord in August 1873 in Germany, at the very moment when the monarchist party,
having overthrown Monsieur Thiers, appeared master of the situation, and pledged his support to him as
the sole head of the family and representative of the French monarchy. In a single act of apparent
political suicide, he had re-affirmed Te claims of a monarchy based on divine right and thereby struck a
fatal blow to the fortunes of the very party which considered him its leader, simultaneously denying his
own raison d'être. The resulting massive arousal of hostile public opinion was to render once and for all
impossible the return of the monarchy to France.
The rest of his life, the Comte de Paris played a modest public role, inheriting the Château d'Eu and
all its dependencies. He died in England on 8 September 1894.