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Encyclopedia > Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry

Charles Ferdinand, duc de Berry (1778 - February 13, 1820), younger son of Charles X of France, was born at Versailles.


At the Revolution he left France with his father, then comte d'Artois, and served in the army of Condé from 1792 to 1797. He afterwards joined the Russian army, and in 1801 took up his residence in England, where he remained for thirteen years. During that time he married an Englishwoman, Anna Brown, by whom he had two daughters, afterwards the baronne de Charette and the comtesse de Lucinge-Faucigny.


The marriage was cancelled for political reasons in 1814, when the duke set out for France. His frank, open manners gained him some favor with his countrymen, and Louis XVIII named him commander_in_chief of the army at Paris on the return of Napoleon from Elba. He was, however, unable to retain the loyalty of his troops, and retired to Ghent during the Hundred Days. In 1816 he married the princess Caroline Ferdinande Louise (1798 1870), eldest daughter of King Francis I of Naples. On the 13th of February 1820 he was mortally wounded, when leaving the opera-house at Paris with his wife, by a saddler named Louis Pierre Louvel. Seven months after his death the duchess gave birth to a son, who received the title of duke of Bordeaux, but who is known in history as the comte de Chambord. A daughter, afterwards duchess of Parma, was born in 1819.


The duchess of Berry was compelled to follow Charles X to Holyrood after July 1830, but it was with the resolution of returning speedily and making an attempt to secure the throne for her son. From England she went to Italy, and in April 1832 she landed near Marseilles, but, receiving no support, was compelled to make her way towards the loyal districts of Vendée and Brittany. Her followers, however, were defeated, and, after remaining concealed for five months in a house in Nantes, she was betrayed to the government and imprisoned in the castle of Blaye.


Here she gave birth to a daughter, the fruit of a secret marriage contracted with an Italian nobleman, Count Ettore Lucchesi_Palli (1805_1864). The announcement of this marriage at once deprived the duchess of the sympathies of her supporters. She was no longer an object of fear to the French government, who released her in June 1833. She set sail for Sicily, and, joining her husband, lived in retirement from that time till her death, at Brunnensee in Switzerland, in April 1870.


This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.








  Results from FactBites:
 
John, Duke Of Berry - LoveToKnow 1911 (502 words)
JOHN BERRY, DUKE OF (1340-1416), third son of John II., king of France and Bonne of Luxemburg, was born on the 30th of November 1340 at Vincennes.
The duke went to England in 1360 as a hostage for the fulfilment of the treaty of Bretigny, returning to France in 1367 on the pretext of collecting his ransom.
The duke was deprived of the government of Languedoc, and his agent, Betizac, was burnt.
Duke of Berry - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (453 words)
His younger son Charles was given the duchy of Berry in 1461, but exchanged it for that of Normandy in 1465.
Her nephew François, Duc d'Alençon, brother of King Charles IX, was created Duke of Anjou, of Berry and of Touraine in 1576, which titles became extinct on his death in 1584.
However, his second son, Charles Ferdinand, was known by the courtesy title of Duc de Berry from his birth in 1778 to his assassination in 1820.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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