Élisabeth Charlotte of Orléans

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Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans
Duchess Consort of Lorraine, Bar and of Teschen, Sovereign Princess of Commercy

Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans
Born September 13, 1676(1676-09-13)
Birthplace Château de Saint-Cloud, France
Died December 23, 1744 (aged 68)
Place of death Commercy, Lorraine, France
Consort October 13, 1698 - March 1729
Consort to Léopold I, Duke of Lorraine
Issue Léopold
Elisabeth Charlotte
Louise Christine
Marie
Gabrièle Charlotte
Louis
Josepha Gabrièle
Gabrièle Louise
Léopold Clement Charles
Francis Stephen
Eléonore
Elisabeth Therese
Charles Alexander Emmanuel
Anne Charlotte
Royal House House of Orléans
Father Philippe de France, duc d'Orléans
Mother Elizabeth Charlotte, Princess Palatine

Elisabeth Charlotte of Orléans or in its french form Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans, styled Mademoiselle de Chartres (Saint-Cloud, September 13, 1676 - Commercy, December 23, 1744), was a French princess and regent of the sovereign duchy of Lorraine.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Élisabeth Charlotte was the only daughter of Philippe de France, duc d'Orléans, (1640-1701), younger brother of King Louis XIV by his second wife, Elizabeth Charlotte, Princess Palatine(1652-1722). Her mother was a daughter of Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine. As a granddaughter of Louis XIII of France, she was a petite-fille de France. She was born at the Château de Saint-Cloud outside of Paris on September 13, 1676. She was one of three children. The other two were:

[edit] Mademoiselle de Chartres

As was customary for unmarried young ladies at the French court, she was given an honorary style, Mademoiselle de Chartres, taken from the name of one of her father's appanages. Her half siblings by her father and his first wife, Princess Henrietta-Anne of England, were:

As a child, Élisabeth-Charlotte was described by her mother as 'so terribly wild' and 'rough as a boy'. [1]
Her mother hoped to marry her daughter to her first cousin, the widowed Monseigneur or even to his son Louis Duke de Bourgogne, but neither marriage was to be.

[edit] Possible marriages

View of the Orléans Family circa 1679. Élisabeth leans on her mother, La Princesse Palatine and her brother is on the right
View of the Orléans Family circa 1679. Élisabeth leans on her mother, La Princesse Palatine and her brother is on the right

As her elder half-sisters had all married into prominent reigning families in Europe, she expected the same.[citation needed] When her cousin's wife, Dauphine Victoire said she should marry one of her younger brothers, Élisabeth said:

I am not made, madame, for a younger son[2][unreliable source?]

It was also suggested by some that she should marry her first cousin, Louis-Auguste de Bourbon, duc du Maine, the eldest legitimated son of Louis XIV and his mistress, Madame de Montespan. As her mother despised the king's illegitimate children, the chances of such an alliance were remote. Although spared from the 'horror' of such a mismatch in rank, her brother, the duc de Chartres was not. He married the duc du Maine's younger sister, Françoise-Marie de Bourbon, in 1692. Élisabeth Charlotte married six years after her elder brother. Before then, her ambitious mother even thought of trying to get her brother-in-law Louis XIV to secure for her daughter a marriage to the King of England, William III, who was rumoured to be homosexual (though this is contested) like her own father.[citation needed]

[edit] Marriage and children

She married on October 13, 1698 at Fontainebleau Leopold, Duke of Lorraine (1679-1729), son of Charles V, Duke of Lorraine and Eleonora Maria Josefa of Austria.

The ducal couple had thirteen children:

Her son François-Étienne who would be the Holy Roman Emperor from his marriage to Maria Theresa of Austria. They were the founders of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine.
Her son François-Étienne who would be the Holy Roman Emperor from his marriage to Maria Theresa of Austria. They were the founders of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine.

As a surprise to all, what had been expected to be an unhappy union turned out to be marriage of love and happiness.[citation needed] After ten years, however, her husband turned his attentions to another, Anne-Marguerite de Lignéville, princesse de Beauvau-Craon. Embarrassed, the duchess remained silent and continued to live in the Château de Lunéville, the main residence of the House of Lorraine. After her husband's liaison ended, the couple had five more children, one of whom would become the father of Marie Antoinette.

[edit] The Regency to 1737

On the death of her uncle Louis XIV in 1715, her elder brother, now the duc d'Orléans, became the Regent of France for the five year old King Louis XV, and the era of his rule is known as the Regency. Louis XV was crowned in October, 1722, two months before the death of her mother in December of the same year. Her brother died in December of the next year. Seven years later, in 1729 her husband died, leaving his wife regent of Lorraine for her son, François Stephen of Lorraine. After being educated in Vienna, he returned to Lorraine in 1737, ending his mother's tenure as regent.

Unable to prevent her son from giving up the duchy of Lorraine (to Stanisław Leszczyński) when he married the Habsburg heiress, Maria Theresa of Austria, she moved into the château d’Harou in nearby Commercy, which was erected into a sovereign principality for her to enjoy during her dowager years.

[edit] Later life

Élisabeth Charlotte died, at the age of sixty, following a stroke on December 23, 1744. She was the last of her siblings to die and outlived ten of her thirteen children. Nine months after her death, her son François-Stephen became the Holy Roman Emperor.

[edit] Legacy

As the mother of the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I, she was an ancestor of the entire 18th and 19th century Habsburg family, as they all descended from Francis I and Maria Theresa. Amongst them are Queen Marie Antoinette and Marie-Louise of Austria, the wife of Napoleon Bonaparte.

[edit] Ancestors

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Antonia Fraser: Love and Louis XIV, p.189
  2. ^ je ne suis pas faite, madame, pour un cadet [1]

[edit] Titles

Élisabeth Charlotte of Orléans
Born: September 13 1676 Died: December 23 1744
French nobility
Preceded by
New Creation
Mademoiselle de Chartres
1676–1698
Succeeded by
Louise Adélaïde d'Orléans
French royalty
Preceded by
Eleonora Maria Josefa of Austria
duchesse de Lorraine et de Bar
1698–1729
Succeeded by
Maria Theresa of Austria