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===''Madame Louise''===
===''Madame Louise''===
None of King Louis' projects for Louise's marriage came to fruition, and she sought sanctuary from the world in her religion. In 1748, there were rumours that Louis would have her engaged to [[Charles Edward Stuart]], pretender to the throne of England.


In 1750, aged 13, Louise returns with her ​​sister Sophie to Versailles, where the King affectionately nicknamed her "''Chiffe''".

Slightly hunchbacked, she remains separated from the world, seeking comfort and courage in the religion. Louis XV had several marriage plans for her, notably in 1766 with [[Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor]], but none was materialized. Already in 1748, when Louise, aged 11, was still in Fontevraud, rumors claimed that his father intended her to marry with Prince [[Charles Edward Stuart]], pretender to the throne of England. Louise then declared:

{{quote|"Do I not worried about being good since destines me a husband, I, who don't want other than Jesus Christ? "}}

It's also said that, the princess didn't hesitate to exaggerate her physical deformation when she crosses with an ambassador, to avoid any matrimonial project.

Moreover Louise resents the court with its intrigues, jealousies and constant ceremonials, who originated in her feelings that she was an slave.


===Mournings===
===Mournings===
Line 47: Line 59:
===Death===
===Death===




None of King Louis' projects for Louise's marriage came to fruition, and she sought sanctuary from the world in her religion. In 1748, there were rumours that Louis would have her engaged to [[Charles Edward Stuart]], pretender to the throne of England.


In 1770, to general amazement, Louise asked her father to allow her to become a [[Carmelite]] [[nun]].<ref>Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert, ''North-Eastern France'', Macmillan, 1896, p. 143.</ref><ref>Markham, Jacob
In 1770, to general amazement, Louise asked her father to allow her to become a [[Carmelite]] [[nun]].<ref>Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert, ''North-Eastern France'', Macmillan, 1896, p. 143.</ref><ref>Markham, Jacob

Revision as of 23:14, 21 September 2016


Ven. Louise of France
Later portrait of Madame Louise by Drouais
Born(1737-07-15)15 July 1737
Versailles
Died23 December 1787(1787-12-23) (aged 50)
Convent of Saint-Denis
Names
Louise Marie de France
HouseBourbon
FatherLouis XV of France
MotherMaria Leszczyńska
ReligionRoman Catholicism
SignatureVen. Louise of France's signature

Venerable Louise of France[1] (15 July 1737 – 23 December 1787), was the youngest of the ten children of Louis XV and his wife, Maria Leszczyńska. As a daughter of the king, she held the rank of a fille de France. From 1740 she was known as Madame Louise.[2] She entered the Carmelites in 1770 under the name of Thérèse of Saint Augustine, and there was in charge of the novices and the economy. She was elected prioress three times. She was declared venerable in 1873.

Life

Daughter of the King

Louise-Marie of France was born at Versailles on 15 July 1737. Her childbirth was particularly difficult for the 34-years-old Queen, and the physicians advised her that another birth could be fatal. However, afraid to completely lose the favor of her husband (who was a 27-years-old vigorous man), the Queen prefers to don't tell him about the warnings of the physicians, although she gradually refuse him the entrance to her rooms.

Around this time, Louis XV displays his first favorite, counting with the indulgence of his minister and former tutor the Cardinal de Fleury, who knows the only two major character flaws of the King: his increasing shyness and the propensity for boredom.

The King effectively ceased all corporal relationship with his wife, and those who wonder about a new pregnancy of the Queen he responds that the infant will be Madame Dernière (Madame the Last). Since her birth Louise was known as "Madame Septième"[3] (one of her seven older sisters died before her birth), and after her baptism, she was known as "Madame Louise".[4]

She was sent to be raised at the Abbey of Fontevraud with Louis' three other young daughters, Victoire, Sophie and Thérèse (who died at Fontevraud at the age of eight). On 20 December 1738 she was baptised at Fonevraud; her godfather was François-Marc-Antoine de Bussy, seigneur de Bisé; her godmother was Marie-Louise Bailly-Adenet, first woman of the chamber to her sister Madame Thérèse.[2]

Louise was early noted by her spirituality, but also by her pride. As a child, she didn't hesitate to demand that the people at her service get up when she enters in a room, because she was the "daughter of your King". However, the nun in charge of her education replied: "And I, Madame, I am the daughter of your God".

Madame Louise

None of King Louis' projects for Louise's marriage came to fruition, and she sought sanctuary from the world in her religion. In 1748, there were rumours that Louis would have her engaged to Charles Edward Stuart, pretender to the throne of England.


In 1750, aged 13, Louise returns with her ​​sister Sophie to Versailles, where the King affectionately nicknamed her "Chiffe".

Slightly hunchbacked, she remains separated from the world, seeking comfort and courage in the religion. Louis XV had several marriage plans for her, notably in 1766 with Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor, but none was materialized. Already in 1748, when Louise, aged 11, was still in Fontevraud, rumors claimed that his father intended her to marry with Prince Charles Edward Stuart, pretender to the throne of England. Louise then declared:

"Do I not worried about being good since destines me a husband, I, who don't want other than Jesus Christ? "

It's also said that, the princess didn't hesitate to exaggerate her physical deformation when she crosses with an ambassador, to avoid any matrimonial project.

Moreover Louise resents the court with its intrigues, jealousies and constant ceremonials, who originated in her feelings that she was an slave.

Mournings

Carmelite Nun

Entrance to the Order

Tasks

Prioress

Death

In 1770, to general amazement, Louise asked her father to allow her to become a Carmelite nun.[5][6] She believed that becoming a nun would compensate for her father's lax morals.[citation needed] Louise joined the convent at Saint-Denis,[7] where the order's rule was obeyed strictly, taking the name Thérèse of Saint Augustine. On 10 September 1770, she took the habit.[2] On 1 October 1771, she gave her vows and was fully accepted into the order.[2]

Louise became prioress of the convent 25 November 1773.[2] She served as prioress from 1773 to 1779, and a second term from 1785.[8] She interceded with her father to allow Austrian Carmelites persecuted by the Emperor Joseph II to enter France. While at the convent, she tried her best to make sure that the other nuns treated her as an equal rather than the daughter of a king.[citation needed] As a child, she had an accident that affected her knee. As a result, she found it difficult to kneel, but when she was offered assistance, she refused.[citation needed] On 26 May 1774, two weeks after the death of her father, she was visited at Saint-Denis by her nephew, King Louis XVI.[9]

She died at Saint-Denis, suffering from a stomach complaint. Her last words were the following:

Au paradis! Vite! Au grand galop!" ("To paradise! Quickly! With full speed!)

Along with other royal tombs at Saint-Denis, her remains were desecrated during the French Revolution. Pope Pius IX declared her venerable on 19 June 1873. Her life is celebrated on 23 December.

Gallery

Ancestry

Family of Louise of France

Notes

  1. ^ Achaintre, Nicolas Louis, Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de Bourbon, Vol. 2, (Publisher Mansut Fils, 4 Rue de l'École de Médecine, Paris, 1825), 154.
  2. ^ a b c d e L. Dussieux, Généalogie de la maison de Bourbon de 1256 à 1871 (Paris: Jacques Lecoffre, 1872), 107.
  3. ^ Ravel, Jeffrey, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007, p. 125, ISBN 0-8018-8598-1
  4. ^ Gratay, Alphonse-Joseph-Auguste, "Henri Perreyve", Pvi, C. Douniol, 1872.
  5. ^ Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert, North-Eastern France, Macmillan, 1896, p. 143.
  6. ^ Markham, Jacob Abbott, A History of France, Harper & Brothers, 1863, p. 143.
  7. ^ Baedeker, Karl, Paris and Environs with Routes from London to Paris, Dulau, 1898, p. 348.
  8. ^ Leathes, Stanley, The religion of the Christ, its historic and literary development, Oxford University, 1874, p. 356
  9. ^ La Gazette de France (27 mai 1774): 109.

Further reading

External links