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History


 
The Bourbon Family:
Three Kingdoms and a Duchy

 
Enrico IV
Henry IV

After Antonio’s death, his son Henry – real winner of the Wars of Religion since all children of Henry II and Catherine of Guise had died in the meanwhile – continued his father’s policy.

As everybody knows, Henry wanted to go to Paris and be crowned King there, but the city strongly opposed his will and imposed him to deny Protestantism and convert to Catholicism if he wanted to become King of France. Henry accepted and in 1594 he was welcomed in Paris and crowned King of France and Navarre in God’s name and with the papal recognition.
The Bourbon had become Kings of France.


The Royal Line of France
Luigi XIII
Louis XIII

Become king in 1594, Henry of Bourbon took the name of Henry IV King of France and Navarre (1594-1610). After him, the Throne went to his son Louis XIII (1610-1643) under the regency of his mother Maria de' Medici until he came of age and then, at his death, to his son Louis XIV, who was then aged just five, under the regency of his mother Anne of Austria helped by Mazarine.
As everybody knows, Louis XIV, the Roi Soleil, ruled for a very long time (his was the longest of all reigns if we count its duration from 1643, the year of his father’s death, in which he officially became Louis XIV King of France and Navarre, although under the regency of his mother).

Even if we start to count from 1661 – the year in which Mazarine died and Louis XIV took full possession of the sovereignty also from the point of view of political power (he proclaimed that he was “Prime Minister of himself”) – his reign was one of the longest.
Until that moment, the Bourbon Family held only one Throne, the most important and glorious in the world together with the Throne of the Sacred Roman Empire (in fact, the two Thrones had their origin in Charlemagne). But unforeseeable historical events were about to change the future of the descendants of the Roi Soleil.

In Spain, the Hapsburg dynasty reigned from the time of Charles V; as everybody knows, in 1556 the Emperor of the Sacred Roman Empire divided his vast dominions between his brother Ferdinand – whom he gave the empire dominions and the title of Emperor – and his son Philip II, to whom he gave the Throne of Madrid and all overseas and European dominions among which the viceroyalty of Naples and Sicily. The line of the Hapsburg-Spain was originated in this way, in parallel with the main line of the Hapsburg-Austria who held the imperial title.
Luigi XIV
Louis XIV

At the end of the XVII century, the Spanish line died out with Charles II, who had no direct heirs. The problem of the succession to the Spanish Throne arose. Both Louis XIV and the Emperor Leopold I of Hapsburg claimed rights over it; in fact both had married one of Charles’ sisters (the King of France had married the elder, the Hapsburg Emperor the younger).

For several reasons, Charles II of Hapsburg in his testament appointed as sole heir Philip of Anjou, nephew of Louis XIV and son of the Dauphin, with the clause that he had to renounce his rights over the Crown of France; secondarily he appointed the Archduke Charles of Hapsburg, second son of the Emperor Leopold.

In reality, when Charles II died in 1700, Philip of Anjou ascended the Throne of Madrid with the name of Philip V.

Of course this provoked the reaction of Austria and also of the other great powers that were afraid of an excessive strengthening of Louis XIV (who already acted as real lord of Spain); therefore these powers supported the candidature of Charles of Hapsburg. The War of the Spanish Succession began.


The Bourbon on the Throne of Spain. Philip V and the
War of Spanish Succession

Born in Versailles on 19 December 1683 from Prince Louis, Dauphin of France, and Maria Anne of Bavaria, the Duke of Anjou was only seventeen when he inherited the Crown of Spain.


Philip V was unprepared to the task of king, but Louis XIV watched over him and through him expected to rule over Spain: to help him, he established a State Council formed by experienced ministers from Colbert’s school who began to implement reforms also in Spain. His marriage to the thirteen-year-old Maria Louise Gabriella – daughter of Duke Victor Amadeus II of Savoy – was a blessing for him. The wedding was celebrated by proxy in Turin on 11 September 1701. The Queen was clever and full of energy.

A rebellion broken out in Naples forced him to leave for Italy. He gave the regency to his young wife, who, helped by the clergy, government people and mainly Princess Orsini - the "camarera mayor" deliberately chosen as her lady-in-waiting by Louis XIV – protected the French interests at the Court and was up to her task. After restoring order in Naples, the break out of the War of Spanish Succession forced Philip to leave for Piedmont and Lombardy, where he fought against the Austrian army of Archduke Charles and showed to be a brave soldier. Fortune would have smiled on him if the Netherlands and England had not allied with Austria and changed in a decisive way the outcome of the war.

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