Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Henri Jules, Prince of Condé
Prince of Condé From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Henri Jules de Bourbon (29 July 1643, in Paris – 1 April 1709, in Paris, also Henri III de Bourbon) was prince de Condé, from 1686 to his death. At the end of his life he suffered from clinical lycanthropy and was considered insane.[citation needed]
Remove ads
Biography
Summarize
Perspective
Henri Jules was born to Louis II de Bourbon, Prince de Condé in 1643. He was five years younger than King Louis XIV of France. He was the sole heir to the enormous Condé fortune and property, including the Hôtel de Condé and the Château de Chantilly. His mother, Princess Claire-Clémence de Maillé-Brézé, was a niece of Cardinal Richelieu. He was baptised at the Église Saint-Sulpice, Paris on his day of birth. For the first three years of his life, while his father was duc d'Enghien, he was known at court as the duc d'Albret.

Upon the death of his grandfather, he succeeded to his father's courtesy title of duc d'Enghien. As a member of the reigning House of Bourbon, he was born a prince du sang and styled as Monsieur le Duc.
Childhood and education
Because of his father exile from France and fighting for Spain, Henri Jules spent much of his youth in the Spanish Netherlands where he was also beginning in 1652 when he was seven years old educated by Pierre Bourdelot who taught him Latin. The following year Henri Jules was enrolled in a Jesuit school in Namur to be taught alongside other children.[1]
Throughout much of his life, Henri Jules was mentally unstable. His maternal grandmother Nicole du Plessis, sister to the Cardinal Richelieu had suffered from the belief that her bottom was made of glass and therefore refused to sit down. Henri-Jules delusions manifested themselves in that he would imagine himself a dog and would bark like one.
He was a short, ugly, debauched, and brutal man not only "repulsive in appearance", but "cursed with so violent a temper that it was positively dangerous to contradict him".[2] He was well educated but had a malicious character.
Trained as a soldier, in 1673 he was made official commander of the Rhine front, but in name only, as he lacked the military ability of his father. He also displayed a recklessness in battle and this lack of judgement made him as much a threat to his own troops as the enemy.[3] His father would instead transfer his hopes on a worthy military successor for the Condé name on Henri-Jules cousin Francois-Louis.
Henri Jules was accorded the responsibility of governing the Condé estates, a task for which he proved to be much more suitable.
A possible bride considered for him at this time was his distant cousin, Élisabeth Marguerite d'Orléans, daughter of Gaston d'Orléans, but the marriage did not materialize.
Marriage
He eventually married the German princess Anne Henriette of Bavaria in the chapel of the Palais du Louvre in Paris in December 1663. The bride was the daughter of Edward, Count Palatine of Simmern and the political hostess Anna Gonzaga. The couple had ten children, only half of whom lived to adulthood. The young princess was noted for her pious, generous and charitable nature. Many at court praised her for her solicitude towards her disagreeable husband. Despite her good qualities, Henri Jules often beat his quiet wife during his rages.
In addition, he had an illegitimate daughter by Françoise-Charlotte de Montalais (1633-1718). The child was known variously as Julie de Bourbon, Julie de Gheneni (anagram of Enghien, aka de Guenani), or Mademoiselle de Châteaubriant. She was legitimised in 1693 at 25 years of age and was married to Armand de Madaillan de Lesparre, Marquis de Lassay,[3] a member of her fathers entourage. She died on 10 March 1710, at age 43.
Remove ads
Later life
Henri Jules mental instability worsened towards the later end of his life and he became convinced that he was already deceased and therefore he began taking his meals in an underground chamber which he was convinced was the home of M. de Turenne. He would also invite guests to this chamber to dine with him and pretend they were also dead and converse on the afterlife.[4] while served by servants dressed in white sheets.
Though his contemporaries considered his actions being a symptom of his mental illness, it should however noted that he was a fervent Jansenist and as part of that belief included preparing for ones death through reflection and austerious living,[clarification needed] and learning how to die well.[5]
Remove ads
Death
Henry Jules was succeeded by his only surviving son, Louis III de Bourbon, who only survived his father by a few months.[3] Therefore the title passed to Henri Jules grandson Louis-Henri.
Ancestry
Remove ads
Issue
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads