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Louis, Count of Vermandois

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Louis, Count of Vermandois
Légitimé de France
Count of Vermandois
Portrait of Louis
Born(1667-10-02)October 2, 1667
Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France
DiedNovember 18, 1683(1683-11-18) (aged 16)
Flanders, present-day Belgium
Burial
Names
Louis de Bourbon, Légitimé de France
FatherLouis XIV of France
MotherLouise de La Vallière

Louis de Bourbon, Légitimé de France, Count of Vermandois (2 October 1667– Flanders, 18 November 1683) was the eldest surviving son of Louis XIV of France and his mistress Louise de La Vallière.

He was sometimes known as Louis de Vermandois after his title. He died unmarried and without issue.

Biography

Louis de Bourbon was born at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye on 2 October 1667. He was named after his father. Like his elder sister, Marie Anne de Bourbon, who was known at court as Mademoiselle de Blois, he was given the surname of de Bourbon not de France as a result of his illegitimacy.

As a child, he called his mother Belle Maman because of her beauty. Louis was legitimised in 1669,[1] at the age of two, and was given the title of comte de Vermandois and was made an Admiral of France.

In 1674, his mother entered a Carmelite convent in Paris, and took the name Sœur Louise de la Miséricorde. Afterwards, they saw very little of each other. From his mother and his father, Louis had five full siblings, many of whom died before his birth.

After his mother left, Louis lived at the Palais Royal in Paris with his uncle, Philippe of France, duc d'Orléans, and his wife Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate. At the Palais-Royal, he became very close to his aunt despite her well-known dislike of Louis XIV's bastards. The affection the aunt and nephew had for each other never diminished.

While he was at the court of his libertine uncle, he met the Chevalier de Lorraine, his uncle's most famous lover. The young count got involved with the older chevalier and his set (including the Prince of Conti), joining a secret group of young aristocrats called, "La Sainte Congregation des Glorieux Pédérastes" (The Holy Fraternity of Glorious Pederasts)[2] and practcing le vice italien (the contemporary appellation for sodomy).

When Louis XIV got wind of the group's existence and his son's the involvement in it, he decided to have Louis flogged under his eyes, and to exile him, the Chevalier de Lorraine, and several other noble members.[2]

In order to cover up the scandal, it was suggested that the boy be married off as soon as possible; a bride suggested was Anne Louise Bénédicte de Bourbon; Louis was exiled before anything could materialise.

In June 1682, Louis was exiled to Normandy. In order to smooth things over between father and son, his aunt Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate suggested to the king that Louis be sent as a soldier to Flanders, which was then under French occupation. The king agreed with the suggestion and his son was sent to the Siege of Courtray. It was there that Louis fell ill.

Despite his illness, Louis was desperate to regain his father's love and continued to fight in battle regardless of advice given by the royal doctor and the marquis de Montchevreuil that he return to Lille in order to recuperate.

Louis died on 18 November 1683, at the age of sixteen. He was buried at the cathedral at Arras. His loving sister and aunt were greatly impacted by his death. His father, however, did not even shed a tear. His mother, still obsessed with the sin of her previous affair with the king, said upon hearing of her son's death:

I ought to weep for his birth far more than his death.[3]

Louis was later suspected of being the Man in the Iron Mask but couldn't be true due to the fact that he died in 1683, while the man in the iron mask died in 1703.

His other half siblings included the future duc du Maine; Madame la Duchesse; Mademoiselle de Tours; Duchess of Orléans, Madame le Régent and the Count of Toulouse.

Ancestry

Family of Louis, Count of Vermandois
16. Antoine de Bourbon, Duke of Vendôme
8. Henry IV of France
17. Jeanne III of Navarre
4. Louis XIII of France
18. Francesco I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
9. Marie de' Medici
19. Johanna of Austria
2. Louis XIV of France
20. Philip II of Spain
10. Philip III of Spain
21. Anna of Austria
5. Anne of Austria
22. Charles II of Austria
11. Margaret of Austria
23. Maria Anna of Bavaria
1. Louis de Bourbon, Count of Vermandois
24. Laurent Le Blanc, Seigneur de La Vallière
12. Jean de La Baume Le Blanc, Baron de la Papelardière
25. Marie Adam de la Gasserie
6. Laurent de La Baume Le Blanc, Seigneur de La Vallière
26. Jacques de Beauvau, Seigneur du Rivau
13. Françoise de Beauvau
27. Françoise Le Picard du Boille
3. Louise de La Vallière
28. Jean le Provost, Ecuyer, Seigneur de la Rue en Guel
14. Jean Le Prévost, Seigneur de la Coutelaye
29. Francoise Fious
7. Françoise Le Prévost
30. Philippe Martin de Mauroy, Chevalier, Seigneur de la Garde
15. Elisabeth Martin de Mauroy
31. Francoise Van Den Werne

References

  1. ^ Philip F. Riley, A Lust for Virtue: Louis XIV's Attack on Sin in Seventeenth-century France, (Greenwood Publishing, 2001), 106.
  2. ^ a b James Neill (2011). The Origins and Role of Same-Sex Relations in Human Societies. McFarland. p. 406. ISBN 978-0786469260.
  3. ^ Love and Louis XIV by Lady Antonia Fraser

Succession

Louis, Count of Vermandois
Born: October 2 1667 Died: November 18 1683
French nobility
Preceded by
Vacant
Eleonore de Vermondois
Count of Vermandois
1669–1683
Succeeded by
Unknown
Political offices
Preceded by Admiral of France
1669–1683
Succeeded by

See also