William Tyler
Three Returning Bourbons and One Bonaparte: 1814-1871
Monday 5.12.2022
Summary
After the abdication of Napoleon, Louis XVI’s two younger brothers (Louis XVIII and Charles X) returned to the throne of France. After the revolution, Louis XVIII was forced to accept adopting a constitution. When his brother Charles X tried to back out, he was deposed in 1830. Further efforts to seed a constitutional monarchy in France gained some traction under Charles’ cousin, Louis-Philippe.
Yet even the placid Louis-Philippe could not withstand the tensions within Europe in 1848. His regime was followed by the Second Republic, headed by Napoleon’s nephew Louis Napoleon. In 1851, Louis Napoleon became Emperor of the French (known as Napoleon III) via a coup d'etat emulating his uncle’s career. Napoleon III saw his Army defeated in autumn 1870 at Sedan, after which he too found exile in England. It was with him that the French monarchical tradition finally ended. A Third Republic was then proclaimed in the aftermath of the Prussian/German defeat.
Further Reading: The Bourbons Kings of France, Chs 7 & 8 by Desmond Seward Louis XVIII by Philip Mansel Citizen King by TEB Howarth History of Louis-Philippe by John SC Abbott The Shadow Emperor by Alan Strauss-Schom Napoleon III by Fenton Bresler The Franco-Prussian War by Stephen Badsey