Alix, Princess Napoléon

Dowager Princess Napoléon
(m. 1949; died 1997)
IssueCharles, Prince Napoléon
Princess Catherine
Princess Laure
Prince JérômeHouseForestaFatherMarie Joseph Albéric, Count de ForestaMotherGeneviève Yvonne Berthe Hélène Fredet
Prince Louis and Princess Alix Napoléon at a banquet in the German Embassy, Paris in 1968

Alix, Dowager Princess Napoléon (née de Foresta; born 4 April 1926) is the widow of Louis, Prince Napoléon, the disputed head of the House of Bonaparte, and pretender to the Imperial throne of France from their marriage in 1949 until his death in 1997. Bonapartists regarded her as "Empress of the French" for almost fifty years of the 20th century.

Early life and ancestry

Born into the family of French nobility, she was an elder daughter of Comte Marie Joseph Albéric de Foresta (1895-1987) and his wife, Geneviève Yvonne Berthe Hélène Fredet (1904-1994).[1] Alix has one younger sister, Hedwige de Foresta (b. 1935), married to Hély, Marquis de La Roche-Aymon (1921-2003), whose mother, Princesse Madeleine (1891-1984), was member of an ancient House of Broglie.[2] Although Alix was the only consort of the surviving Imperial line not born a princess, her family had been nobles in Lombardy since the 13th century, becoming counts palatine in 1330, constables of Venice in 1425, then retainers of an old House of Doria, at that time one of the most powerful families in the Republic of Genoa. They settled in Provence, France early in the 16th century, where they acquired twenty-two manors and the title of Marquis by 1651.[3] The Forestas distinguished themselves during the French Restoration as courtiers loyal to the House of Bourbon, and to Henri, comte de Chambord, in particular Marie-Joseph de Foresta-Collongue (1783-1858), who was awarded with additional hereditary title of Marquis de la Roquette on 28 May 1821, with letters patent confirmed on 25 October 1821.[4] Long established as squires of large estates and rice paddies in the Camargue, the Forestas often welcomed her son Charles and his siblings there while they were growing up.[5]

Biography

In 1961, about "200 girls from the United States and other countries" paraded "through the halls of the Palace of Versailles...to curtsey before Princess Alix Napoleon, wife of the great-grandnephew of Napoleon Bonaparte."[6]

In 1976, she went to the Iranian Embassy for the Shah's birthday, being described at that time in the press as "one of the two most royal ladies of France -- Princess Napoleon Bonaparte, the elegant, lovely-looking Alix..."[7]

She was an honorary member of The Napoleonic Society of America (1983–2006), which later merged with The Napoleonic Alliance to form The Napoleonic Historical Society in 2006. More recently, she also gave Havana's Napoleonic Museum "part of a porcelain dinner service presented by Napoleon Bonaparte to his brother Jerome on his wedding day."[8]

Marriage and issue

Alix's coat of arms as Princess Napoléon

Louis, Prince Napoléon married Alix de Foresta on 16 August 1949 at Linières-Bouton, France. They had four children:[9]

  • Prince Charles Marie Jérôme Victor (b. 19 October 1950) who claims headship of the House of Bonaparte and the title, "Le Prince Napoléon".
  • Princess Catherine Elisabeth Albérique Marie (b. 19 October 1950), who wed firstly on 4 June 1974, Nicolò San Martino d'Agliè dei marchesi di Fontaneto e San Germano (b. 3 July 1948) in Prangins, Switzerland, and divorced in 1982 without issue. She wed secondly on 22 October 1982, Jean-Claude Dualé (3 November 1936 in Medjez-el-Bab, Tunisia – 2017) in Paris, France, and had two children:
    • Charlotte Laure Laëtitia Dualé (b. 13 October 1982)
    • Marion Josée Alix Dualé (b. 29 March 1985)
  • Princess Laure Clémentine Geneviève Bonaparte (b. 8 October 1952 in Paris) married on 23 December 1982, Jean-Claude Lecomte (15 March 1948 in Ax-les-Thermes, France – 2009) and had a son:
    • Clément Louis Lecomte (b. 7 July 1995)
  • Prince Jérôme Xavier Marie Joseph Victor (b. 14 January 1957) married on 2 September 2013, Licia Innocenti (b. 27 April 1965 in Baden, Aargau, Switzerland)

References

  1. ^ https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00048462&tree=LEO
  2. ^ https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00161656&tree=LEO
  3. ^ Gustave Chaix d'Est-Ange, Dictionnaire des familles françaises anciennes ou notables à la fin du XIXe siècle : notice famille de Foresta, t. XVIII, Evreux, Imprimerie Charles Hérissey, 1922 (lire en ligne [archive]), p. 334-335.
  4. ^ Albert Révérend, Jean Tulard, Titres, anoblissements et pairies de la Restauration, 1814-1830, Volumes 3 à 4, Champion, 1974
  5. ^ Valynseele, Joseph (1967). Les Prétendants aux Trônes d'Europe (in French). Paris. p. 249.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ "Girls Await Top-Paris Society Ball," The Spokesman-Review 79.42 (25 June 1961): 2.
  7. ^ "Watergate Prosecutor Comments," The Victoria Advocate 131.184 (7 November 1976): 3D.
  8. ^ "Princess Alix de Foresta Attends Reopening of Havana’s Napoleonic Museum," Cuba Daily News (03 / 31 / 2011).
  9. ^ Nicolas Enache. La Descendance de Marie-Thérèse de Habsburg, Reine de Hongrie et de Bohéme. Paris, 1999. ISBN 2-908003-04-X pp. 200, 210
  • Photograph of Alix and the Empress of Persia
Alix, Princess Napoléon
House of Foresta
Born: 4 April 1926
Titles in pretence
Vacant
Title last held by
Clémentine of Belgium
— TITULAR —
Empress of the French
16 August 1949 – 3 May 1997
Reason for succession failure:
Empire replaced by Republic
Succeeded by
Jeanne-Françoise Valliccioni
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