Henry IV of France's succession
Part of the French Wars of Religion

King Henry IV of France, until 1589 known as Henry of Navarre. 17th century engraving by Henri Goltzius.
DateAugust 1589 – March 1594
Location
France
Result
  • Henry IV of France is recognised as king in most of France after converting to Roman Catholicism and under the condition of tolerance towards Protestants
  • Continued Catholic resistance with Spanish support leads Henry IV to declare war on Spain in January 1595
Belligerents
Kingdom of France Politiques and Protestants:
Huguenots
 England
Catholics:
Catholic League
Spain Spain
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of France Henry IV of France Charles de Bourbon

Henry III of Navarre's succession to the throne in 1589 was followed by a four-year war of succession to establish his legitimacy, which was part of the French Wars of Religion (1562–1598). Henry IV inherited the throne after the assassination of Henry III, the last Valois king, who died without children. Henry was already King of Navarre, as the successor of his mother, Jeanne d'Albret, but he owed his succession to the throne of France to the line of his father, Antoine of Bourbon, an agnatic descendant of Louis IX. He was the first French king from the House of Bourbon.

Henry's succession in 1589 proved far from straightforward. He and King Henry III were moving to besiege Paris at the time of the latter's death. The city and large parts of France, mostly in the north, were in the hands of the Catholic League, an alliance of leading Catholic nobles and prelates who opposed the Protestant Henry of Navarre as heir to the throne. Instead, they recognized Henry's uncle, Charles of Bourbon, as the heir, and on Henry III's assassination, they declared Charles king. As a result, Henry IV was forced to fight a civil war to assert his position as king, followed by a war against Spain, who continued to question his legitimacy.

After the death of Charles of Bourbon, the Catholic League's failure to choose a replacement claimant to the throne, in combination with Henry IV's conversion to Catholicism, led to a general recognition of the king in France. Henry IV's successors ruled France until the French Revolution, then returned during subsequent Bourbon restorations, and they founded dynasties in Spain and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.

Bourbon claim to throne

Henry of Navarre was descended through his father from King Louis IX of France. Robert, Count of Clermont (d. 1317), the sixth and youngest son of Louis IX but the only son besides Philip III to produce a surviving line, had married Beatrix of Bourbon and assumed the title of sire de Bourbon. Bourbon was elevated into a duchy for Robert's son Louis, who became the first Duke of Bourbon.

Branches of the House of Bourbon
House of Bourbon
Dukes of BourbonBourbon-La Marche
Counts of MontpensierCounts of La MarcheCounts of VendômeBourbon-Carency
Bourbon-VendômeDukes of Montpensier
Kings of NavarrePrinces of Condé

    At the death of Charles IV, Duke of Alençon in 1525, all cadet branches of the House of Valois had become extinct, with the only remaining Valois being the royal family itself. The chief of the Bourbons became the first prince of the blood, the closest to the succession to the throne should the immediate family of the king become extinct. At the death of Charles III, Duke of Bourbon in 1527, the Vendôme branch of the House of Bourbon became the senior line of the family. At that time, Charles de Bourbon was Duke of Vendôme. His son Antoine de Bourbon married the Queen of Navarre. Antoine's son, Prince Henry of Navarre, inherited this title on his death from an arquebus wound at the siege of Rouen in 1562.[1]

    The legitimacy of Henry of Navarre's claim to the throne was still questioned, however. In similar cases, the throne had earlier passed to successors with a much closer blood link to the throne. Louis XII had succeeded Charles VIII as his second cousin once removed in the male line. Francis I had succeeded Louis XII as his cousin five times removed in the male line. The successions were legally unproblematic because consanguinity was acknowledged in law to the tenth degree. Henry of Navarre, on the other hand, could claim only an agnatic relationship to Henry III in the twenty-second degree.[2] When Henry had become the heir presumptive to the throne in 1584, on the death of Francis, Duke of Anjou, polemicist Jean Boucher had been among those who protested that such a distance in blood meant Henry's claim to the throne had effectively lapsed and that therefore the French States-General had the right to elect a new king.

    When Henry was a boy, it seemed highly unlikely that he would ever inherit the throne of France since Henry II had produced four surviving sons. However, the prince of Navarre's pedigree gave him a special place of honour in the French nobility since all scions of the Bourbon line were acknowledged as the princes of the blood. As Head of the House of Bourbon, Henry was officially the First Prince of the Blood, the first nobleman of the kingdom.

    The importance of the princes of the blood had been demonstrated when Antoine of Navarre's uncle Francis, Count of Enghien (d. 1546) had commanded the victorious royal armies at the battle of Ceresole in 1544. It was to be further demonstrated when Antoine of Bourbon's last surviving brother, Cardinal Charles (d. 1590), was chosen by the Catholic nobles as King of France in the face of Henry IV's Protestantism. Catherine de' Medici had ensured her regency of the nine-year-old King Charles IX in 1560 only by making a deal with Antoine of Bourbon, who many considered had the right, as First Prince of the Blood, to be the regent.[3]

    In a kingdom that the Salic Law excluded women from succession to the throne,[4] Catherine had overcome prejudice against government by a woman and been elected governor (gouvernante) of France with sweeping powers. However, she accepted that none of her three daughters would ever inherit the French throne. By 1572, only two of her sons remained alive, she brokered a marriage between her daughter Margaret and Henry, who that year became King Henry III of Navarre after the death of his mother, Jeanne d'Albret while she was buying clothes for the wedding in Paris. The marriage was intended to unite the interests of the house of Valois with the house of Bourbon.

    Henry of Navarre always emphasised the significance of his blood, rather than religion, when he challenged the Guise-led Catholic League. After the League forced Henry III to sign the Treaty of Nemours, which excluded Navarre from the succession, in July 1585, the latter issued a manifesto condemning the pact as:

    A peace made with foreigners at the expense of the princes of the blood; with the House of Lorraine at the expense of the House of France; with rebels at the expense of obedient subjects; with agitators at the expense of those who have brought peace by every means within their power.... I intend to oppose it with all my heart, and to this end to rally around me... all true Frenchmen without regard to religion, since this time it is a question of the defence of the state against the usurpation of foreigners.[5]

    The pull of such propaganda remained so potent that even after 25 years of civil war, an English agent reported that after that and similar declarations by Henry, "many good Catholics flooded to his standard".[6]

    Kingdom of Navarre

    Château of Pau, where Henry of Navarre was born in 1553

    Though most of the old Kingdom of Navarre was incorporated into Spain, the claim to the remaining part was retained by Queen Catherine (daughter of Magdalene of France), who married John, Count of Périgord, brother-in-law of Cesare Borgia and lord of vast lands in the southwest of France. John was chased out of Spanish Navarre by Ferdinand II of Aragon in 1512[7] and retreated to Navarre north of the Pyrenees, and the Navarrese Cortes (parliament) accepted annexation to Castile. The part that survived as an independent kingdom north of the Pyrenees, Lower Navarre, was united with the Viscountcy of Béarn in an independent kingdom. It was given a representative assembly by Catherine and John's son, Henry II of Navarre. By the time of Henry III of Navarre (the future Henry IV of France), the monarch of Navarre could call to arms 300 gentlemen and 6,000 footsoldiers from the kingdom.

    Rival claimants

    The Catholic League's candidate for the crown of France in 1589 was Charles, Cardinal de Bourbon. The brother of Antoine of Bourbon (and Henry of Navarre's uncle), he was the last surviving Catholic prince of the blood. However, two factors made him an unconvincing choice: he was 66 years old, and he was firmly in the custody of first Henry III and then Henry IV. The cardinal found himself imprisoned in 1588, when Henry III ordered the murder of Henry, Duke of Guise, at the Château of Blois and rounded up those he regarded as a threat to his crown, including the Cardinal of Bourbon. On Henry III's death, Henry IV assumed responsibility for his captive rival. The League proved unable to free the cardinal, and when he died on 9 May 1590, they were left without a plausible successor as claimant to the throne. That proved fatal to their opposition to Henry's rule.

    During the period between the succession of Henry IV and the death of the Cardinal of Bourbon, the city of Paris had achieved a degree of independence. While acknowledging the Catholic League and accepting a Spanish garrison, the authorities there had championed their liberties against those of the crown so much that some citizens openly opposed the institution of monarchy altogether. In October 1589, a Parisian lawyer complained publicly, "Our civil disorder and factions have opened the door to a crowd of corrupt little men who, with effrontery, have attacked authority with such licence and audacity that those who have not seen it would not believe it. In so doing, they have wanted to jump from a monarchy to a democracy".[8]

    The death of the Cardinal of Bourbon prompted measures to elect a new anti-king. Although the French monarchy was hereditary, the League's lawyers searched the early history of France for precedents to legitimise the election of a king.[9] The Protestant scholar and ideologue François Hotman had argued in his Francogallia that France was once a free country, whose liberties had been eroded over time, including the right to elect kings.[10] Hotman had asserted the right of the Estates-General to perform this function. Though Hotman was a Protestant, his argument also influenced Catholic jurists searching for a means to replace the Cardinal of Bourbon at the beginning of the 1590s and the decision to summon the Estates-General to elect a new "king".[11]

    The meeting of the Estates General that opened on 26 January 1593 proved far from representative. Many royalist delegates refused to attend, and other delegates were blocked by royalist troops from reaching Paris. By then, deep divisions in the League had become apparent. The League's leader, Charles of Lorraine, Duke of Mayenne, had repeatedly disputed the strategy of the Duke of Parma, the Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, whom Philip II sent into northern France to reinforce the League.[12] Mayenne had also quarrelled with his nephew, Charles, Duke of Guise, whom some wanted to elect king. Finally, Mayenne was at odds with many Parisian leaders, particularly with the Sixteen, a group of city representatives who pursued their own libertarian agenda and often worked with the Spanish behind Mayenne's back.[12]

    In November 1591, when the Sixteen executed a group of moderates from the Paris parlement, Mayenne hanged or imprisoned the ringleaders. Mayenne, who nursed ambitions to be king himself, saw his grand alliance of Catholic nobles, French towns and Spain crumbling from a growing disunity of purpose and the absence of an obvious claimant to the throne.[12]

    It was widely believed among Catholics that the pope's blessing was essential to the legitimacy of a king of France because of the Protestant faith of Henry.[13] At the time of his succession, Henry IV was under a papal excommunication, which had been imposed by Pope Sixtus V on 21 September 1585, and so the papacy considered it legitimate for Henry's subjects to oppose his rule, both as King of Navarre and, after 1589, as King of France. The persistence of rebellion and civil war in the early years of Henry's reign owed much to the papacy's refusal to accept anyone but a Catholic on the French throne.

    Mayenne was opposed to the idea of summoning the Estates-General to elect a king, but in 1592, he finally caved in to Spanish pressure to do so. Mayenne opened the assembly with a symbolicall-empty chair beside him.[14] The influence of Spain on the assembly soon proved problematic. Spain sought the election of the Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain, the daughter of Philip II of Spain and Henry III's niece and would-be-heiress under male-preference primogeniture. The Spanish urged the Estates-General to repeal the Salic law, which prevented the rule of a queen regnant, but in so doing, they failed to grasp a fundamental principle of the French royal succession.[15]

    The Spanish ambassador in Paris had instructions to "insinuate cleverly" the rights of the Infanta to the French throne. His brief also stated that the Salic Law "was a pure invention... as the most learned and discerning of their lawyers recognise".[16] The Estates-General of the Catholic League insisted that if Clara Isabella Eugenia were to be chosen, she should marry a French prince. Philip II, however, wanted her to marry Archduke Ernest of Austria.[17] The Estates replied that "our laws and customs prevent us from calling forward as king any prince not of our nation".[14] On 28 June 1593, the Paris parlement followed up by resolving "to preserve the realm which depends on God alone and recognizes no other ruler of its temporal affairs, no matter what his status, and to prevent it from being overrun by foreigners in the fair name of religion".[18]

    While the delegates of the Estates-General dithered in Paris, Henry IV dealt a well-timed blow to their deliberations by announcing his wish to be converted from Protestantism to Catholicism, a move that effectively cut the ground from under the Catholic League's feet. The Estates-General sent delegates to treat with Henry's representatives, and on 8 August, most of the members of the assembly returned home.[14]

    Legitimisation

    Henry IV of France touching for scrofula, in an engraving of 1609

    Henry's abjuration of the Protestant faith on 25 July 1593 at the Abbey of Saint-Denis proved decisive in winning over many of his opponents. His legitimisation proceeded in stages. The archbishop of Bourges raised his excommunication, though without papal authority, during the abjuration ceremony. The following year, Henry had himself anointed and crowned at Chartres cathedral.[19] After the ceremony, he demonstrated his sacred powers by touching people for scrofula, the king's evil.[20] Finally, on 12 July 1595, Pope Clement VIII agreed to lift Henry's excommunication, and he pronounced the absolution on 17 September.[21] For the first time, he gave Henry the title of "most Christian King of France and Navarre".[22]

    When Clement absolved Henry, he, like Henry, was motivated by political pragmatism. The papacy lived in fear of further national churches breaking away from Rome, to be governed instead by princes. The Gallican church had already showed independent tendencies, and some of Henry's advisers advocated for him to declare himself the spiritual head of the French church.[21] Also, Clement feared that in the words of the historian J. H. Elliott, "a Spanish victory in France could mean the end of papal independence".[23] Clement's grant of absolution, therefore, contains an element of damage limitation. For two years, Henry had been recognised by many in the French church, and French theologians at the Sorbonne had confirmed the Archbishop of Bourges's lifting of Henry's excommunication.[21] To reassert papal jurisdiction, Clement made a point of declaring the absolution granted at Saint-Denis in 1593 to be void, but in substituting his own absolution, he ruled all Henry's acts since that date as legitimate in retrospect.[24] Thus, the pope papered over the technical anomaly of the archbishop's abrogation of papal powers. Clement's absolution was contingent on a set of demanding conditions. Among other promises, Henry swore to establish a single religion in France, to recompense all Catholic clergy who had lost land or property to the Huguenots and to apply the decrees of the Council of Trent in France.[25]

    After 1594, Henry's recognition doomed further armed opposition to his rule within France. One by one, the leaders of the Catholic League made peace with him. Mayenne surrendered in 1596 after the Peace of Follembray, and in 1598, the surrender of the last League commander, Philippe Emmanuel, Duke of Mercœur, who had hoped to restore Brittany to independence under his own rule, was followed by the Edict of Nantes the same year. Even so, many of Henry's Catholic subjects were sceptical about his recantation. It was argued that until Henry fulfilled the daunting terms of his absolution, his conversion could not be considered sincere. Those who continued to believe that Henry was a heretic regarded him as a tyrant who had usurped the throne of France under false pretenses. One of the reasons that François Ravaillac gave for assassinating Henry IV in 1610 was the king's "refusal to exercise his power to compel the so-called reformed Church Calvinist Protestants to the apostolic Catholic and Roman Church".[26]

    Assassination

    Henry IV's assassination in 1610 was the last of a series of attempts on his life throughout his reign.[27] The constant threat of assassination was related to questions of his legitimacy as King of France. Even after his abjuration.of the Protestant faith in 1593, doubts remained about the sincerity of Henry's conversion. In particular were those who believed that in failing to fulfill the terms of his absolution, he remained technically excommunicate and therefore a legitimate target of assassination. As a Catholic king, Henry should have, it was argued, closed Huguenot churches and banned Protestant worship, but he instead made concessions to his former co-religionists in the Edict of Nantes and tolerated the existence of what was seen as a "state within a state", with whole towns and regions of France in which the Huguenots' right to worship, bear arms and govern their own affairs being protected by Henry.

    According to his murderer, François Ravaillac, Henry "made no attempt to convert these Protestants and was said to be on the point of waging war against the Pope so as to transfer the Holy See to Paris". Ravaillac stated that "he had felt obliged to take this step because, from rumours he had heard, he felt the King had seemed reluctant to punish the Huguenots for trying to murder all the Catholics last Christmas Day. Some Catholics still languished in the Paris gaols while their persecutors went scot free".[28]

    Henry continued to promote Huguenots to office in France and to form alliances with Protestant princes abroad. In his home territory of Béarn, he did nothing to re-establish free Catholic worship, as the pope had demanded. It seemed clear to Henry's Catholic opponents that he had recanted his Protestantism merely for political reasons to secure the French throne. Rebels and would-be assassins felt justified by what they saw as Henry's manifest failure to comply with the terms of his absolution. In their view, Henry remained a heretic and thus a usurper on the throne of France.[29]

    Genealogy

    On the death of King Henry III of France, who had no son, the crown passed to Henry IV, in application of Salic law, because Henry was the descendant of the eldest surviving male line of the Capetian dynasty.

    House of Bourbon

    Henry IV's descent in the male line from Louis IX of France.[30]

    Simplified Bourbon family tree

    From Louis IX to Henry IV

    Direct Capetians
    Louis IX
    King of France
    1214–1270
    r.1226–1270
    Margaret
    of Provence
    1221–1295
    House of Bourbon
    Philip III
    King of France
    1245–1285
    r.1270–1285
    Robert
    Count of Clermont
    1256–1317
    r.1268–1317
    Beatrice
    of Burgundy
    1257–1310
    House of Valois
    Charles
    Count of Valois
    1270–1325
    r.1284–1325
    Louis I
    Duke of Bourbon
    1279–1341
    r.1327–1341
    Mary
    of Avesnes
    1280–1354
    Philip VI
    King of France
    1293–1350
    r.1328–1350
    John II
    King of France
    1319–1364
    r.1350–1364
    Isabella
    of Valois
    1313–1383
    Peter I
    Duke of Bourbon
    1311–1356
    r.1342–1356
    James I
    Count of La Marche
    1319–1362
    r.1356–1362
    Jeanne
    of Châtillon
    1320-1371[31]
    Charles V
    King of France
    1338–1380
    r.1364–1380
    Joanna
    of Bourbon
    1338–1378
    Louis II
    Duke of Bourbon
    1337–1410
    r.1356–1410
    Peter II
    Count of La Marche
    1342–1362
    r.1362
    John I
    Count of La Marche
    1344–1393
    r.1362–1393
    Catherine
    of Vendôme
    1354–1412
    Charles VI
    King of France
    1368–1422
    r.1380–1422
    John I
    Duke of Bourbon
    1381–1434
    r.1410–1434
    Louis I
    Duke of Orléans
    1372–1407
    r.1392–1407
    James II
    Count of La Marche
    1370–1438
    r.1393–1438
    Louis
    Count of Vendôme
    1376–1446
    r.1393–1446
    John
    Lord of Carency
    1378–1458
    r.1393–1458
    Charles VII
    King of France
    1403–1461
    r.1422–1461
    Charles I
    Duke of Bourbon
    1401–1456
    r.1434–1456
    Louis I
    Count of Montpensier
    1405–1486
    r.1428–1486
    John
    Count of Angoulême
    1399–1467
    Eleanor
    of Bourbon-La Marche
    1407–aft.1464
    Lords of Carency
    Louis XI
    King of France
    1423–1483
    r.1461–1483
    Joan
    of France
    1435–1482
    John II
    Duke of Bourbon
    1426–1488
    r.1456–1488
    Charles II
    Duke of Bourbon
    1434–1488
    r.1488
    Louis
    Bishop of Liège
    1438–1482
    r.1456–1482
    Gilbert
    Count of Montpensier
    1443–1496
    r.1486–1496
    Charles
    Count of Angoulême
    1459–1496
    r.1467–1496
    Dukes of NemoursJohn VIII
    Count of Vendôme
    1425–1477
    r.1446–1477
    Anne
    of France
    1461–1522
    Peter II
    Count of La Marche
    Duke of Bourbon
    1438–1503
    r.1488–1503
    Peter
    of Bourbon-Busset
    1464–1529
    Francis
    Count of Vendôme
    1470–1495
    r.1477–1495
    Louis
    Prince of La Roche-sur-Yon
    1473–1520
    Louise
    Duchess of Montpensier
    1482–1561
    r.1538–1561
    Suzanne
    Duchess of Bourbon
    1491–1521
    r.1503–1521
    Charles III
    Count of La Marche
    Duke of Bourbon
    1490–1527
    r.1521–1527
    Philip
    of Bourbon-Busset
    1494–1557
    Francis I
    King of France
    1494–1547
    r.1515–1547
    Charles
    Duke of Vendôme
    1489–1537
    r.1514–1537
    Louis
    Duke of Montpensier
    1513-1582
    r.1561–1582
    Bourbon-Busset
    illegitimate male-line
    Henry II
    King of France
    1519–1559
    r.1547–1559
    Jeanne III
    d'Albret

    Queen of Navarre
    1528–1572
    r.1555–1572
    Antoine
    Duke of Vendôme
    King of Navarre
    1518–1562
    r.1555–1562
    Louis
    Prince of Condé
    1530–1569
    r.1546–1569
    Dukes of Montpensier
    Margaret
    of France
    1553–1615
    Henry IV
    of Bourbon

    King of France
    1553–1610
    r.1589–1610
    Marie
    de' Medici

    1575–1642
    Henri I
    Prince of Condé
    1552–1588
    r.1569–1588
    Louis XIII
    King of France
    1601–1643
    r.1610–1643
    Henri II
    Prince of Condé
    1588–1646
    r.1588–1646
    Louis XIV
    King of France
    1638–1715
    r.1643–1715
    Louis II
    Grand Condé

    Prince of Condé
    1621–1686
    r.1646–1686
    Armand
    Prince of Conti
    1629–1666
    r.1629–1666
    Henri Jules
    Prince of Condé
    1643–1709
    r.1686–1709
    Louis III
    Prince of Condé
    1668–1710
    r.1709–1710
    Louise Françoise
    of Bourbon
    1673–1743
    Marie Thérèse
    de Bourbon
    1666–1732
    François Louis
    Grand Conti

    Prince of Conti
    1664–1709
    r.1685–1709
    Louis Armand I
    Prince of Conti
    1661–1685
    r.1666–1685
    Marie Anne
    de Bourbon
    1666–1739
    Louis IV Henri
    Prince de Condé
    1692–1740
    r.1710–1740
    Marie Anne
    de Bourbon
    1689–1720
    Louise Élisabeth
    de Bourbon
    1693–1775
    Louis Armand II
    Prince of Conti
    1695–1727
    r.1709–1727
    Louis V
    Joseph

    Prince of Condé
    1736–1818
    r.1740–1818
    Louis François
    Prince of Conti
    1717–1776
    r.1727–1776
    Louis VI Henri
    Prince of Condé
    1756–1830
    r.1818–1830
    Louis François Joseph
    Prince of Conti
    1734–1814
    r.1776–1814
    Louis Antoine
    Duke of Enghien
    1772–1804

    Descent from Henry IV

    King of France
    Henry IV
    Kingdom of France King of France
    (1589–1610)
    King of France
    Louis XIII
    Kingdom of France King of France
    (1610–1643)
    King of France
    Louis XIV
    Kingdom of France King of France
    (1643–1715)
    Duke of Orléans
    Philippe I
    Duke of Orléans

    Louis
    "Le Grand Dauphin" of France
    Duke of Orléans
    Philippe II
    Duke of Orléans
    Regent of France


    Louis
    "Le Petit Dauphin" of France
    King of Spain
    Philip V
    Spain King of Spain
    (1700–1746)
    Duke of Orléans
    Louis
    Duke of Orléans
    King of France
    Louis XV
    Kingdom of France King of France
    (1715–1774)
    King of Spain
    Louis I
    Spain King of Spain
    (1724)
    King of Spain
    Ferdinand VI
    Spain King of Spain
    (1746–1759)
    King of Spain
    Charles III
    Spain King of Spain
    (1759–1788)
    Philip
    Duchy of Parma Duke of Parma
    (1748–1765)
    Duke of Orléans
    Louis Philippe I
    Duke of Orléans

    Louis
    Dauphin of France
    King of Spain
    Charles IV
    Spain King of Spain
    (1788–1808)
    Ferdinand
    Duchy of Parma Duke of Parma
    (1765–1802)
    Duke of Orléans
    Louis Philippe II
    (Philippe Égalité)

    Duke of Orléans
    King of France
    Louis XVI
    Kingdom of France King of France
    (1774–1791)
    King of the French
    (1791–1792)

    Titular King of France
    (1792–1793)
    King of France
    Louis XVIII
    Kingdom of France Titular King of France
    (1795–1804)

    Legitimist pretender
    (1804–1814)
    King of France
    (1814–1824)
    King of France
    Charles X
    King of France
    (1824–1830)

    Legitimist pretender
    (1830–1836)
    King of Spain
    Ferdinand VII
    Spain King of Spain
    (1808; 1813–1833)
    Francisco de PaulaCarlos
    Count of Molina Carlos V
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1833–1845)
    Louis I
    Kingdom of Italy (Napoleonic) King of Etruria
    (1801–1803)
    King of the French
    Louis-Philippe I
    France King of the French
    (1830–1848)

    Orléanist pretender
    (1848–1850)
    King of France
    Louis
    Dauphin of France
    Titular King of France as Louis XVII
    Titular King of France
    (1793–1795)
    Louis-Antoine
    Duke of Angoulême Dauphin of France
    Titular King of France as Louis XIX
    Legitimist pretender
    (1836–1844)

    Charles Ferdinand
    Duke of Berry
    Queen of Spain
    Isabella II
    Spain Queen of Spain
    (1833–1868)
    Francis
    Duke of Cádiz
    King consort of Spain
    Carlos
    Count of Montemolin Carlos VI
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1845–1861)
    Juan
    Count of Montizón Juan III
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1861–1868)

    Titular King of France as Jean III
    Legitimist pretender
    (1883–1887)
    Louis II
    Kingdom of Italy (Napoleonic) King of Etruria
    (1803–1807)
    Charles I
    Duchy of Lucca Duke of Lucca
    (1824–1847)
    Charles II
    Duchy of Parma Duke of Parma
    (1847–1849)
    Duke of Orléans
    Ferdinand Philippe
    Duke of Orléans
    King of France
    Henri
    Count of Chambord
    Titular King of France as Henri V
    Legitimist pretender
    (1844–1883)
    King of Spain
    Alfonso XII
    Spain King of Spain
    (1874–1885)
    Carlos
    Duke of Madrid Carlos VII
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1868–1909)

    Titular King of France as Charles XI
    Legitimist pretender
    (1887–1909)
    Alfonso Carlos
    Duke of San Jaime Alfonso Carlos I
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1931–1936)

    Titular King of France as Charles XII
    Legitimist pretender
    (1931–1936)
    Charles III
    Duchy of Parma Duke of Parma
    (1849–1854)
    Philippe
    Count of Paris
    Titular King of France as Philippe VII
    France Orléanist pretender
    (1850–1894)
    Robert
    Duke of Chartres
    King of Spain
    Alfonso XIII
    Spain King of Spain
    (1886–1931)

    Titular King of France as Alphonse I
    Legitimist pretender
    (1936–1941)
    Jaime
    Duke of Madrid Jaime III
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1909–1931)

    Titular King of France as Jacques I
    Legitimist pretender
    (1909–1931)
    Robert I
    Duchy of Parma Duke of Parma
    (1854–1859)
    Philippe
    Duke of Orléans
    Titular King of France as Philippe VIII
    France Orléanist pretender
    (1894–1926)
    Jean
    Duke of Guise
    Titular King of France as Jean III
    France Orléanist pretender
    (1926–1940)
    Jaime
    Duke of Segovia Jaime IV
    Spain Legitimist pretender
    (1941–1975)

    Titular King of France as Jacques II or
    Henri VI
    Legitimist pretender
    (1941–1975)
    Juan
    Count of Barcelona
    Xavier
    Duke of Parma
    Spain Carlist regent
    (1936–1952)
    Javier I
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1952–1977)
    Felix
    Prince of Luxembourg
    Henri
    Count of Paris
    Titular King of France as Henri VI
    France Orléanist pretender
    (1940–1999)
    Alfonso
    Duke of Anjou and Cádiz Alfonso XIV
    Spain Legitimist pretender
    (1975–1989)

    Titular King of France as Alphonse II
    Legitimist pretender
    (1975–1989)
    King of Spain
    Juan Carlos I
    Spain King of Spain
    (1975–2014)
    Carlos Hugo
    Duke of Parma Carlos Hugo I
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1977–1979)
    Sixtus Henry
    Prince of Parma Enrique V
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (1979–present)
    Grand Duke of Luxembourg
    Jean
    Luxembourg Grand Duke of Luxembourg
    (1964–2000)
    Henri
    Count of Paris
    Duke of France

    Titular King of France as Henri VII
    France Orléanist pretender
    (1999–2019)
    Louis
    Duke of Anjou
    Titular King of France as Louis XX
    Legitimist pretender
    (1989–present)
    Luis II
    Spain Legitimist pretender
    (1989–present)
    King of Spain
    Felipe VI
    Spain King of Spain
    (2014–present)
    Carlos
    Duke of Parma Carlos Xavier II
    Spain Carlist pretender
    (2011–present)
    Grand Duke of Luxembourg
    Henri
    Luxembourg Grand Duke of Luxembourg
    (2000–present)
    Jean
    Count of Paris
    Titular King of France as Jean IV
    France Orléanist pretender
    (2019–present)

    Louis
    Duke of Burgundy
    Dauphin of France
    Princess of Asturias, Heir to the Throne
    Leonor
    Princess of Asturias
    Carlos
    Prince of Piacenza
    Guillaume
    Hereditary Grand Duke of Luxembourg
    Gaston
    Count of Clermont

    Ancestors

    Notes

    1. Frieda, 192–93.
    2. Mousnier, 106.
    3. Robert Knecht, Catherine de' Medici, 72. Amongst other concessions, Catherine released Antoine's brother, Louis of Bourbon, prince of Condé, from prison, where he had been condemned to death for crimes against the king (lèse-majesté).
    4. Mousnier, 106. This practice had been made law in 1328.
    5. Quoted by Buisseret, 18–19.
    6. Buisseret, 19.
    7. Knecht, Renaissance France, 104.
    8. Quoted in Greengrass, 56.
    9. Greengrass, 56.
    10. Greengrass, 12.
    11. Greengrass, 13.
    12. 1 2 3 Buisseret, 42.
    13. Mousnier, 108. There was also a belief in some quarters that the original papal blessing of Charlemagne was conferred automatically on his descendants, including Henry.
    14. 1 2 3 Buisseret, 43.
    15. Greengrass, 56–57; Mousnier, 119.
    16. Greengrass, 56–57.
    17. Mousnier, 119.
    18. Mousnier, 119–120.
    19. Henry chose Chartres because Rheims Cathedral, the traditional venue for royal coronations, was still in the hands of the Catholic League.
    20. Mousnier, 112–13.
    21. 1 2 3 Mousnier, 114.
    22. Mousnier, 115.
    23. Quoted by Buisseret, 41.
    24. Mousnier, 114–15.
    25. Mousnier, 115; Buisseret, 62.
    26. Mousnier, 36.
    27. Buisseret, 56. There were two assassination attempts in 1593, three in 1594, two each in 1595 and 1596 and at least nine more afterward.
    28. Mousnier, 36–37.
    29. Mousnier, 116.
    30. See genealogical table in Baumgartner, France in the Sixteenth Century.
    31. "Jeanne de Chatillon".
    32. Knecht, genealogies,Renaissance France; Baumgartner, genealogical table, France in the Sixteenth Century.

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