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The Bourbons
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"The Bourbons
The name of Bourbon comes from a town in France (called
Bourbon-L'Archambault from the name of an early lord) and the region
around it, the Bourbonnais. Robert de Clermont, a son of Louis IX, was
originally given the title and apanage of comte de Clermont. He later married
the heiress of the first lords of Bourbon; Bourbon was made into a duchy and
peerage in 1327. The difference of the Bourbon family was a bend gules.
Junior branches modified the bend further, adding a bordure (Préaux),
charging it with three lions argent (La Marche) and then adding a
bordure gules (Carency) or a bordure dancetty gules (Duisant), charging
the bend with a quarter of Dauphiné d'Auvergne in chief part
of the bend (Montpensier), or a crescent arget in chief (La Roche-sur-Yon),
or shortening into a baton (Condé) and adding a bordure (Conti),
etc.
In 1589, when Henri III
died, the closest relative in main line was Henri de Bourbon, king of
Navarre, of the Vendôme branch of Bourbon,
who became Henri IV and placed the house of Bourbon on the throne.
Henri IV's son Louis XIII had two sons, Louis XIV and Philippe. To
Philippe was given the apanage of Orléans in 1661, and from him is
descended the house of Orléans.
Louis XIV's wife was Maria-Teresa of Austria, older sister of the king of
Spain Carlos II. He had one son and three grandsons, the dukes of Burgundy,
Anjou and Berry. When Carlos II died in 1700, he had named as successor
the duke of Anjou, who became king as Felipe V; not without a European war
first, the War of Spanish Succession. As a result, Spain lost a number of
territories, and Felipe V had to renounce all claims to the French throne
for himself and his descendants by the Treaty
of Utrecht.
The senior branch of the Bourbons
The son of Louis XIV died in 1711, the duke of Burgundy in 1712, the
duke of Berry in 1714, and the only surviving legitimate descendant
succeeded as Louis XV. He had t"
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