Everything about Princesse De Lamballe totally explained
Princess Marie Thérèse Louise of Savoy-Carignan, Princess de Lamballe (
September 8,
1749 –
September 3,
1792) was an
Italian-
French courtier, aristocrat of the
House of Savoy, and royal confidante to French queen
Marie Antoinette. Her killing sparked a movement of anti-revolutionary propaganda, which ultimately led to the development and implementation of the
Reign of Terror.
Life
Early years
Born in
Turin, she was the fourth daughter of
Louis-Victor of Savoy, Prince of Carignan (died 1774; great-grandfather of
Charles Albert of Sardinia) and of
Landgravine Christine of Hesse-Rheinfels-Rothenburg. In 1767, she married
Louis-Alexandre de Bourbon, Prince de Lamballe, the only surviving son of the vastly wealthy
Duc de Penthièvre, the sole heir of
Louis XIV's illegitimate son, the
Comte de Toulouse. The Duc de Penthièvre was the head of a cadet branch of the reigning
House of Bourbon called the
House of Bourbon-Penthièvre.
Her husband died the following year, and she went to live with her kindly father-in-law at the
Château de Rambouillet. Upon the marriage of the future king
Louis XVI and
Marie Antoinette in 1770, she returned to court.
Marie Antoinette, charmed by her gentle manners, singled her out as companion and confidante and the two became good friends. After her accession as queen,
Marie Antoinette, in spite of the king's opposition, appointed the Princesse de Lamballe to be the
superintendent of her royal household. Between 1776 and 1785, the
Duchesse de Polignac supplanted the Princess de Lamballe as the queen's favourite. However, when
Marie Antoinette tired of the Polignacs' intrigues, she turned again to the princess. From 1785 until the
French Revolution, the Princesse de Lamballe was the besieged queen's closest friend.
Revolution
The Princesse de Lamballe accompanied the royal family to the
Tuileries Palace after
the March on Versailles. In Paris, her
salon served as a meeting-place for the queen and the members of the
National Constituent Assembly, many of whom the queen wished to win over to the cause of the
Bourbon Monarchy.
After a visit to the
Great Britain in
1791 to appeal for help for the royal family, the princess wrote her
will and returned to the Tuileries, where she continued her services to the queen until August 10, when she was imprisoned with the queen in the
Temple.
Murder
On August 19, she was transferred to
La Force for refusing to take an oath against the monarchy. Instead, she agreed to preach the freedom and equality of all men. Because she refused the oath, though, on
September 3, she was delivered over to the fury of bloodthirsty revolutionaries during an orgy of killing later called the
September Massacres.
The mob stripped and gang-raped her, cut off her breasts and mutilated the rest of her body. There are further rumors that a man cut off her genitals which he impaled upon a pike and proceeded to rip out her heart which he then ate. The princess' head was cut off, crudely stuck on a pike and then carried away to a nearby café where the head was laid down in front of the customers, who were asked to drink in celebration of her death. It seems likely that the head was taken to a barber, in order to dress the hair to make it instantly recognisable. Following this, the head was replaced upon the pike and was paraded beneath Marie Antoinette’s prison window at the Temple. Those who were carrying it wished the Queen to kiss the lips of her favourite, as it was a frequent rumour that the two had been lovers, however, the head wasn't allowed to be brought into the building. Nevertheless, the Queen was very distraught at the sight.
Five citizens of the local section in Paris delivered her body (minus, of course, her head which was then being displayed on a pike) to the authorities shortly after her death. Royalist propaganda claimed her body was displayed on the street for a full day. Her heartbroken father-in-law finally succeeded in retrieving her corpse and had it interred in the Penthrièvre family crypt in the cathedral at
Dreux.
The Princesse de Lamballe was the sister-in-law of the
Duc d'Orléans, better known as
Philippe Égalite. Philippe had married the sister of her dead husband,
Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon-Penthièvre, in 1769. As a result, she was an aunt to the future King of the French,
Louis Philippe.
Trivia
- A story is told that as the princess was being killed, a letter written to her by Marie Antoinette fell from its hiding place in her hair and landed in a pool of her own blood.
She was sketched by the artist F Gabriel in the courtyard of La Force only hours before her death.
She is portrayed by Mary Nighy in the recent film Marie Antoinette.
Marie Grosholz, more famously known as Madame Tussaud, was ordered to make the deathmask.
Ancestry
Further Information
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