Dauphin of France
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The Dauphin of France (French:Dauphin de France) – strictly, Dauphin of Viennois (Dauphin de Viennois) – was the title given to the heir apparent of the throne of France from 1350–1791, and from 1824–1830.
Guy VIII, Count of Vienne, had a dolphin on his coat of arms and had been nicknamed le Dauphin (French for dolphin). The title of Dauphin de Viennois descended in his family until 1349, when Humbert II sold his signeurie, called the Dauphiné, to King Philippe VI on condition that the heir of France assumed the title of le Dauphin. The wife of the Dauphin was known as la Dauphine.
The first French prince called le Dauphin was Charles V. The title is roughly equivalent to the English title Prince of Wales. The official style of a Dauphin of France, prior to 1461, was par la grâce de Dieu, dauphin de Viennois, comte de Valentinois et de Diois ("By the Grace of God, Dauphin of Viennois, Count of Valentinois and of Diois"). A Dauphin of France would unite the coat of arms of the Dauphiné, which featured Dolphins, with the French fleurs-de-lys, and might where appropriate further unite that with other arms (e.g. François, son and Dauphin of Francis I, was ruling Duke of Brittany, so united the coat of arms of that province with the typical arms of a Dauphin of France; Francis II, whilst Dauphin, was also King of Scotland by marriage, and so added those arms to those of the Dauphin of France.
![Louis de France, nicknamed Le Grand Dauphin](../../../upload/thumb/2/22/Grand_Dauphin.jpg/180px-Grand_Dauphin.jpg)
Originally, the Dauphin was personally responsible for the rule of the Dauphiné, which was legally part of the Holy Roman Empire, and which the Emperors, in gifting the rule of the province to the French heirs, had stipulated must never be united with France. Because of this, the Dauphiné suffered from anarchy in the 14th and 15th centuries (since the Dauphins of France were frequently minors, or concerned with other matters).
![Arms of Francis II as Dauphin and King-consort of Scotland.](../../../upload/shared/thumb/9/93/Armoiries_Fran%C3%A7ois_II_dauphins.png/100px-Armoiries_Fran%C3%A7ois_II_dauphins.png)
The province was temporarily brought under control by Louis XI of France during his period as Dauphin (the last to personally rule his fief), who defied his father, Charles VII, by remaining in the province longer than the King had permitted, and by engaging in personal politics more beneficial to the Dauphiné than to France (for example, Louis made his second marriage during the period in the Dauphiné to Charlotte of Savoy, against the wishes of Charles VII: Savoy was a traditional ally of the Dauphiné, and Louis wished to reaffirm that alliance, so as to stamp out rebels and robbers in the province). Louis, however, was driven out of the Dauphiné by Charles VII's soldiers in 1456, leaving the region to fall back into disorder; after his succession in 1461, Louis therefore united it to France, and brought it permanently under royal control.
Unlike the English title Prince of Wales, which was (and is) granted at the will of the monarch rather than as an automatic right at birth, the title of Dauphin would automatically be conferred upon the next heir apparent in the direct line upon birth, accession of the parent to the throne, or death of the previous Dauphin.
The title was abolished by the Constitution of 1791, which made France a constitutional monarchy. Under the constitution, the heir to the throne (Dauphin Louis-Charles at that time) was restyled as Prince Royal (a Prince of the Blood would be retitled as prince français), taking effect from the inception of the Legislative Assembly on 1 October 1791. The title was restored in potentia under the Bourbon restoration of Louis XVIII; there was not, however, another Dauphin until his death, and the accession of his brother Charles X, whereupon Charles' son and heir, Louis-Antoine, Duke of Angouleme, automatically became Dauphin. However, with the removal of the Bourbons, the title fell once again into disuse (the July Monarchy titling their heirs as Prince Royal). After the death of Henri, comte de Chambord, Carlos, Duke of Madrid, the heir of the legitimist claimant, Juan, Count of Montizón, made use of the title in pretence, as have the Spanish legitimist claimants since.
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[edit] List of Dauphins of France
[edit] In Literature
![A lineographic representation of the arms of the Dauphin of France. The arms were created by Jean de Beaugrand in 1604.](../../../upload/shared/thumb/4/40/Lineographic_Dauphin_Coat_of_Arms.jpg/200px-Lineographic_Dauphin_Coat_of_Arms.jpg)
In Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck encounters two odd characters who turn out to be professional con men. One of them claims that he should be treated with deference, since he is really an impoverished English duke, and the other, not to be outdone, reveals that he is "really" the Dauphin ("Looy the Seventeen, son of Looy the Sixteen and Marie Antoinette").
[edit] Modern Uses of the Term
Today, the term Dauphin is used as the name for the yearbook of St. Louis University High in St. Louis, MO, U.S.A. The high school, the oldest west of the Mississippi River, has carried down through its almost 200 year history some symbols of the French influence on the beginnings of the city of St. Louis, named for the French king, Louis IX, a former dauphin. Its theatre players are known as the Dauphin Players. Harrisburg, the capital of Pennsylvania is in Dauphin County.
[edit] See also
There is also a Helicopter made with the name Dauphin made by the French company Eurocopter.