Napoleon II of France
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Napoleon II of the French, Duke of Reichstadt (March 20, 1811 – July 22, 1832) was the son of Napoleon Bonaparte, and briefly the second Emperor of the French.
Napoléon François Joseph Charles, known from birth as the King of Rome, was the son of Emperor Napoleon I and his second wife, Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria. He was styled as HM The King of Rome, which Napoleon I declared was the courtesy title of the heir-apparent.
The Italian composer Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli, choir master of the Sistine Chapel in Rome, refused as an Italian patriot to conduct in St. Peter's a "Te Deum" for the birth of this "King of Rome" and was taken a prisoner to Paris. Napoleon père was, however, a fan of Zingarelli's music and so quickly released him. In addition Zingarelli was awarded a state pension.
Three years after his birth in Paris, the First French Empire - to which he was heir - collapsed, and Napoleon abdicated the throne in favour of his infant son, who was taken by the empress to Château de Blois in April 1814. In 1815, after his defeat at Waterloo, Napoleon again abdicated in favour of his son.
The Chamber of Representatives and Chamber of Peers recognized him as Emperor from the moment of his father's abdication (June 22, 1815), but the entrance of the Allies into Paris (July 7) put an end to this short-lived regime. Despite his nominal reign, he is not normally referred to as "Napoleon II" except by Bonapartists who also call him the King of Rome. The next Bonaparte to come to the throne of France took the name Napoleon III in deference to his cousin's mostly theoretical reign.
After 1815, the young prince, now known as "Franz," after his maternal grandfather, rather than as "Napoleon," was a virtual captive in Austria. He was awarded the title of Duke of Reichstadt in 1818. He died of tuberculosis at Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna on July 22, 1832. Upon the death of his step-father, Neipperg, and the revelation that his mother had borne two illegitimate children to him prior to their marriage, Franz said to his friend, Prokesch von Osten, "If Josephine had been my mother, my father would not have been buried at Sainte Helena, and I should not be at Vienna. My mother is kind but weak; she was not the wife my father deserved".[1]
It has been suggested[2] that his death was the result of deliberate lead or arsenic poisoning at the hands of agents of Metternich's police state.
In 1940 his remains were transferred, as a gift to France from Adolf Hitler, from Vienna to the dome of Les Invalides in Paris, where he rested for some time beside his father, later being moved to the lower church. His heart and intestines remain in Vienna, in urn 42 in the Herzgruft, and his viscera are in urn 76 of the Ducal Crypt in Vienna.
He was also known as "L'Aiglon", or "The Eaglet". Edmond Rostand wrote a play, L'Aiglon, about his life. Serbian composer Petar Stojanović composed an operetta "Napoleon II: Herzog von Reichstadt", premiered in Vienna in the 1920s.
[edit] Publications
- Welschinger, Le roi de Rome, 1811-32, (Paris, 1897)
- Wertheimer, The Duke of Reichstadt, (London, 1905)
[edit] References
- ^ Markham, Felix, Napoleon, p.249
- ^ Altman, Gail S. Fatal Links: The Curious Deaths of Beethoven and the Two Napoleons (Paperback). Anubian Press (September 1999). ISBN 1-888071-02-8
House of Bonaparte Born: 20 March 1811 Died: 22 July 1832 |
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Regnal Titles | ||
Preceded by Napoleon I |
Emperor of the French 22 June–7 July 1815 |
Succeeded by Louis XVIII (as King of France and Navarre) |
Titles in pretence | ||
Bourbon Restoration | * NOT REIGNING * Emperor of the French (7 July 1815–22 July 1832) |
Succeeded by Joseph Prince Napoléon Line |
Lucien I Prince Canino Line |