Louis de BOURBON Duc de PENTHIEVRE (1725-1793, Admiral of France, grandson of Ki…
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Louis de BOURBON Duc de PENTHIEVRE (1725-1793, Admiral of France, grandson of King Louis XIV through the legitimated bastard branch) / Charge on parchment signed "L.J.M. de Bourbon" by his hand, as Admiral of France, given to Sieur Pierre FAUVEL. de Bourbon" in his hand, as Admiral of France, given on October 21, 1744: he delivers to Sieur Pierre FAUVEL the office of postulant procurator in the Admiralty of BAYEUX - This parchment (57 x 29 cm) is laminated on a black background under a marie-louise and presented in a gilded frame (on the back of the frame, certificate by "Les écrits d'Antan", 1970s).

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Louis de BOURBON Duc de PENTHIEVRE (1725-1793, Admiral of Fr

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Decret de la Convention Nationale, Du 16 Avril 1793 ... Qui ordonne l'interrogatoire des indivus de la famille des Bourbons, & Le sequestre des biens de celle des Bourbons-Orleans. Paris, Imprimerie Nationale Executive du Louvre, 1793 4to. 255x195 mm. Pages 3, 1 blank. Slight traces of use. First edition. The Terror is in force in France. The entire Bourbons-Orleans family, is under arrest. On April 4, the Duke of Chartres (future Louis-Philippe I), eldest son of Duke Louis-Philippe d'Orléans, then lieutenant general of the Army of the North, went over to the Austrian enemy along with his commander, General Dumouriez, author of a failed coup d'état. The Duke of Orleans, since 1792 known as Egalite, who had also voted for the execution of Louis XVI, then became suspect in the eyes of the Montagnards. All members of the Bourbon family are arrested on April 7, 1793. The measure affects the Duke of Orleans, his two other sons, the Duke of Montpensier and Louis-Charles d'Orléans, Count of Beaujolais, and his sister Louise -Bathilda. The Convention decides to remove the entire family from Paris and operates their immediate transfer to Fort Saint-Jean in Marseille. Egalite will be guillotined on November 6, 1793. 4to. 255x195 mm. Pp. 3, 1 blank. Slight traces of wear. First edition. There is terror in France. The entire Bourbons-Orleans family is under arrest. On April 4, the duke of Chartres (future Louis-Philippe I), eldest son of the duke Louis-Philippe d'Orléans, then lieutenant general of the Army of the North, went over to the Austrian enemy together with his leader, general Dumouriez, author of a failed coup. The Duke of Orleans, called Egalite since 1792, who had also voted for the execution of Louis XVI, then became suspect in the eyes of the Montagnards. All members of the Bourbon family are arrested on April 7, 1793. The measure concerns the Duke of Orléans, his other two children, the Duke of Montpensier and Louis-Charles d'Orléans, Count of Beaujolais, and his sister Louise -Bathilda. The Convention decides to remove the entire family from Paris and immediately transfers them to the Fort Saint-Jean in Marseille. Egalite will be guillotined on November 6, 1793.