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CHARLES FERDINAND BERRY

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 809 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHARLES FERDINAND BERRY  , Dula: 08 (1778-1820), younger son of Charles X. of France, was born at
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Versailles . At the Revolution he
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left France with his
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father, then comte d'
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Artois, and served in the army of Conde from 1792 to 1797 . He afterwards joined the
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Russian army, and in 18or took up his residence in England, where he remained for thirteen years . During that time he married an Englishwoman, Anna Brown, by whom he had two daughters, afterwards the baronne de Charette and the comtesse de Lucinge-Faucigny . The
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marriage was cancelled for
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political reasons in 1814, when the duke set out for France . His frank, open manners gained him some favour with his countrymen, and Louis XVIII. named him
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commander-in-chief of the army at Paris on the return of
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Napoleon from Elba . He was, however, unable to retain the
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loyalty of his troops, and retired to Ghent during the
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Hundred Days . In 1816 he married the princess Caroline Ferdinande Louise (1798-1870), eldest daughter of King Francis I. of Naples . On the 13th of
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February 182o he was mortally wounded, when leaving the opera-house at Paris with his wife, by a saddler named Louis
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Pierre Louvel . Seven months after his
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death the duchess gave birth to a son, who received the title of duke of
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Bordeaux, but who is known in
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history as the comte de Chambord . A daughter, afterwards duchess of
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Parma, was born in 1819 . The duchess of Berry was compelled to follow Charles X. to Holyrood after
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July 183o, but it was with the
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resolution of returning speedily and making an attempt to secure the
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throne for her son .

From England she went to

Italy, and in
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April 1832 she landed near
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Marseilles, but, receiving no support, was compelled to make her way towards the loyal districts of Vendee and
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Brittany . Her followers, however, were defeated, and, after remaining concealed for five months in a house in Nantes, she was betrayed to the government and imprisoned in the castle of Blaye . Here she gave birth to a daughter, the fruit of a secret marriage contracted with an
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Italian nobleman, Count Ettore Lucchesi-Palli (1805-1864) . The announcement of this marriage at once deprived the duchess of the sympathies of her supporters . She was no longer an
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object of fear to the French government, who released her in
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June 1833 . She set
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sail for Sicily, and, joining her
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husband, lived in retirement from that time till her death, at Brunnensee in
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Switzerland, in April 187o .

End of Article: CHARLES FERDINAND BERRY
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DUKE OF JOHN BERRY (1340-1416)

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