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See also: king of
See also: France from 1824 to 1830, was the See also: fourth See also: child of the dauphin, son of See also: Louis XV. and of
See also: Marie Josephe of See also: Saxony, and consequently See also: brother of Louis XVI
.
He was known before his accession as See also: Charles Philippe, count of
See also: Artois
.
At the age of sixteen he married Marie Therese of See also: Savoy, See also: sister-in-See also: law of his brother, the count of See also: Provence (Louis XVIII.)
.
His youth was passed in scandalous dissipation, which See also: drew upon himself and his coterie the detestation of the See also: people of See also: Paris
.
Although lacking military tastes, he joined the French army at the siege of See also: Gibraltar in 1772, merely for distraction
.
In a few years he had incurred a See also: debt of 56 million francs, a See also: burden assumed by the impoverished See also: state
.
See also: Prior to the Revolution he took only a minor See also: part in politics, but when it broke out he soon became, with the See also: queen, the chief of the reactionary party at See also: court
.
In See also: July 1789 he See also: left France, became See also: leader of the emigres, and visited several of the courts of See also: Europe in the See also: interest of the royalist cause
.
After the execution of Louis XVI: he received from his brother, the count of Provence, the title of See also: lieutenant-general of the See also: realm, and, on the See also: death of Louis XVII., that of " Monsieur." In 1795 he attempted to aid the royalist rising of La See also: Vendee, landing at the See also: island of Yeu
.
But he refused to advance farther and to put himself resolutely at the See also: head of his party, although warmly acclaimed by it, and courage failing him, he returned to See also: England, settling first in See also: London, then in Holyrood Palace at See also: Edinburgh and afterwards at Hartwell
.
There he remained until 1813, returning to France in See also: February 1814, and entering Paris in See also: April, in the track of the See also: Allies
.
During the reign of his brother, Louis XVIII., he was the leader of the ultra-royalists, the party of extreme reaction . On succeeding to the See also: throne in See also: September 1824 the dignity of his address and his affable condescension won him a passing popularity
.
But his See also: coronation at See also: Reims, with all the gorgeous
ceremonial of the old regime, proclaimed his intention of ruling, as the Most Christian King, by divine right
.
His first acts, indeed, allayed the worst alarms of the Liberals; but it was soon apparent that the See also: weight of the See also: crown would be consistently thrown into the See also: scale of the reactionary forces
.
The emigres were awarded a milliard as compensation for their confiscated lands; and Gallicans and Liberals alike were offended by See also: measures which threw increased power into the hands of the See also: Jesuits and Ultramontanes
.
In a few months there were disquieting signs of the growing unpopularity of the king
.
The royal princesses were insulted in the streets; and on the 29th of April 1825 Charles, when reviewing the See also: National Guard, was met with cries from the ranks of " Down with the ministers
!
" His reply was, next See also: day, a decree disbanding the citizen army
.
It was not till 1829, when the result of the elections had proved the futility of Villele's policy of repression, that Charles consented unwillingly to try a policy of compromise
.
It was, however, too See also: late
.
Villele's successor was the vicomte de Martignac, who took See also: Decazes for his See also: model; and in the speech from the throne Charles declared that the happiness of France depended on " the sincere union of the royal authority with the liberties consecrated by the charter." But Charles had none of the See also: patience and See also: common-sense which had enabled Louis XVIII. to See also: play with decency the part of a constitutional king
.
" I would rather hew See also: wood," he exclaimed, " than be a king under the conditions of the king of England "; and when the Liberal opposition obstructed all the measures proposed by a See also: ministry not selected from the See also: parliamentary majority, he lost patience
.
" I told you," he said, " that there was no coming to terms with these men." Martignac was dismissed; and See also: Prince Jules de See also: Polignac, the very incarnation of clericalism and reaction, was called to the helm of state
.
The inevitable result was obvious to all the See also: world
.
" There is no such thing as See also: political experience," wrote Wellington, certainly no friend of Liberalism; " with the warning of See also: James II. before him, Charles X. was setting up a
See also: government by priests, through priests, for priests." A formidable agitation sprang up in France, which only served to make the king more obstinate
.
In opening the session of 183o he declared that he would " find the power " to overcome the obstacles placed in his path by " culpable manoeuvres." The reply of the See also: chambers was a protest against " the unjust distrust of the sentiment and reason of France "; whereupon they were first prorogued, and on the 16th of May dissolved
.
The result of the new elections was what might have been foreseen: a large increase in the Opposition; and Charles, on the advice of his ministers, determined on a virtual suspension of the constitution
.
On the 25th of July were issued the famous " four ordinances " which were the immediate cause of the revolution that followed
.
With singular fatuity Charles had taken no precautions in view of a violent outbreak
.
Marshal Marmont, who commanded the scattered troops in Paris, had received no orders, beyond a jesting command from the duke of Angouleme to place them under arms " as some windows might be broken." At the beginning of the revolution Charles was at St Cloud, whence on the See also: news of the fighting he withdrew first to See also: Versailles and then to Rambouillet
.
So little did he understand the seriousness of the situation that, when the laconic message " All is over!" was brought to him, he believed that the insurrection had been suppressed
.
On realizing the truth he hastily abdicated in favour of his See also: grand-son, the duke 'of See also: Bordeaux (comte de Chambord), and appointed Louis Philippe, duke of See also: Orleans, lieutenant-general of the
See also: kingdom (July 30th)
.
But, on the news of Louis Philippe's acceptance of the crown, he gave up the contest and began a dignified retreat to the See also: sea-See also: coast, followed by his suite, and surrounded by the See also: infantry, cavalry and artillery of the guard
.
Beyond sending a corps of observation to follow his movements, the new government did nothing to arrest his escape
.
At See also: Maintenon Charles took leave of the bulk of his troops, and proceeding with an escort of some 1200 men to See also: Cherbourg, took See also: ship there for England on the 16th of See also: August
.
For a See also: time he returned to See also: Holy-rood Palace at Edinburgh, which was again placed at his dis-posal
.
He died at Goritz, whither he had gone for his See also: health, on the 6th of See also: November 1836
.
The best that can be said of Charles X. is that, if he did not know how to See also: rule, he knew how to cease to rule
.
The dignity of his exit was more worthy of the See also: ancient splendour of the royal See also: house of France than the theatrical humility of Louis Philippe's entrance
.
But Charles was an impossible monarch for the 19th century, or perhaps for any other century
.
He was a typical Bourbon, unable either to learn or to forget; and the closing years of his See also: life he spent in religious austerities, intended to expiate, not his failure to grasp a See also: great opportunity, but the comparatively venial excesses of his youth.'
See Achille de Vaulabelle, Chute de l'See also: empire: histoire See also: des deux restaurations (Paris, 1847–1857) ; Louis de Vielcaste!, Hist. de la restauration (Paris, 186o–1878); Alphonse de Lamartine, Hist. de la restauration (Paris, 1851–1852) ; Louis Blanc, Hist. de dix ans, 1830–1840 (5 vols., 1842–1844) ; G
.
I. de Montbel, Derniere Epoque de l'hist. de Charles X (5th ed., Paris, 1840) ; See also: Theodore See also: Anne, Memoires, souvenirs, et anecdotes sur l'interieur du palais de Charles X et See also: les evenements de 1815 d 1830 (2 vols., Paris, 1831); ib., Journal de See also: Saint-Cloud a Cherbourg; Vedrenne, See also: Vie de Charles X (3 vols., Paris, 1879) ; See also: Petit, Charles X (Paris, 1886) ; Villeneuve, Charles X et Louis XIX en exil
.
Memoires inedits (Paris, 1889) ; Imbert de Saint-Amand, La Cour de Charles X (Paris, 1892)
.
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