Duke of Enghien - Dukes of Enghien - Second Creation (1689-1830)

Second Creation (1689-1830)

His grandson Henry II, Prince of Condé, inherited the Duchy of Montmorency near Paris in 1633, and in 1689 the Duchy of Montmorency was renamed as Duchy of Enghien for his son Louis II, Prince of Condé. The title Duke of Enghien was thereafter used as a courtesy title for the eldest son of the Prince of Condé.

  • 1. 1689-1709: Henri I, Duke of Enghien (1643–1709)
  • 2. 1709-1710: Louis I, Duke of Enghien (1668–1710)
  • 3. 1710-1740: Louis II Henri, Duke of Enghien (1692–1740)
  • 4. 1740-1818: Louis III Joseph, Duke of Enghien (1736–1818)
  • 5. 1818-1830: Louis IV Henri, Duke of Enghien (1756–1830)

Most often it refers to Louis-Antoine-Henri de Bourbon-Condé, duc d'Enghien (1772–1804), the son of Louis Henry II, whose execution on trumped-up charges in 1804 during the French Consulate removed any hope of reconciliation between Napoleon Bonaparte and the House of Bourbon. The duke was executed in the moat of the Chateau de Vincennes.

On the death of the last duke in 1830, the title passed to Louis Philippe III, Duke of Orléans, a great-great-grandson of the Louis I, Duke of Enghien through the female line. He had become King of the French as Louis Philippe I a month earlier.

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