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  2. Orléanist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orléanist

    Coat of arms of the House of Orléans at the start of the July Monarchy. Orléanist (French: Orléaniste) was a 19th-century French political label originally used by those who supported a constitutional monarchy expressed by the House of Orléans. [1]

  3. Henri, Count of Paris (1908–1999) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri,_Count_of_Paris_(1908...

    Henri d'Orléans (Henri Robert Ferdinand Marie d'Orléans; 5 July 1908 – 19 June 1999), was the Orléanist pretender to the defunct throne of France as Henry VI from 1940 until his death in 1999. Henri was the direct descendant of Philippe I, Duke of Orléans , son of Louis XIII .

  4. Succession to the former French throne (Orléanist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Succession_to_the_former...

    The Orléanist claimant to the throne of France is Jean, Count of Paris.He is the uncontested heir to the Orléanist position of "King of the French" held by Louis-Philippe, and is also considered the Legitimist heir as "King of France" by those who view the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht (by which Philip V of Spain renounced for himself and his agnatic descendants any claim to the French throne) as ...

  5. Louis Alphonse de Bourbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Alphonse_de_Bourbon

    According to the French Legitimists, Louis Alphonse is the rightful claimant to the defunct throne of France, under the name Louis XX. [6] His claim is based on his descent from Louis XIV (r. 1643–1715) through his grandson Philip V of Spain. Philip renounced his claim to the French throne under the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713.

  6. Category:Pretenders to the French throne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Pretenders_to_the...

    This category includes all the claimants to the French throne, either as rival claimants during the time that France was still a monarchy, or claimants for the restoration of the monarchy. during the monarchy as rival claimants to the reigning monarch: pretenders to the throne of the kingdom of France. of the royal line (kings of England) (1340 ...

  7. House of Orléans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Orléans

    It became a tradition during France's ancien régime for the Duchy of Orléans to be granted as an appanage to a younger (usually the second surviving) son of the king. While each of the Orléans branches thus descended from a junior prince, they were always among the king's nearest relations in the male line, sometimes aspiring to the throne itself, and sometimes succeeding.

  8. Henri, Count of Paris (1933–2019) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri,_Count_of_Paris_(1933...

    He was the first son of Henri, Count of Paris (1908–1999), and his wife Princess Isabelle of Orléans-Braganza, and was born in Woluwe-Saint-Pierre, Belgium, [2] a law in 1886 having permanently exiled from France the heads of its formerly reigning dynasties and their eldest sons.

  9. Legitimists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legitimists

    A remnant of Legitimists, known as the Blancs d'Espagne (Whites of Spain), by repudiating Philip V's renunciation of the French throne as ultra vires and contrary to the fundamental French monarchical law, upheld the rights of the eldest branch of the Bourbons, represented as of 1883 by the Carlist pretender to the Spanish throne.