Orléanists comprised a French political faction or party which arose out of the Revolution, and ceased to have a separate existence shortly after the establishment of the Third Republic in 1872. It took its name from the Orléans branch of the house of Bourbon, the descendants of Philip I, Duke of Orléans, the younger brother of Louis XIV, who were its chiefs.
Saint-Simon records that the regent Orléans who died in 1723 habitually avowed his admiration for English liberty - at least in safe company and private conversation. Philippe Egalité, who had reasons to dislike King Louis XVI and his queen, Marie Antoinette, stepped naturally into the position of spokesman of the liberal royalists of the early revolutionary time, and it was a short step from that position to the attitude of liberal candidates for the throne, as against the elder Bourbon branch of the Capetian royal house which claimed to reign by divine right.
The elder branch as represented by Louis XVIII was prepared to grant (octroyer), and did grant, a charter of liberties. The count of Chambord, the last of the elder line (the Spanish Bourbons who descended directly from Louis XIV were considered to be barred by the renunciation of Philip V of Spain), was equally ready to grant a constitution. But these princes claimed to rule "in chief of God" and to confer constitutional rights on their subjects of their own free will, and mere motion.
This feudal language and these mystic pretensions offended a people so devoted to principles as the French, and so acute in drawing deductions from premises, for they concluded, not unreasonably, that rights granted as a favour were always subject to revocation as a punishment. Therefore those of them who considered a monarchical government as more beneficial to France than a republic, but who were not disposed to hold their freedom subject to the pleasure of a king, became either Bonapartists who professed to rule by the choice of the nation, or supporters of the Orléans princes who were ready to reign by an "original compact" and by the will of the people. The difference therefore between the supporters of the elder line, or Legitimists, and the Orléanists became profound, for it went down to the very foundations of government.
Those rights of equality before the law, and in social life, which had been far dearer to Frenchmen of the revolutionary epoch than political freedom, seemed secured. The next step was to obtain political freedom, and it was made under the guidance of men who were Orléanists because the Orléans princes seemed to them to offer the best guarantee for such a government as they desired—a government which did not profess to stand above the people and to own it by virtue of a divine and legitimate hereditary right, nor one which, like the Bonapartists, implied a master relying on an army, and the general subjection of the nation.
The liberals who were Orléanists had the advantage of being very ably led by men eminent in letters and in practical affairs—Guizot, Thiers, Achille Charles Léon Victor, duc de Broglie, Jacques Victor Albert, duc de Broglie, the banker Jacques Laffitte and many others. When the unsurpassed folly of the legitimate rulers brought about the July Revolution of 1830, the Orléanists stepped in, and they marked the profound change which had been made in the character of the government by calling the king "King of the French" and not "King of France and Navarre". That king appeared as the chief of the people by compact with the people, and not as a territorial lord holding, in feudal phrase, "in chief of God".
It had been inevitable that the Orléanists, in their dislike of "divine right" on the one hand, and their fear of democratic Caesarism on the other, should turn for examples of a free government to England, and in England itself to the Whigs, both the old Whigs of the Revolution Settlement of 1689, and the new Whigs who extorted political franchises for the middle classes by the Reform Bill. The Orléanists saw in Britain a monarchy based on a parliamentary title, governing constitutionally and supported by the middle classes, and they endeavoured to establish the like in France under the name of a juste-milieu, a via media between political absolutism by divine right and a democracy which they were convinced would lead to Caesarism. The French equivalent for the English middle-class constituencies was to be a pays legal of about a quarter of a million of voters by whom all the rest of the country was to be "virtually represented". Guizot expounded and carried out this doctrine with uncompromising rigour. The Orléanist monarchy became so thoroughly middle-class that the nation outside of the pays legal ended by regarding the government as a privileged class less offensive, but also a great deal less brilliant, than the aristocracy of the old monarchy.
When a fusion was arranged in 1873 it stood on quite another footing. After much exchange of notes and many agitated conferences in committee rooms and drawing-rooms, the comte de Paris, the representative of the Orléanists, sought an interview with the comte de Chambord at Frohsdorff, and obtained it by giving a written engagement that he came not only to pay his respects to the head of his house, but also to "accept his principle".
It has been somewhat artlessly pleaded by the Orléanists that this engagement was given with mental reservations. But no mental reservations remained on the part of the comte de Chambord, and the country showed its belief that the liberal royalists had been fused by absorption in the divine-right royalists. It returned republicans at by-elections till it transformed the Assembly.
The Orléanist princes had still a part to play, more particularly after the death of the comte de Chambord in 1883 left them heads of the house of France, but the Orléanist party ceased to exist as an independent political organisation.
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"Orléanist".
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