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To: CatoRenasci
The Bourbon flag was simply a symbol of larger issues. What Chambord was saying was that he was not going to be a figure-head king over a liberal country simply to keep the conservatives quiet. If he was going to put his name and his honor on the line, it was going to be for a traditional, conseravtive and Church-based monarchy in the old style, not the mongrel Citizen-king bourgeois monarchy of Louis Phillipe. He was a man of principle and France, like a few other countries, could use more like him.

Vive le roi!
39 posted on 12/04/2003 11:52:46 AM PST by Guelph4ever (“Tu es Petrus, et super hanc petram aedificabo ecclesiam meam et tibi dabo claves regni coelorum”)
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To: Guelph4ever
It was a symbol of larger issues to be sure, but he surely misread the temper of French society if he thought the French were looking for another Charles X. I studied this period with Roger Williams, the distinguished mid-20th century historian of the Second Empire and early Third Republic. A small group of his graduate students and I had several discussions about the 'lost Orleanist moment'. Chambord was a damned fool in the view of most serious French historians.
40 posted on 12/04/2003 1:09:03 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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