Émilie Pellapra

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Portrait of the Princess de Chimay, by Franz Xaver Winterhalter, 1849

Émilie Louise Marie Françoise Joséphine Pellapra (11 November 1806 – 22 May 1871),

Joseph de Riquet de Caraman
, 17th prince de Chimay.

Early life

She was born in Lyon on November 11, 1806, the daughter of Madame Pellapra, née Françoise-Marie LeRoy, the wife of a rich financier named Henri (de) Pellapra.

For Émilie to have been the daughter of Napoleon it would have been necessary that he stayed in Lyon in February 1806. However, no stay in this city at that time seems to have taken place and, according to several authors (in particular André Gavoty in the Bulletin de l'Institut Napoleon April 1950), Napoleon only met LeRoy in 1810.

Personal life

Émilie married Count Louis Marie de Brigode (1777–1827), a politician under the First French Empire and the Bourbon Restoration. He was from an old noble family from French Flanders and his elder brother Romain-Joseph de Brigode-Kemlandt. Before his early death, they were the parents of twins:

  • Fernand de Brigode (1827–1830), who died young.
  • Louis Marie Henri Pierre Désiré de Brigode (1827–1859), marquis of Brigode, French peer, Mayor of Romilly; he married Annette du Hallay-Coëtquen (1831–1905).

The Comte de Brigode died in Bourbonne-les-Bains on 22 September 1827, shortly after the birth of their twins.

Second marriage

She remarried on 30 August 1830 to Prince

Joseph de Riquet de Caraman (1808-1886), 17th prince de Chimay, son of Prince François-Joseph-Philippe de Riquet and Thérésa Cabarrus
, and had four children:

She died at the Château de Menars on May 22, 1871.

References

Further reading