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  1. Louis Philippe Marie Léopold d'Orléans (15 November 1845 – 24 May 1866) was a member of the House of Orléans and held the title of Prince of Condé. He was the first member of a royal house to visit the Australian continent where he died in 1866. Life. Louis d'Orléans with his mother, Maria Carolina of Bourbon-Two Sicilies ( Victor Mottez, 1851)

  2. 1 de may. de 2024 · Louis I de Bourbon (l. 1530-1569) was a descendant of Louis IX of France (r. 1226-1270) and founder of the House of Condé. The Prince of Condé proved his valor as a Huguenot military leader during the first three French Wars of Religion and died at the Battle of Jarnac in 1569.

  3. On Henry II’s death (1559), Condé came forward as the military leader of the Huguenots: he needed their backing to make himself at all considerable politically; they needed a princely patron more resolute than his eldest brother Anthony of Bourbon, king of Navarre, though Condé’s licentious way of life accorded ill with their principles.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Louis, the first Prince, actually gave the Condé property to his youngest son, Charles (1566–1612), Count of Soissons. Charles' only son Louis (1604–1641) left Condé and Soissons to female heirs in 1624, who married into the Savoy and Orléans-Longueville dynasties.

  5. Louis de Bourbon, 1st Prince of Condé (7 May 1530 – 13 March 1569) was a prominent Huguenot leader and general, the founder of the Condé branch of the House of Bourbon.

  6. The 1st Prince of Condé, Louis de Bourbon, was born in Vendôme in 1530. He was the youngest son of Charles IV de Bourbon descending from Louis IX (Saint Louis) and Françoise d’Alençon. Louis de Condé, the brother of Antoine de Bourbon (1518-1562), and the founder of the House of Condé was the first to be called Prince.

  7. Prince Louis of Orléans, "Prince of Condé" ( Louis Philippe Marie Léopold; 1845 – 24 May 1866 [1] was a French prince given the title of Prince of Condé at birth. He died in Australia in 1866 at age 20.