Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 10 de oct. de 2015 · The Bourbon Restoration. Following Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo, France’s Bourbon monarchy was restored. It was the first, fragile step in a diminished state’s return to the family of European nations. The summer of 1815 was a turbulent one in France.

  2. The Second Bourbon Restoration was the period of French history during which the House of Bourbon returned to power after the fall of the First French Empire in 1815. The Second Bourbon Restoration lasted until the July Revolution of 26 July 1830.

  3. Restored briefly in 1814 and definitively in 1815 after the fall of the First French Empire, the senior line of the Bourbons was finally overthrown in the July Revolution of 1830. A cadet Bourbon branch, the House of Orléans, then ruled for 18 years (1830–1848), until it too was overthrown.

  4. Article History. Date: 1814 - 1830. Location: France. Bourbon Restoration, (1814–30) in France, the period that began when Napoleon I abdicated and the Bourbon monarchs were restored to the throne. The First Restoration occurred when Napoleon fell from power and Louis XVIII became king.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 20 de feb. de 2024 · Introduction. In a very basic sense, the Bourbon reforms began shortly after the arrival of the Bourbon dynasty to the Spanish throne in 1700, when Charles II, the last Spanish Habsburg, died without an heir. In his will, Charles II stipulated that the Sun King’s (Louis XIV of France) grandson would become the next Spanish king.

  6. French History. virtual Issue on the Bourbon Restoration. Guest Edited by Andrew J. Counter, New College, Oxford. In 1830, after the expulsion of Charles X, France's last Bourbon king, a pamphleteer looked back on the preceding fifteen years and wondered: 'What claim can a reign that was crow-barred into an age of progress [and] enlightenment ...

  7. 11 de jun. de 2021 · 158 Accesses. Abstract. This chapter focuses on the last decade of Bourbon Restoration, the 1820s, which opened with the assassination of the duc de Berry. Firstly, the chapter discusses Marie-Thérèse and the possibility of women inheriting the throne of France and the way she was represented as the last Dauphine of France.