Bourges (1839–1845) ,
Bourges Having crossed to France Carlos and his family initially stopped in
Bordeaux, where for few days they remained in sort of a house arrest. He was given a choice of locations to settle, but it is not clear whether or how he responded. Modern historians speculate that it was the prime minister,
marshal Soult, who picked the
Cher department, located in central France 500 km from the Spanish frontier. The prefect was asked to find an appropriate location; he opted for the city of
Bourges. The best he could have suggested was
Hôtel Panette, a large but somewhat neglected residence in the centre of the city, which was rented for 2,000 francs per month. In late September 1839 Carlos settled there with his family and the court of some 30 people, including advisers, secretaries, chamberlains, confessors, a doctor, a pharmacist, preceptors for children, servants, cooks, grooms, a picketman, a coachman and a confectioner. Some of this staff, e.g. the confessors, had their own servants. The monthly cost of maintaining this court was around some 6,000 francs. The infant was supposed not to leave Bourges unless agreed with administration and not to engage in any political activity; he remained under supervision of governmental agents. Carlos spent 5 years in Hôtel Panette. Throughout all this time he was accompanied by his second wife María Teresa de Braganza and by his oldest son Carlos Luis, then in his 20s; two younger sons, Juan and Fernando, during long strings were being educated in
Genoa. The French administration tolerated visits of numerous Carlists, either exiled in France or arriving from Spain, given their arrivals were agreed in advance; apart from this, no official receptions or balls were given. There is little information available on their daily routine; most of it was related to religious chores. The royals attended the mass every day; they probably enjoyed the service as this was the sole case of them going out not accompanied by police agents. They also engaged in some local charity initiatives. Some scholars claim their life was marked by some puritan traits, especially that Carlos started to consider his war defeat in terms of divine punishment for his sins, while María Teresa had to do with company of 2-3 ''dames d'honneur'' and developed some depression. Unlike Carlos Luis, who watched military exercises of the French army in the neighborhood, Carlos did not attend. When in 1842 the violin professor of Carlos Luis suggested that he gives a family concert, Carlos objected; he noted that given the circumstances, enjoying music was immoral.
Act of Bourges (1845) On 18 May 1845
La Gazette du Berri published (in Spanish, with French translations following) 4 documents: Carlos abdicated in favor of his son, Carlos Luis, while the latter accepted the hereditary claims transmitted; the papers are collectively referred to as the
Act of Bourges. There are numerous motives of the abdication quoted by historians. Some are mostly personal: the 57-year-old claimant was increasing tired and tending to melancholy; his wife, diagnosed with serious respiratory and nervous problems, was heavily recommended to undergo treatment in Italian resorts, the trip the French government did not agree to unless the claim is renounced. Political considerations appear to be more important. There were serious plans developed and advanced in Spain to mend the dynastic feud; they consisted of marrying Carlos Luis with
Isabella, and abdication was thought a step towards facilitating this marriage. It is possible that the plan was supported by
Metternich; Marqués de Villafranca for few years has been acting as intermediary between Carlos and the Austrian chancellor, who kept suggesting abdication against longtime demurrals of the claimant. The French prime minister
Guizot was neither averse to the project, though in case of France what mattered more was the position of king
Louis Philippe I, who found it highly inconvenient to be forced to keep his relative in house arrest. Some scholars trace even the influence of the
Russian Empire and the tsar
Nicolas I personally. Last but not least, also
Pope Gregory XVI recommended abdication; in his case a number of motives, related to position of the Catholic church in Spain, might have been in play. Following abdication Carlos adopted the title of Duke of Molina.
Last years (1845–1855) In July 1845, two months following his abdication, Carlos and his wife were allowed to leave Bourges. They first travelled to
Gréoux-les-Bains and then to
Marseille, where the government – to great relief of king Louis Philippe – issued them passports. In the autumn via
Nice they arrived in Genoa and then settled for few months of 1846 in
Aix-les-Bains, at that time a spa in the
Kingdom of Sardinia. In early 1847 the couple visited the
Duchy of Modena to attend the wedding of Carlos' middle son Juan with
Maria Beatrix of Austria-Este, sister of the ruling Duke of Modena,
Francis V. In the autumn of 1847 they arrived in
Venice, in the Austrian-held
Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia, and were hosted in
Palazzo Rezzonico, the property of the Austria-Estes. The revolution and the anti-Habsburg rising of March 1848 forced them to flee Venice; they were leaving together with the
Duchess of Berry towards her palace in
Trieste. The Duchess left one floor of her
palazzetto at what is now Via del Lazzaretto Vecchio at their disposal. The place became Carlos' last permanent residence; he was being paid a regular pension by the emperor
Franz Joseph I and the tsar
Nicholas I. In 1849 Carlos, at the time in his early 60s, suffered a stroke; despite treatment in
Baden, he did not regain full mobility. The youngest son Fernando, at the time single and in his late 20s, lived with his father in Trieste. In the early 1850s Carlos had 2 grandchildren from the marriage of Juan; however, in 1852 the latter abandoned his wife and settled in London. Carlos was admitting countless visitors, mostly Carlists, arriving either from Spain or from elsewhere in Europe, e.g.
general Cabrera from London. The quasi-court, maintained in Trieste, amounted to at least 25 people; they included secretaries, advisors, aide-de-camps, a confessor, a chamberlain, a doctor, ''dames d'honneur'' and numerous servants, including a maggiordomo, butler, maids, cooks and others. Some historians write that though merely Conde de Molina, he "behaved like he were the king of Spain", but visitors were unimpressed by "povero palazzo" and some note his absent-minded gaze. He died at 18:00 CET on 10 March 1855, 19 days before his 67th birthday. ==Ancestors==