On November 10, 1878, Harden-Hickey first published the newspaper
Triboulet, named for a jester of King
Louis XII, eight years after Napoleon's fall from power. Though popular, the strongly anti-republican stand of this paper involved Harden-Hickey in no fewer than a dozen
duels, several dozen lawsuits and numerous fines. Sadly for Harden-Hickey and his fellow
royalists, their funds were exhausted by 1887. As of 1880, he had 11 novels published. Two of the novels are borrowed from
Michael Strogoff by
Jules Verne and another is based on
Don Quixote by
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra. His novels praise the virtues of monarchies and are anti-democratic. James was made a baron of the
Holy Roman Empire (which legally ceased to exist in 1806) for his strong defense of the church in his works and in practice. His novels include the following, all published under the pen name Saint Patrice: •
Un Amour Vendeen • ''Lettres d'un Yankee'' •
Merveilleuses Adventures de Nabuchodonosor Nosebreaker •
Un Amour dans le Monde • ''Memoirs d'un Gommeux'' Sometime after, James Harden-Hickey divorced his first wife and renounced Catholicism; he acquired an interest in
Buddhism and
Theosophy. This was a turning point in his life, and he took the opportunity to travel around the world, staying a year in India, learning
Sanskrit and studying the philosophy of the
Buddha. He returned to Paris and met Annie Harper Flagler, daughter of American iron industrialist John Haldane Flagler and wife Annie Harper Converse Flagler (sister of American banker
Edmund C. Converse). Her father was head and founder of the National Tube Company, a successful pipe company, and one of
Andrew Carnegie's partners in the steel business. They were married at the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York on March 17 (St. Patrick's Day), 1891. He lived with and off the Flaglers in New York for two years. Traveling to
Tibet before his marriage, his crew made a stop in the South Atlantic. Harden-Hickey noticed that the tiny island of
Trinidad in the South Atlantic Ocean had never been claimed by any country and was, legally, "
res nullius". He claimed the island and proclaimed himself James I,
Prince of Trinidad. He wanted an independent state with himself as
military dictator, and later in 1893, he got just that. ==As Prince James I of Trinidad==