Birth Louise was born at the
Palace of Versailles on 15 July 1737, exactly as predicted by the royal
physicians. Her parents had had seven daughters and two sons before her, but one sister (
Marie Louise) and one brother (
the Duke of Anjou) had already died. As
Salic law precluded women from inheriting the throne,
Louis XV hoped for a "spare" son from this pregnancy. After the birth, he played a joke on the crowd gathered outside, announcing the birth of a son. The news spread and people celebrated with public feasts. The newborn's maternal grandfather, the deposed King
Stanisław of Poland, prepared to travel to Versailles. By evening, the truth was clarified, and Stanisław stayed home. France and the royal court were saddened by the birth of another girl. Daughters of the French king, known as
filles de France, were referred to simply as
madame and their given name. French royal children were
baptised immediately upon birth with a simplified ceremony called
ondoiement (performed by the
Archbishop of Vienne for Louise)
. The baptism was completed a few years later, with godparents and a name. Before this time, Louis XV's daughters were known by numbers. Accordingly, Louise was called Madame Septième as his seventh (living) daughter. An
anecdote claims that the King announced that he and Queen Marie would have no more children by calling Louise
Madame Dernière ("the last madame"). However, the historian Poignant argues that this story was invented and spread by the
Marquis d'Argenson, known for his malignant rumours. Queen
Marie Leszczyńska, when she learnt of her baby's gender, whispered to her husband in an exhausted voice, "I would suffer once more [and] just as much [to] give you a duke of Anjou". Louis XV and France all still hoped for a future son, but Louise was his last child.
Infancy in Versailles The royal children shared an apartment in the
aile des Princes (Wing of Princes) of Versailles, with a common
antechamber and
cabinet for receiving visitors, and a private
altar. The walls and furniture were
upholstered in red
damask and covered with protective red
serge. The rooms were decorated with
tapestries of mythological and historical scenes. There had been no changes since Louis XIV's children, and there were no personal touches, except the
dressing table, provided to each princess at birth and differing in design. That of Louise was upholstered in gold and silver
brocade with colourful flowers and lined with green
taffeta. Just like her sisters, Louise had a bedroom with three beds and a cradle, which she shared with her
wet nurse, Madame Hoppen a
(sous-)gouvernante, the
remueuse (tasked with dressing and bathing the baby)
, and two
chambermaids (who shared one folding bed, one always awake). She received a complete set of solid gold
tableware, engraved
enfans de France (children of France) at her birth, used only on special occasions. Every item for personal use, including
chamber pots, bore the same inscription. The ingredients of their breakfast
porridge were brought in a sealed container, inspected, cooked publicly, and tasted first by the
gouvernante. Louise first lived under the care of the
gouvernante, Madame de Tallard with her elder siblings. Each princess was given a large retinue. A foreign visitor to the court recorded his amazement at seeing the princesses run around the palace always followed by at least fourteen people. The relationship between the children and their parents, like their each part of their lives, was regulated by courtly etiquette in full detail, although the King did occasionally bend the rules in private. The children participated fully in courtly representation; their meals and their morning and night dressings were public for courtiers (as were those of their parents). Soon after Louise's birth, Chief Minister
Cardinal de Fleury announced that the presence of so many little girls "embarrassed the court" and cost too much. Except for the three eldest princesses, they were thus sent to a convent. The Queen was opposed to the decision, but she was too afraid of her husband and his powerful minister to challenge them.
Fontevraud Louise was not yet one year old when, on 16 June 1738, she was sent to far-away
Fontevraud Abbey with her three elder sisters: five-year-old
Victoire, four-year-old Sophie, and two-year-old Thérèse (known as Madame Quatrième, Madame Cinquième, and Madame Sixième, as they had not yet been baptised). Louis XV was away at
Rambouillet for a day of hunting; his emotional reaction to separation from his daughters is unknown. The princesses shared a carriage, accompanied by one of their
sous-gouvernantes, Madame de La Lande, and followed by eight coaches, two
chaises, and twenty wagons of luggage. Louise's wet nurse, Madame Hoppen, accompanied her. Louise and her sisters arrived in Fontevraud on 28 June; they were lodged in the Logis-Bourbon building of the abbey, renovated for their use and with a private chapel. The next day, Madame de La Lande returned to Versailles. Later that year, Louise was so ill that the abbess ordered her immediate baptism on 30 December, which is when she received the name Louise Marie. The Queen remarked on the illness in a personal letter, identifying it as
dysentery, adding that "one has but pains in this cruel world, but thank God, we are not made to stay here". The princesses were raised primarily by two nuns, Sister Mac Carthy and Sister Françoise Paris de Soulange, the latter being the most beloved by them. They were also each assigned one nun as a personal
gouvernante. Sometimes, they were subjected to harsh punishments, such as being shut into a burial crypt alone, which caused Madame Victoire to suffer from lifelong
panic attacks.'''' They were never visited by any of their relatives, including their parents. Three teachers are known to have been appointed for
mesdames at Fontevraud: Abbot Piers, a legal scholar, who, however, died in November 1738; Monsieur de Caix, one of the royal musicians; and a dancing master. The memoirs of Madame Campan claim that at the age of twelve, Louise had not yet learnt the alphabet fully, which her biographer Stryenski dismisses based on the existence of her signatures from her time in Fontevraud. She was considered intelligent from a young age, and she enjoyed mocking others (as did her father and her brother) and herself. , 1748. This portrait was commissioned by
Madame de Pompadour, and was sent to Louise's parents in October 1748 In September 1744, the sister closest to her in age,
Thérèse, died of
smallpox. Soon afterwards, the King commissioned a painting of the three surviving girls as a surprise for his wife. Commenting on the painting, the Queen said that she had "never seen anything so pleasant as [Louise]: her face is touching and very far removed from sadness; [she had] not seen one so singular; [Louise] is touching, gentle, and spiritual". While young, she was also haughty, expecting the special treatment due to princesses at court from the nuns. According to anecdotes, she demanded that people rise when she entered a room or when she drank, commanding, "Stand, ladies! Louise drinks". The Abbess, Madame de Soulanges, exclaimed, "Remain seated". When a maid did not behave humbly enough in her presence, the young Louise asked, "Am I not the daughter of your king?", to the woman replied, apparently upon the instruction of Madame de Soulanges, "And I, madame, am I not the daughter of your God?" During her time in Fontevraud, Louise might have had an accident: waiting for her chambermaid in the morning, she climbed on the railings of her bed and fell down. Whatever the cause, at some point, she developed a "hump" (as she called it). She perhaps inherited the
congenital scoliosis running in the Bourbon family. Throughout her childhood, her health was frail. In 1748, when Louise, aged eleven, was still in Fontevraud, rumors began to circulate that her father intended her to marry Prince
Charles Edward Stuart, pretender to the throne of England. Louise then declared, "I do not worry about being good for a husband, I, who desire no other than Jesus Christ". ==Adulthood in Versailles==