Prior to the creation of the Order of the Holy Spirit in 1578 by King Henry III, the senior order of chivalry in France had been the
Order of Saint Michael. Its membership was initially restricted to a small number of powerful princes and nobles, but this increased dramatically due to the pressures of the
Wars of Religion. At the beginning of the reign of Henry III, the Order of Saint Michael had several hundred living members, ranging from kings to bourgeois. Recognising that the order had been significantly devalued, Henry III founded the Order of the Holy Spirit on December 31, 1578, thereby creating a two-tier system: the new order would be reserved for princes and powerful nobles, whilst the Order of Saint Michael would be for less eminent servants of the Crown. The new order was dedicated to the
Holy Spirit to commemorate the fact that Henry III was elected as King of Poland (1573) and inherited the throne of France (1574) on two
Pentecosts. The new order was also identified with the "Order of the Knot" (
Ordre du Nœud, also known as
Ordre du Saint-Esprit au Droit Désir "Order of the Holy Spirit of the Right Will") which had been founded in 1352/3 by
Louis I of Naples. This had been one of the short-lived
chivalric orders popular among the high nobility at the time. The statutes of the 14th-century order are preserved as BNF Fr 4274. An elaborate facsimile of this manuscript was produced under
Louis XIV. During the
French Revolution, the Order of the Holy Spirit was officially abolished by the French government, along with all other chivalric orders of the
Ancien Régime, although the exiled
Louis XVIII continued to acknowledge it. Following the
Bourbon Restoration, the order was officially revived and a number were awarded for the 1825
Coronation of Charles X, only to be abandoned by the
Orleanist Louis-Philippe I following the
July Revolution in 1830. Since 1883, both the
Orléanist and
Legitimist pretenders to the French throne have continued to nominate members of the order, long after the abolition of the French monarchy itself. == Composition ==