uniform by
Ary Scheffer, c. 1830 Ferdinand Philippe's marriage had long been one of the July Monarchy's major political affairs. Had it not been for the 1830 Revolution, he would have married the sister of
Henri, Count of Chambord,
Louise d'Artois (1819–1864). Her family called off the marriage plans when Ferdinand Philippe's branch of the family 'usurped' the throne. From 1835, after an assassination attempt by
Giuseppe Fieschi and his co-conspirators, Ferdinand Philippe's father had been obsessed with the marital prospects of his son, then 25.
Blanche-Joséphine Le Bascle d'Argenteuil noted, in her
Souvenirs, that if the Prince Royal died young after having fathered a male heir, the July Monarchy would be faced with the prospect of a
regency, in all its political uncertainty – thus, for her, the wisest course consisted of marrying off the King's third son, then the fourth, then the fifth, guaranteeing Louis Philippe descendants, all the while leaving several men around the throne who could take over from him if he died suddenly. At this time the July Monarchy was searching for new allies in
Continental Europe so they would not have to depend solely on the United Kingdom.
Talleyrand, fresh from renouncing his embassy to London and close to the British
Foreign Secretary,
Lord Palmerston, pointed in this direction. The King at first envisaged a rapprochement with Russia via
Württemberg.
King Wilhelm I, widower of
Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia, had two daughters of marriageable age, Princesses Marie (born 1816) and
Sophie (born 1818). Wilhelm I's sister
Catharina had already made an inauspicious French marriage alliance to
Jérôme Bonaparte and so Wilhelm declined the proposition as humiliating. He later was to accept Marie's even more humiliating marriage to Count Alfred von Neipperg in 1840.
Queen Louise wrote to her parents on Marie's marriage that "We see singular things. It was not at all probable that this daughter, who the king of Württemberg did not wish to give to Chartres for fear of his ending his days [in exile] in America, should end up marrying a miserable little Austrian officer without illustriousness and of very ordinary birth." Louis Philippe next envisaged an alliance with
Austria via the marriage of his son to Archduchess
Maria Theresa (born 1816), daughter of
Archduke Karl,
Duke of Teschen (German:
Herzog von Teschen).
Queen Marie Amélie was highly favourable to such a match as she was herself a daughter of an Austrian archduchess (
Maria Carolina of Austria), and Archduke Karl was not opposed to it. However, Karl faced determined opponents on two sides –
Prince Metternich, who did not want to repeat his error in marrying
Marie Louise to
Napoleon, and Archduchess
Sophie, a
Bavarian princess and sister-in-law of the new
Kaiser Ferdinand I, who dominated the
Vienna court with her strong personality, and was awaiting her son
Franz Joseph I's ascent to the imperial throne. France's ambassador to Vienna, the
Count of Sainte-Aulaire, who had been put in charge of preparing the ground for an Austrian match, felt the possibility was difficult if not completely impossible. The new
President of the Conseil,
Adolphe Thiers, dreamed of concluding such a match and becoming a new
Duke of Choiseul as the maker of a spectacular reversal in the alliances of Europe. Ferdinand Philippe and his younger brother, the
Prince Louis, Duke of Nemours, set out on a European tour on 2 May 1836. Ferdinand Philippe and
Queen Marie-Amélie got off to a bad start when the young French Prince Royal refused to shave off the proud beard that had set a fashion among French youth. She wrote back to Queen Louise complaining that "there was a lack of tact there and of sentiments of convenience that afflicted me. [...] I believe that
Leopold I can say to him that a goatee beard on the face of a prince royal is contrary to all German manners. Here, [such a beard] is neither handsome nor fortunate, there it can be fatal." The two French princes were a great success in Berlin and
Vienna, staying at the latter from 29 May to 11 June. However, the
Marquis de Sémonville commented that "everyone has shaken their hand, but no one was close to them".), and these were both very young for marriage (born in 1821):
Princess Januária of Brazil, daughter of Emperor
Pedro I of Brazil, and the
Infanta Isabella of Spain, daughter of the
Infante Francisco de Paula, younger brother of King
Ferdinand VII. The former was excluded by her remoteness, and the latter due to her family's unfortunate history (her mother
Princess Luisa Carlotta of the Two Sicilies, niece of Queen Marie-Amélie, was monstrously obese) and her physical appearance (she was red-haired and thin; Queen Louise wrote to Queen Marie-Amélie on 21 November 1836 that "I send you her portrait, that Leopold found hideous. Her hair especially is frightening in terms of the children she will have. If all her family are ginger, this will afflict them [too]". ==Marriage==