Joachim Murat | |
Birth Date: | 21 June 1834 |
Birth Place: | Bordentown, New Jersey, U.S. |
Death Place: | Chambly, Oise, France |
Father: | Lucien, 3rd Prince Murat |
Mother: | Caroline Georgina Fraser |
Spouse: | |
Issue: | 3, including Joachim, 5th Prince Murat |
Succession: | Prince Murat |
Reign: | 10 April 1878 – 23 October 1901 |
Reign-Type: | Tenure |
Predecessor: | Prince Lucien |
Successor: | Prince Joachim |
Joachim Joseph Napoléon Murat, 4th Prince Murat (21 June 1834 - 23 October 1901) was a major-general in the French Army and a member of the Bonaparte-Murat family.
Joachim Joseph was born at Bordentown, New Jersey, on 21 June 1834. He was the eldest son, of four siblings, born to the former Caroline Georgina Fraser (1810–1879) and Prince Napoléon Lucien Charles Murat, 2nd Prince of Pontecorvo and 3rd Prince Murat.
His father was the second son of Joachim Murat, King of Naples, who married Napoleon's sister, Caroline Bonaparte. His maternal grandparents were Thomas Fraser, a Scottish emigrant to the United States and major in the Loyalist militia during the American Revolution, and his wife Ann Loughton (née Smith) Fraser.[1]
He moved to France with his family in 1848, after the fall of Louis-Philippe of France, where his father was appointed Minister, senator and imperial prince.
In 1852 Joachim entered the army, becoming an officer the following year and rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1863. In 1866 he became a colonel of a regiment of the Cavalry Guard.
In 1870 he was made brigadier general and participated in the Franco-Prussian War that led to the end of the Second Empire.
After the fall of Napoleon III he retired to a private life but was able to maintain the title of general and prince.
In 1854, he married in Paris Malcy Louise Caroline Berthier de Wagram (1832–1884), at the Tuileries Palace. She was a daughter of Napoléon Berthier de Wagram, 2nd Duc de Wagram, and the former Zénaïde Françoise Clary. His wife's paternal grandfather was Marshal Berthier and she was a grand-niece of Désirée Clary and Julie Clary. Together, they were the parents of three surviving children, two daughters and one son:
As a widower (since 1884), he married secondly the Baroness Hainguerlot, née Lydia Hervey (1841–1901), in Paris on 7 November 1894. Lydia was born in Kemptown, Sussex, and was the daughter of Charles John Vigors Hervey, Esq. and Martha Hervey (née Kemp). She was the widow of Arthur, Baron Hainguerlot (1833–1892), a wealthy Parisian banker. Joachim and his second wife did not have any children together.[6]
He spent the rest of his life at his family's castle, the Château de Chambly in Chambly, Oise, France where his second wife died on 25 September 1901. Prince Murat there died a month later on 23 October 1901.[7]
of the First French Empire|-