Honoré III, Prince of Monaco explained

Honoré III
Full Name:Honoré Camille Léonor Grimaldi
Succession:Prince of Monaco
Reign:7 November 1733[1] – 19 January 1793
Predecessor:Jacques I
Successor:National Convention
as de facto ruling government
Honoré IV
as next reigning monarch
Issue:Honoré IV, Prince of Monaco
Prince Joseph
House:Grimaldi
Mother:Louise Hippolyte, Princess of Monaco
Father:Jacques I, Prince of Monaco
Birth Date:10 November 1720

Honoré III (Honoré Camille Léonor Grimaldi; 10 November 1720 – 21 March 1795) ruled as Prince of Monaco and was Duke of Valentinois from 1733 to 1793. Honoré was the son of Louise Hippolyte, Princess of Monaco, and her husband, Prince Jacques I.

Life

Honoré was born on 10 November 1720.

On 20 May 1732, he moved to Hôtel Matignon in Paris with his father and remained there, even after the proclamation in 1733 of him as Prince of Monaco after his father's abdication.[2] Antoine Grimaldi, le Chevalier de Grimaldi, acted as regent for the prince between 1732 and 1784, when Honoré chose to reside in Paris or the Château des Matignon in Normandy. This situation remained the same for half a century until Antoine's death in 1784, when Honoré III was already 64 years old. Although he was open to the revolutionary ideas of the time, he was imprisoned on 20 September 1793.[3] At his liberation a year later, he was ruined, and his property under seal.

Family

While in Paris, it was suggested that he marry Marie Louise de La Tour d'Auvergne, but the marriage never materialised. In 1751, he married Maria Caterina Brignole (d. 1813).

The couple had two children; Honoré IV, Prince of Monaco and Joseph Grimaldi (10 September 1763 – 28 June 1816) before legally separating in 1770, and Marie-Catherine married her long-time companion Prince de Condé in 1798, after her husband's death.

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Edwards, Anne . Anne Edwards

    . Anne Edwards. The Grimaldis of Monaco . 1992 . Morrow . 978-0-688-08837-8 . en. 59.

  2. Book: Klieger, P. Christiaan . The Microstates of Europe: Designer Nations in a Post-Modern World . 2012-11-29 . Lexington Books . 978-0-7391-7427-2 . 161–162 . en.
  3. Book: Notes and Queries . 1910 . Oxford University Press . 362 . en.