mardi 21 mai 2024

🔴 Le comte et la comtesse de Paris quittent Dreux en raison d'un conflit avec la Fondation Saint-Louis

Le comte et la comtesse de Paris avec leurs enfants à Dreux en mai. Photographie (c) David Nivière.

Cette semaine, le comte et la comtesse de Paris ont fait quelques valises, réuni leurs cinq enfants et quitté leur demeure du domaine royal de Dreux. Cette décision intervient alors que les relations entre le comte, qui a le droit de résider sur le domaine, et la Fondation Saint-Louis , qui gère le domaine, se sont nettement dégradées. Le prince Jean d'Orléans a expliqué à L'Écho Républicain : « Ce n'est pas un exil ou une fuite. J'emmène simplement ma famille ailleurs en attendant que la situation s'améliore. »

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The Count of Paris believes that the Fondation Saint-Louis, of which he is honorary president, has been slowly trying to make life at Dreux more difficult on the Count and his family. This has included such incidences as foundation staff making derogatory comments about the family’s dog, someone on staff running over one of the chickens that the Orléans children raise, and the foundation’s administration making part of the vegetable garden inaccessible to the family. Prince Jean thinks that the Fondation Saint-Louis has perhaps overextended their security measures by installing CCTV cameras all over the estate, which has created a feeling of a lack of privacy within the Orléans family. Furthermore, during the novel coronavirus pandemic, the Fondation Saint Louis instituted new regulations that would limit the daily life of the Count and Countess of Paris and their children. “They took advantage of this period to issue four pages of regulations under the pretext of health security. This document, which I do not recognise as having any legal value, is in fact only a series of measures aimed at us,” Prince Jean stated in his recent comments. “One of the measures obliges us to no longer enter the domain by the main entrance, but to do so by the rampart walk, where they want to install an electric gate: an unnecessary, absurd and dangerous expense since the rampart walk which connects the houses is not made to support cars.

Maison Philidor, home of Madame the Duchess of Montpensier.

This is not the first clash between the Orléans and the Foundation Saint Louis. In 2016, the foundation took measures to try and end the right of Princess Marie-Thérèse, Duchess of Montpensier, to live at the Maison Philidor in Dreux, which has been her home for many years. Ultimately, the foundation relented, and Jean’s mother was able to stay in her home.

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Reaction to the news of the departure of the Count and Countess of Paris has been mostly been met with sympathy. The exception to this would be the statement of Marc Métay, Secretary General of the Fondation Saint-Louis: “What happens between the Saint-Louis Foundation and the Count of Paris is a strictly private matter on which I do not have to comment.” However, Stéphane Bern, a well-known French journalist with connections to many European royal houses, is understanding of concerns of the Count of Paris; moreover, Monsieur Bern is also on the board of directors of the foundation. Bern stated, “We cannot attack our honorary president in this way. It shows a lack of respect towards his father and his grandfather. We must not forget that the foundation exists by the will of the latter. It is paradoxical to attack the Orléans family when one belongs to a foundation whose precise purpose is to defend the family’s heritage. The foundation takes refuge behind the law. Of course, we must respect the rules, but we also must respect the princes of the family of France.” The Mayor of Dreux, Pierre-Frédéric Billet, has also weighed in on the situation: “We have met with Marc Métay. The City is keen to establish a collaboration with the foundation to develop the royal domain [according to the foundation’s plans]. We are going to put in the means for that. But, therefore, I have asked to join the council of administration [of the Fondation Saint-Louis] in the same way as the Mayor of Amboise, who is a member already.” Monsieur Billet continued that the royal domain of Dreux “benefits from the presence of the family of the Count of Paris. They have every right to be there. They are part of the history of Dreux. Many Drouais are also attached to their presence.

La Fondation Saint-Louis a été créée en 1974 par le prince Henri l'Aîné d'Orléans (1908-1999), comte de Paris et chef de la Maison royale de France. Le défunt comte de Paris a fait don à la fondation des biens suivants : le château d'Amboise, le domaine royal de Dreux, la chapelle royale Saint-Louis de Dreux, le château de Bourbon-l'Archambault, l'église Notre-Dame de la Compassion et la colonne des princes de Condé. Après la mort d'Henri l'Aîné, son fils le prince Henri le Jeune d'Orléans (1933-2019), comte de Paris, puis son petit-fils le prince Jean d'Orléans, comte de Paris, ont été présidents d'honneur de la fondation. La Fondation Saint-Louis est contrôlée par un conseil d'administration ; le président actuel de la Fondation Saint-Louis est Monsieur François Voss. Aucun membre de la famille d'Orléans n'occupe de poste au conseil d'administration de la fondation qui contrôle son patrimoine. En 2011, les neuf enfants survivants d'Henri l'Ancien, comte de Paris, demandent la dissolution de la Fondation Saint-Louis afin de reprendre le contrôle des anciennes propriétés de leurs ancêtres ; ce procès n'aboutit pas à une victoire pour les princes et princesses d'Orléans.

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