Louis Charles Victor de Riquet, 1st Duke of Caraman (24 December 1762 – 25 December 1839), known as the 4th Count of Caraman from 1807 to 1817, then 1st Marquis of Caraman from 1817 to 1830; was a French diplomat and soldier who became Lieutenant General of the King's Armies. He was a Peer of France from 1815 until his death.
Early life
Caraman was born on 24 December 1762 in Paris. He was the eldest son of Victor Maurice de Riquet, 4th Count of Caraman (1727–1807), and Marie Anne Gabrielle Josephe Francoise Xaviere de Henin-Liétard, Princess of Chimay (1728–1800). Among his siblings was younger brothers Maurice Gabriel de Riquet de Caraman and François-Joseph-Philippe de Riquet, who succeeded their childless maternal uncle as Prince of Chimay in 1804 and inherited the Chimay estates.[a][1]
After the campaign of 1792 and the death of the King, he was placed on the list of émigrés and all his family's property was confiscated. From then on he was forced to live abroad and seek a means of existence there.[3]
He served as a Major and as a Cavalry Colonel in the Prussian Army. He was called back to France by his father in 1801, returning as a Prussian officer; at the moment when he wanted to return to Prussia, he was arrested and put in the Tour du Temple (where the French royal family had been held) without explanation. He was then sent to Ivrea in Piedmont. Detained for five years, he was given his freedom on condition that he would leave the Prussian service, but was kept on the list of émigrés.
Returning to France in 1828, he received the title of hereditary Duke of Caraman on 10 May 1830 by King Charles X. After the July Revolution in 1830, he refused to take any active position; but he continued to sit in the Chamber of Peers.[5]
Personal life
On 10 July 1785 at Everberghe, Belgium, he was married to Baroness Joséphine Léopoldine Ghislaine de Merode-Westerloo (1765–1824), a daughter of Philippe Maximilien de Merode, Count of Mérode, and Marie Catherine de Merode, Princess of Rubempré. Before her death in 1824, they were the parents of:[2]
Victor Marie Joseph Louis de Riquet de Caraman (1786–1837), styled Marquis of Caraman who married his cousin, Marie-Anne Gabrielle Joséphine Françoise de Riquet de Caraman, a daughter of Maurice Gabriel de Riquet de Caraman, in 1810. After her death in 1823, he married Antoinette Césarine de Galard de Béarn in 1827.[2]