Alice Heine

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Alice Heine
Alice Heine.jpg
Alice Heine (c. 1890)
Princess consort of Monaco
Tenure30 October 1889 – 26 June 1922
BornMarie Alice Heine
(1858-02-10)10 February 1858
New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
Died22 December 1925(1925-12-22) (aged 67)
Paris, France
Burial
Spouse
Armand Chapelle de Jumilhac, 7th Duke of Richelieu (m. 1875)

Albert I, Prince of Monaco
(m. 1889; separated 1902)
IssueArmand Chapelle de Jumilhac, 8th Duke of Richelieu
Odile Chapelle de Jumilhac, Princess de La Rochefoucauld
FatherMichel Heine
MotherAmélie Marie Miltenberger

Alice Heine (February 10, 1858 – December 22, 1925) was the American-born Princess consort of Monaco by marriage to Prince Albert I of Monaco. Marcel Proust used her as a model for the Princesse de Luxembourg in his novel, In Search of Lost Time. Her first husband was the Duke of Richelieu, and one of the titles of her second husband was the Duke of Mazarin; she was thus unique in bearing the titles of both Cardinal Richelieu and Cardinal Mazarin.

Life[edit]

She was born Marie Alice Heine at 900 Rue Royale, in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana. Her French father, Michel Heine, was a scion of a prominent German-rooted Berlin and Paris banking Jewish family. His brother was Armand Heine, and both were cousins of poet Heinrich Heine. He was born in Bordeaux, France, and moved to New Orleans in 1843, and become a successful financier and real-estate developer. Her mother was Amélie Marie Céleste Miltenberger, daughter of Joseph Alphonse Miltenberger, an architect and cast-iron importer by trade of French Alsatian descent, and his Creole wife, Marie Céleste Dorfeuille; her family had built three interconnected Miltenberger mansions on Rue Royale. She had two younger brothers, Paul Henri and Isaac Georges.

The American Civil War sent the family back to France, where the teenaged Alice's youth and beauty and her family's wealth, made a great impression in Parisian society. A & M Heine, her father's firm, helped finance Napoleon III's war with Prussia.

Michel and Amélie became regulars in the court of Napoleon III, who, along with the Empress Eugénie, became godparents to the New Orleans-born Heine.[1]

Jewish by birth, Alice converted to Roman Catholicism when she married her first husband, Marie Odet Armand Aimable Chapelle de Jumilhac, Marquis of Jumilhac then 7th Duke of Richelieu and Duke of Aiguillon, in Paris on February 27, 1875. They had one son and one daughter:

  • Marie Odet Jean Armand Chapelle de Jumilhac (Paris, December 21, 1875 - New York City, June 30, 1952). He became the 8th and last Duke of Richelieu, as well as the Duke of Aiguillon and Marquis of Jumilhac, upon the death of his father in Athens on June 28, 1880. In 1913, he married Eleanor Douglas Wise (1890-1972) of Maryland, United States, daughter of John Sergeant Wise. Without issue.[2]
  • Odile Marie Auguste Septimanie Chapelle de Jumilhac (La Ferté-Bernard, August 30, 1879 - Monaco, August 3, 1974). In 1905, by marriage with Gabriel Marie François Hippolyte Ferri Eugène de La Rochefoucauld (1875-1942), she first became Countess de La Rochefoucauld and later Princess de La Rochefoucauld-Montbel (Kingdom of Bavaria). They had a daughter, Anne Alice Elisabeth Amélie de La Rochefoucauld (1906-1980), who married twice and had no issue.[3]

Princess of Monaco[edit]

Alice's second marriage, to Prince Albert I of Monaco, Sovereign Prince of Monaco, occurred on October 30, 1889. The prince, whose first wife had been a daughter of a Scottish duke, was an oceanographer. She was credited with having caught the first specimen of Grimaldichthys profundissimus, long thought to be the deepest-living fish in the world's oceans.[4] However, during her husband's long journeys at sea, Alice took a greater interest in the Monegasque opera season. The courtesan Caroline Otero (La Belle Otero), who had been a part-time lover of the prince between 1893 and 1897, recalled the prince fondly in her memoirs and claimed that he wasn't a virile man and suffered from erection difficulty.

She brought a strong business acumen, showing an understanding far beyond her years. Having helped put her husband's principality on a sound financial footing, she would devote her energies to making Monaco one of Europe's great cultural centers with its opera, theater, and the ballet under the direction of the famed Russian impresario, Sergei Diaghilev. Her affair with composer Isidore de Lara resulted in Prince Albert slapping her in view of an audience at the Salle Garnier.[5]

The Prince and Princess of Monaco separated judicially on May 30, 1902 (Monaco) and June 3, 1902 (France), but remained married. Upon the prince's death 20 years later, Alice became the Dowager Princess of Monaco. She did not remarry.

Legacy[edit]

Her former home in New Orleans is now the Café Amelie and advertises itself as a setting for weddings, receptions, special parties and the like.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "www.knowlouisiana.org". Archived from the original on 2018-07-20. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  2. ^ William1
  3. ^ Lachaise (in French)
  4. ^ Plongée dans le Musée océanographique de Monaco
  5. ^ Anne Edwards, "The Grimaldis of Monaco" (Morrow, 1992), pages 168 and 176
  6. ^ Café Amelie

External links[edit]

Monegasque royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
Antoinette de Mérode
Princess consort of Monaco
1889–1922
Vacant
Title next held by
Ghislaine Dommanget