On the way to the guillotine, the cart stopped. The officer had ordered it to halt directly in front of the Palais-Royal—the prisoner's own palace, his own headquarters, the place where he had funded newspapers, entertained crowds, and imagined himself the coming man of French politics.
He had to sit there, bound and helpless, while the same Parisians who had once applauded his every gesture screamed for his death.
His reported response: "Ils m'applaudirent." They applauded me.
This wasn't some idealistic reformer swept up in events beyond his control. This was arguably the richest man in France—a royal prince who owned twelve palaces, who turned his Paris mansion into a revolutionary headquarters, who bankrolled pamphlets and protests and political agitators.
And when they asked him to vote on his cousin's fate, he stood in the National Convention and said one word: Death.
Ten months later, he climbed the same scaffold. Faced the same blade. The Revolution he funded had consumed him.
👑 THE PRINCE WHO FUNDED THE REVOLUTION:
Louis-Philippe-Joseph d'Orléans was born into the junior branch of the Bourbon dynasty—always close to the throne, never quite on it. By the 1780s, he'd transformed the Palais-Royal into something unprecedented: gardens open to the public, cafés and bookshops in the arcades, censorship barely touching the place.
He funded Camille Desmoulins, who helped trigger the storming of the Bastille. He funded Brissot, who led the Girondins. Pamphleteers and agitators by the dozen. The Palais-Royal became a machine for generating revolutionary sentiment.
On July 12, 1789, two days before the Bastille fell, the call to arms went out from his gardens. Crowds carried busts through the streets: Jacques Necker and Philippe d'Orléans.
It must have seemed like his gamble was paying off.
⚖️ THE VOTE:
January 1793. The National Convention voting on Louis XVI's fate. Each deputy had to stand and announce his verdict.
When Philippe's turn came, the chamber fell silent. This was the king's cousin. A fellow Bourbon.
He stood. He spoke clearly. Death.
Louis XVI, still alive in prison, was told about his cousin's vote. His response: "It really pains me to see that Monsieur d'Orléans, my kinsman, voted for my death."
Philippe thought the vote proved his revolutionary credentials beyond doubt. He thought the Jacobins would have to accept him now.
He was catastrophically wrong.
📉 THE FALL:
By 1793, Philippe was trusted by no one. Royalists saw him as a traitor to his blood. Revolutionaries saw him as a Bourbon pretending to be a citizen. Danton reportedly called him "slime."
Then his son made everything worse. Louis-Philippe defected with General Dumouriez to the Austrians. From the Committee of Public Safety's perspective, this was proof of an Orléans conspiracy.
On April 6, 1793, the Convention decreed the arrest of all Bourbons on French soil. Philippe was dining at the Palais-Royal when they came for him.
⛓️ THE FINAL DAYS:
Seven months in prison. First Marseille, then the Conciergerie—the "antechamber of the guillotine." Marie Antoinette had been held there three weeks earlier. The Girondins had passed through on their way to the scaffold.
His trial lasted one day. The charges: being a Bourbon, his son's treason, old accusations about funding early revolutionary disturbances.
Philippe's defense: he'd opened the Palais-Royal, supported the Third Estate, renounced feudal rights, changed his name, voted for the king's execution.
The Tribunal wasn't interested.
When the guilty verdict was read, Philippe responded: Since they were predetermined to execute him, they ought at least to have sought more plausible pretexts.
📚 SOURCES:
https://enlightenment-revolution.org/index.php?title=Philippe_Egalit%C3%A9https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Philippe_d'Orl%C3%A9ans_(1747-1793)https://louis-xvi.over-blog.net/article-06-novembre-1793-louis-philippe-de-bourbon-duc-d-orleans-philippe-egalite-50349965.htmlhttp://artemis.austincollege.edu/acad/history/htooley/THTPhilippeEgalite.pdfhttps://www.worldhistory.org/Louis_Philippe_II,_Duke_of_Orleans/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Votes_on_the_death_of_Louis_XVI📚 WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER:
✓ How the Palais-Royal became the nerve center of revolutionary Paris
✓ Why Philippe crossed over to join the Third Estate
✓ The vote that stunned even radical deputies
✓ His son's defection and how it sealed his fate
✓ Seven months in prison while the Terror accelerated
✓ The trial that recycled old accusations
✓ The cart stopping at his own palace
✓ His final words about the applause
✓ Why his body was never recovered
✓ How his son became King of France—and lost it all
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