

historischer
Roman
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Vidal, Elena Maria (2000):
Madame Royale.
Neumann Press
Inhalt:
Ein historischer Roman über das offizielle Leben der Herzogin von
Angoulême.
Verlagstext:
An historical novel on the French Revolutionary Age. This
intriging story deals in particular with the daughter of Louis XVI and
Marie-Antoinette, and the search for her little, lost brother. All of the
major characters were real people, and the situations are based on fact.
Madame Royale was written as a response to readers of Trianon, who wanted
to know "What happened to the daughter?" and more about the
surviving personages of the story. The period which follows the fall of
Napoleon Bonaparte, called by historians "the Bourbon
restoration" (1814-1830), was outwardly one of rest and peace for
France. Yet beneath the surface, the forces of revolution were engaged in
a ruthless duel for power with those of the reaction. The conflict, played
out in salons and boudoirs, in newspapers, novels and pamphlets, was
nevertheless a fight to the death, from which one party would emerge the
conqueror, while the other would sink into the oubliette of exile or
imprisonment. The Left had many weapons. As for the reactionaries, they
possessed mediocre, frail or aged princes, with followers whose religious
convictions were sometimes prone to be superficial or bigoted. They had,
however, one weapon, and that weapon was a woman, a woman who embodied in
herself the tradition of legitimacy, of a heritage reaching far back into
the mists of the early centuries of Christianity. Of cold demeanor with a
heart of fire; of bitter aspect, with an unfailing generosity, her undying
faith and zealous devotion to God, His Church, and the poor led her to be
the heroine and defender of the idea of the Christian state. Daughter of a
martyred king and queen, she was Marie-Thérèse-Charlotte of France, the
Duchesse d'Angouleme, who from childhood had been called "Madame
Royale."
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