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Restauration
After Napoleon’s abdication, the signing of the treaty of Paris on 30 May 1814 reestablished the Monegasque borders to the same state as in 1792. This treaty also reestablished the French protectorate. Unable to visit his subjects, Prince Honoré IV first of all chose his brother Joseph, then, in January 1815, his son Honoré to be administrator of Monaco. In 1814, when the first Restoration took place, crown Prince Honoré was named member of the House of Peers by king Louis XVIII. Honoré V was a French member of parliament and a foreign sovereign when his father died in 1819 and occasionally participated in the gallery at the Luxembourg Palace. He was “ultra” moderate, believed in gallican ideals, favoured the “billions to the emigrants” law as well as equitable electoral laws and, like Chateaubriand, supported some freedom of the press.
1814
30/05/1814
Grande boite
2
No