top of page

Emmanuel Henri Victurnien

Marquis de Noailles

Emmanuel-Henri-Victurnien, marquis de Noailles (September 15, 1830 – February 16, 1909), was a French diplomat, historian and literary critic, the second son of Paul de Noailles. Youngest son of Duke Paul de Noailles and Alicia Elfrida Victournienne de Rochechouart-Mortemar. Born at the castle of Mentenon. In his youth he travelled in the East and took part in the siege of Sevastopol during the Crimean War. In 1856 he travelled through Tunisia on horseback and with a photographic camera, taking many views. During the Second Empire he remained a private citizen, and engaged in history and literature. He was the Conservative Republican candidate for the National Assembly in the Lower Pyrenees, but lost on 7 January 1872 with 31,599 votes to 40,668 for the Legitimist leader Charles Chenelon. On 12 May 1872 he was appointed minister plenipotentiary to Washington by Adolphe Thiers. Secured the resumption of the postal convention between the two countries, which had been broken up three years before. He resigned after 24 May 1873, was then reinstated, and on 4 December of the same year was appointed minister plenipotentiary to the Italian court. On 18 July 1876 he was promoted to the rank of France's first ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary to Italy. He settled in Palazzo 

Farnese, the former residence of French ambassadors to the papal court. He had cool relations with the Holy See, but contributed to the organisation of the conclave in 1878. In 1881 he provided diplomatic support for the French annexation of Tunisia. On 20 February 1882 was appointed ambassador to Constantinople. Rejected all representations of the Turks on the question of the succession of the Tunisian Bey. Participated in a conference on Egyptian affairs. On 17 July 1886 he resigned on his own request. Returned to service in 1896, taking up the post of ambassador in Berlin. Endeavoured to maintain good relations with Germany. After his retirement, on 3 January 1903, he received from Kaiser Wilhelm II as a memento of his marble bust. He had a reputation as an experienced and skilful diplomat. In 1876 he refused to stand for election to the Senate from the Lower Pyrenees, but from October 1874 he represented the canton of North-West Bayonne in the General Council of that department.

The Papal Zouaves (Italian: Zuavi Pontifici) were an infantry battalion, later regiment, dedicated to defending the Papal States. Named after the French zouave regiments, the Zuavi Pontifici were mainly young men, unmarried and Catholic, who volunteered to assist Pope Pius IX in his struggle against the Italian unificationist Risorgimento. The Zouaves evolved out of a unit formed by Louis Juchault de Lamoricière on 23 May 1860, the 'Company of Franco-Belgian Tirailleurs'. The company was quickly increased to an 8-company battalion by amalgamating the Tirailleurs with another volunteer unit, the 'Crusaders of Cathelineau'. On 1 January 1861 the unit was renamed the Papal Zouaves, after already proving themselves in 1860. The name had been introduced by Xavier de Mérode. The Almoner was Mgr. Edouard de Woelmont. The unit was commanded by the Swiss colonel Eugène Allet (1814–1878), from Leuk, who had previously served in the Pontifical Swiss Guard under Pope Gregory XVI. All orders were given in French. From 1867 to 1868, the Papal Zouaves increased their strength from that of a single battalion to a four-battalion regiment, each battalion having six active and one depot company. Initially, the French and Belgian unit was mostly composed of young aristocrats and gentlemen.Later on, the unit was truly international, and by May 1868 numbered 4,592 men. A British volunteer, Joseph Powell, noted in his account of his 

service with the Papal Zouaves that at least three individuals of African descent and one person from China served in the Zouaves. Between February 1868 and September 1870 the number of Canadian volunteers, mainly from the Francophone and majority Catholic province of Quebec, rose to seven contingents numbering some 500 men in total. In addition to involvement in the suppression of brigandage between 1864 and 1868, the Papal Zouaves were employed in humanitarian relief when a cholera epidemic devastated Albano during early 1867. All members of two companies of the 1st Battalion were decorated by Pope Pius IX for their work in burying the dead and tending to the infected. One thousand five hundred Papal Zouaves assisted in the notable Franco-Papal victory at the Battle of Mentana, fought on 3 November 1867 between French-Papal troops and Italian volunteers led by Giuseppe Garibaldi. In his report to the Pope, the commander of the Papal forces, General Kanzler, praised the elan of the Zouaves, citing a determined bayonet charge as a particular example. The Zouaves suffered the brunt of the fighting, sustaining 81 casualties in the battle, including 24 killed (the Papal forces suffered only 30 dead in total) and 57 wounded. The official French report of the battle prepared by the French commander, General de Failly, also cited the bravery of the Papal Zouaves. The youngest victim, aged seventeen, was English Zouave Julian Watts-Russell. The Zouaves also played a role in the final engagements against the forces of the newly united Kingdom of Italy in September 1870, in which the Papal forces were outnumbered almost seven to one. The Zouaves fought off enemy lancers on the 13th, withdrew with Papal artillery under heavy fire on the 20th and made preparations for a counterattack against the Italians before being told of the surrender at the Capture of Rome. Several Zouaves were executed or murdered by the Italian forces following the surrender, including a Belgian officer who refused to give up his sword. After being disbanded, veterans of the Papal Zouaves fought on in other units, for example, on the side of the Carlists in the Third Carlist War and on the side of the French in the Franco-Prussian War. After the Capture of Rome by Victor Emmanuel in 1870, 760 French soldiers of the disbanded Papal Zouaves, led by Colonel de Charette, offered the French Government of National Defense their service. They were renamed as Légion de Volontaires de l’Ouest (Legion of the Volunteers of the West) and, by 7 October 1870, the contingent, composed of 64 officers, 1,620 men, 80 cavalry, 80 gunners. While retaining their grey and red Papal uniforms, the Zouaves fought the Prussians and their other German allies outside Orléans, with 15 killed or wounded between 11 and 12 October 1870, and also engaged the enemy at Patay. Expanded to two battalions totalling about 1,800 men, the new force with its experienced core of former Papal Zouaves fought with distinction at the Battle of Loigny where the 2nd Battalion charged with the bayonet, losing 216 out of 300 men (18 officers and 198 men) while covering the retreating and shattered 16th Corps. The Volontaires were armed with Chassepots and Remingtons. The unit was disbanded after the entrance of Prussian troops into Paris. Some Spanish Papal Zouaves fought on the Catalan Front as the Carlist Zouaves (Spanish: Zuavos Carlistas), commanded by Alfonso de Borbón, the brother of the Carlist King Carlos VII, who asked him to enter the Catalan front, naming him General in Chief of the Zouaves. The Carlist Zouaves were also joined by many of the young aristocrats who previously fought side by side in Rome with the Infante Alfonso for the pontifical cause.

The House of Noailles is a surviving family of nobility of extraction whose Agnatic descent has been proven since 1225 (for the honours of the Court). Originally from Noailles in the Limousin, it developed several branches in Auvergne and Guyenne. The family was made Grand Duchess of Spain in 1711. It included a cardinal and four of its members were awarded the dignity of Marshal of France. The title of Duke of Noailles was created in 1663 for Anne de Noailles, Count of Ayen. The second, third and fourth Dukes were all Marshals of France. The third, fifth and sixth dukes were knights of the Order of the Golden Fleece. The title of Duke of Noailles is one of the few regular French ducal titles holding a peerage from the Ancien Régime that is still represented. The heir to the title of Duke of Noailles is traditionally known as the Duke of Ayen.

Awards: Insignia and star of the Supreme Order of Christ (Ordine Supremo del Cristo), sash and star of the Order of the Holy Spirit (Ordre du Saint-Esprit), star of the Order of Pope Pius IX (Ordine di Pio IX).

bottom of page