Hampshire Heritage
The prince who went to war
The safe return
at the weekend
of Prince
Harry from the war
in Afghanistan is in
contrast to the sad
return from battle of
another Royal prince
who now lies buried
in Hampshire.
Napoléon IV, Prince
Imperial (full name: Louis
Napoléon Eugène John
Joseph) was the only child of
Emperor Napoleon III of
France and his Empress consort
Eugénie de Montijo. His
early death in Africa while
fighting for Britain sent
shock waves throughout
Europe, as he was the last
hope for the restoration of
the Bonapartes to the throne
of France.
At the outbreak of the
Franco-Prussian War of
1870-1871 he accompanied
his father the Emperor
Napoleon III to the front. But
when France lost the war he
was forced to flee with the
Imperial Family and settled
in England. On his
father's death,
Bonapartists proclaimed
him
Napoleon IV.
During the 1870s
there was some
talk of a marriage
between him and
Queen Victoria's
youngest daughter,
Princess Beatrice.
He was commissioned
into the
Royal Artillery in
order to follow in
the footsteps of
his famous greatuncle
Napoleon
Bonapart himself.
Finally, with the outbreak of
the Zulu War in 1879, the
Prince Imperial, with the
rank of lieutenant, forced
the hand of the British military
to allow him to take
part in the conflict.
He was only allowed to go
to Africa by special pleading
of his mother, the Empress
Eugenie, and by Queen
Victoria herself. He went as
an observer, attached to the
staff of Frederic Thesiger,
2nd Baron Chelmsford, the
commander in South Africa,
who was ordered to take
care of him. Louis accompanied
Chelmsford on his
march into Zululand.
The Prince took part in
several reconnaissance missions,
though his eagerness
for action almost led him
into an early ambush.
Despite this on the evening
of May 31, 1879, Louis was
allowed to scout in a forward
party scheduled to leave in
the morning, in the mistaken
belief that the path ahead
was free of Zulu skirmishers.
On the morning of June 1
the troop set out, earlier
than intended, and without
the full escort, largely owing
to Louis' impatience. At
noon the troop was halted at
a temporarily deserted kraal
while Louis made some
sketches of the terrain. No
lookout was posted. As they
were preparing to leave,
about 40 Zulus fired upon
them and rushed screaming
uSuthu! ("kill") towards
them. The Prince's horse
dashed off before he could
mount, the Prince clinging
to a holster on the saddle.
After about 100 yards a strap
broke, and the Prince fell
beneath his horse, trampling
his right arm. He leapt up,
drawing his revolver with
his left hand, and started to
run.
The Prince was speared in
the thigh, pulled the assegai
from his wound, and turned
and fired on his pursuers.
Another spear struck his left
shoulder. The Prince tried to
fight on, using the assegai
he had pulled from his leg,
but weakened by his
wounds, he sank to the
ground and was overwhelmed.
When recovered
his body had 18 assegai
wounds. Two of his escort
had been killed, and another
was missing.
Louis Napoleon's death
caused an international sensation,
and in one slanderous
account Queen Victoria
was accused of deliberately
arranging the whole thing.
The Zulus later claimed
that they would not have
killed him if they had
known who he was.
Zabanga, his chief assailant,
met his death in July at the
Battle of Ulundi. Eugénie
was later to make a pilgrimage
to Sobuza's kraal, where
her son died.
After death the Prince was
ritually disemboweled, a
common Zulu practice to
prevent his spirit seeking
revenge on his killers in the
afterlife. His badly decomposed
body was brought
back to England and buried
in Chislehurst. Later, it was
transferred to a special mausoleum
constructed by his
mother as the Imperial
Crypt at Saint Michael's
Abbey, Farnborough.
Hampshire, next to his
father.
The Empress bought a
home at Farnborough and is
also buried there next to her
husband and brave but illfated
son who insisted that
after training as a royal soldier
he should be allowed to
go to war.
10:53am Monday 3rd March 2008
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