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224:. However, Feuchères finally discovered the true relationship between his wife and Condé, whom he had been assured was her father, and left her, obtaining legal recognition of their separation in 1827. On hearing of the scandal, the king banished Dawes from his court, declaring her "naught more than a commoner street-wench yet tragically bereft of any skills of the trade." Thanks to her influence, however, Condé was induced in 1829 to sign a will bequeathing the bulk of his estate—worth more than sixty-six millions—to the
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on them. As the parish register at St Helen's had no record of her baptism, Sophia had received adult baptism in 1817, when she reduced her age by three years. For her marriage licence she described herself as a widow, and in her marriage contract she said she was the daughter of a
Richard Clark and
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and the subsequent exile of the King, made up his mind to leave France secretly. When on 27 August 1830 he was found hanging dead from his window, the baroness was suspected and an inquiry was held. But the evidence of death being the result of any crime appearing insufficient, she was not
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137:, where she was seduced and fell into great poverty. An army officer took her as his mistress, and when they split up he settled an annuity of £50 a year on her. She sold this and in 1809 placed herself at a school in Chelsea.
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Hated as she was by the French, the baroness returned to
England, where she died in December 1840. At the time of her death she was living at 189, Cumberland Street, Westminster, and on 22 December she was buried in
192:. To prevent scandal and to qualify her to be received at court, in 1818 he had her married to Adrien Victor de Feuchères, a lieutenant-colonel commanding the 6th Infantry Regiment of the
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visited her, her niece married a marquis Hugues de
Chabannes La Palice, and her nephew was made a baron. Condé, wearied by his mistress's importunities, and depressed after the
232:, and 2,000,000 francs, free of death-duty, were to go to the Prince's “faithful companion, Mme la baronne de Feucheres”, as well as the chateaux and estates of Boissy,
280:, had collaborated with Sophie in the crime. Later, rumours circulated amongst the French nobility that Condé had died in the course of what would later be known as
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88:, the daughter of a fisherman named Richard Daw (or Dawes) by Jane Callaway, who were married in 1775 at St Helens Church. A blue plaque at her birthplace reads:
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204:(Church of England), and also in a Roman Catholic ceremony in Paris on 26 August 1818, and the duke settled 72,000
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under the name Sophia Dawes
Baroness de Feuchères de Charlepont. Her age at death was stated as fifty.
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Dawes was one of ten children, of whom only four grew up. In 1796 the whole family moved into the
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and a baron. The new baroness, pretty and clever, became a person of consequence at the court of
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Burials in the Year 1840 in All Souls
Cemetery established by the General Cemetery Company
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the widow of a
William Dawes. All these inventions later gave her heirs much trouble.
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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prosecuted. There were rumours that the new King of the French,
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London, England, Crisp's
Marriage Licence Index, 1713–1892
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Paris, France, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1792-1930
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Birthplace of Sophie Dawes at St Helens, Isle of Wight
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In 1934, the story of her life was told in the book
36:Portrait of Sophie Dawes, Baronne de Feuchères, by
348:. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 296.
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148:Dawes later worked as a servant in a high-class
451:(Uithoorn: Karakter Uitgevers BV, 2011), p. 431
435:(Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Co., 1935),
172:in Greek, as later shown by her surviving
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212:As well as providing Sophia with a
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144:Queen Square, Bloomsbury, in 1812
585:Burials at Kensal Green Cemetery
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508:Sophie Dawes, Queen of Chantilly
380:Dictionary of National Biography
263:Again Dawes was in high favour.
216:, the Duke made her husband his
62:Louis Henry II, Prince of Condé
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532:Feuchères, Sophie, Baronne de
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575:Mistresses of French royalty
413:"Adrien Victor de Feucheres"
394:"Adrien Victor de Feucheres"
158:Louis Henri, Prince of Condé
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488:The Scandal of Sophie Dawes
298:The Scandal of Sophie Dawes
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449:De macht van een maîtresse
80:Dawes was born in 1790 at
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101:Daughter of Richard Dawes
38:Alexis Leon Louis Valbrun
437:Chapter 5: Almost a lady
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230:Louis Philippe d'Orléans
162:Queen Square, Bloomsbury
103:Fisherman & Smuggler
537:Encyclopædia Britannica
469:(subscription required)
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345:Encyclopædia Britannica
267:received her at court,
198:St Martin-in-the-Fields
570:House of Bourbon-Condé
248:, the pavilion in the
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108:The Queen of Chantilly
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374:"Dawes, Sophia"
369:Alger, John Goldworth
290:Kensal Green Cemetery
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282:erotic asphyxiation
98:Madame de Feuchères
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495:She Stands Accused
433:She Stands Accused
188:after the fall of
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258:War in the Vendée
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560:1840 deaths
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222:Louis XVIII
202:Westminster
127:chambermaid
549:Categories
497:, chap 5.
478:References
269:Talleyrand
154:Piccadilly
131:Portsmouth
68:Early life
265:Charles X
119:workhouse
82:St Helens
465:no. 4169
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190:Napoleon
170:Plutarch
166:Xenophon
105:known as
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396:in the
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150:brothel
123:Newport
114:in 1792
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244:, and
206:francs
180:Career
135:London
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309:Notes
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186:Paris
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