Joachim Murat | |
Birth Date: | 28 February 1856 |
Birth Place: | Boissy-Saint-Léger, Val-de-Marne, France |
Death Place: | Château de Chambly, Chambly, Oise, France |
Father: | Joachim, 4th Prince Murat |
Mother: | Malcy Louise Caroline Berthier de Wagram |
Spouse: | Marie Cécile Ney d'Elchingen |
Issue: | 8, including Joachim, 6th Prince Murat |
Succession: | Prince Murat |
Reign: | 23 October 1901 – 2 November 1932 |
Reign-Type: | Tenure |
Predecessor: | Joachim Joseph Murat |
Successor: | Joachim Murat |
Joachim Napoléon Murat, 5th Prince Murat (28 February 1856 – 2 November 1932) was a member of the Bonaparte-Murat family.
Joachim Napoléon Murat was born on 28 February 1856 at Boissy-Saint-Léger, Val-de-Marne, France. His parents were Joachim Joseph Murat, 4th Prince Murat and of Malcy Louise Caroline Berthier de Wagram. His paternal grandparents were Prince Napoleon Lucien Charles Murat, 2nd Prince of Pontecorvo and 3rd Prince Murat, the second son of Joachim Murat, King of Naples, who married Napoleon's sister, Caroline Bonaparte, and Caroline Georgina Fraser (Charleston, South Carolina, 13 April 1810 – Paris, 10 February 1879), daughter of Thomas Fraser.[1]
His maternal grandparents were Napoléon-Alexandre Berthier, 2nd Prince of Wagram (1810–1887) and Zénaïde Françoise Clary (1812–1884), who was the niece of Désirée Clary and Julie Clary. His maternal great-grandfather was Louis-Alexandre Berthier (1753–1815), 1st prince de Wagram, 1st duc de Valangin, 1st sovereign Prince of Neuchâtel, who was a Marshal and Vice-Constable of France beginning in 1808, and Chief of Staff (Major général) under Napoleon.
In 1919, Prince Murat gave his Paris house on the rue de Monceau to President Woodrow Wilson for his use while in Paris for the Paris Peace Conference.
On 10 May 1884 he married Marie Cécile Ney d'Elchingen, a daughter of the Michel Aloys Ney, 3rd Duc d'Elchingen and a great-granddaughter of Marshal Michel Ney. Together, they were the parents of eight children, including:
Prince Louis died unmarried and Prince Charles had no issue; all the others did. Prince Murat died at the family estate, Château de Chambly in Oise on 2 November 1932.[7]
of the First French Empire|-