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 11.  
Eugénia de Montijo , The Empress of France from 1853-1871, was 
born May 5, 1826 and lived until  July 11, 1920. 
Her full name was Maria Eugénia Ignacia Augustina Palafox de 
Guzmán Portocarrero y Kirkpatrick, 9th Countess de Teba 
 
Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon III, nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte 
was born April 20, 1808 
 and died January 9, 1873. 
 
  
 Princess Anna Murat, was born on February 3, 1841 in 
Bordentown, New Jersey, USA,  the daughter of Prince Murat and Caroline 
Fraser. She married Antoine de Noailles, le Duc de Mouchy (1841-1909), on December 18, 1865. 
She died  September 7,  1924 in Mouchy, Oise. They had two children: a 
son, Franois de Noailles Prince of Poix  and a daugher, Sabine Lucienne 
Ccile Marie de Noailles (she died in 1881 just 2 weeks before her 13th 
birthday.) 
  
    
      
        
          
            
              
                as a 
                side-note:  
                Caroline Frazer was the daughter of Thomas Fraser and Anna 
                Lauton.   
                They had 5 children: Caroline Laetitia, Joachim Napoleon, Anna, 
                and Achille Charles Louis Napoléon and Louis Napoléon.  
                Achille Charles Louis Napoléon married Salomé Dadiani of 
                Mingrelia on May 13, 1868. While Achille died on Feb. 27 in 
                Zoughdidi, Mingrelia, Salomé lived until 1913. Salomé was the 
                sister of David Dadiani, the father of the famous chess player, 
                Prince Dadian of Mingrelia.   | 
               
             
   
           
         
       
     
   
 
  
 
  
   
   
   
   
 The Count Casabianca played in 
consultation against other notable players, as did the Duke of Brunswick. 
 Here Casabianca, the Duke of 
Brunswick and Jean Prèti are playing Sarafino Dubois [(1817-1899) a leading 
Italian master] 
 [Event "consultation"] 
[Site "Paris"] 
[Date "1855.??.??"] 
[Result "1-0"] 
[White "Serafino Dubois"] 
[Black "Brunswick-Casabianca-Preti"] 
 
1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Bc4 Qh4+ 4.Kf1 g5 5.Nc3 Bg7 6.d4 c6 7.Nf3 Qh5 8.e5 b5 
9.Bb3 h6 10.Ne4 Bf8 11.d5 c5 12.Qe1 a5 13.Bd2 b4 14.d6 Ba6+ 15.Kg1 Nc6  
16.Nf6+ Nxf6 17.exf6+ Kd8 18.Ne5 c4 19.Nxc6+ dxc6 20.Qe5 cxb3 21.Qxa5+ Ke8  
22.Re1+ Be2 23.Qc7 Rd8 24.Qxc6+ Rd7 25.Qc8+ Rd8 26.d7#  
1-0 
   
 Morphy's Opera Box Game: 
 
 
 
  
 The Duke of Brunswick is a bit more confusing. 
   
 According to an official source: 
 Andrew McNaughton, The Book of Kings: A Royal 
Genealogy, in 3 volumes (London, U.K.: Garnstone Press, 1973), volume 1, page 
40. 
He was: 
"Karl III Friedrich Herzog von Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel was the son of 
Friedrich Wilhelm Herzog von Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel and Marie Elisabeth 
Wilhelmine Prinzessin von Baden.1 He was born on 30 October 1804.1 He died on 19 
August 1873 at age 68 at Geneva, Switzerland, unmarried and in exile."
  
  
  
Tim Krabbé 
called him: Karl II, Herzog von Braunschweig. 
  
The inscription on the Brunswick Monument reads:
  
  The Duke of Brunswick, Charles Frederick August William, was a distinguished 
  linguist, horsemen and musician was born 1804. He dethroned and chased out in 
  1830 and thus, took refuge in Paris, but spent his last three years back in 
  Geneva. Mr. Charles Frederick August William was an eccentric and a paranoiac.
   
   
  His death in 18 August 1873 provided a tidy sum for the city Geneva. But in 
  his will, Geneva, as his residuary legatee must provide his final resting 
  place that is in “an eminent and worthy location, executed according to the 
  established concept by the finest artists of the time, without consideration 
  of cost”.  
   
  He also stipulated that his mausoleum must be the exact replica of the 
  Scaliger family tomb in Verona, Itay (circa 14th century). 
 
more: 
Visit to the Napoleonic battlefield of Quatre Bras (1873). See the very 
imposing Brunswick monument (erected to commemorate the Duke of Brunswick who 
was killed during the battle) 
from a 
Swiss online guide book: 
  
the Brunswick Monument 
  
  
  
This 
mauseoleum is located next to the Richemont Hotel, the Beau Rivage Hotel and the 
Hotel de la Paix, three of the city's five stars hotels. It was built in 1877 
for an eccentric German nobleman, Charles II d'Este-Guelph, Duke of Brunswick, 
who came to live in Geneva to flee from political turmoil in Germany. He lived 
in one of the hotels and played chess with his guests. He once said that, were 
he not for his enormous wealth, he would already be in an insane asylum.  
 
When he died in 1873 he gave all his money to the city of Geneva in exchange for 
the construction of this mausoleum, built in 1879 on the model of one in Italy. 
The city used the money to build the golden gates of Parc des Bastions and the 
city's opera, the Grand Theatre. 
 
 
   
  
Anders 
Thulin offers this: 
I've just come across some lines on the Duke
 
in The Problem, a periodical devoted to chess problems, published  
in Pittsburgh. They're by J. F. Magee, Jr., in 1914, issue 17,  
p. 133, and are said to be reprinted from Chess Amateur:  
 
During the revolution of 1830, the Duke was compelled to  leave Brunswick 
and he sought refuge in Paris and Geneva. His  
agent, Silberschmidt, the problemist, was imprisoned for political reasons, and 
whilst in confinement.  published in 1845 his collection of chess problems. 
In 1858 Paul Morphy played a blindfold game against  the Duke in the Paris 
Opera House,  
during the intervals while the "Barber of Seville" was being played. Mr. Hopper, 
in "The Field", December 31st, 1910 gives  
this interesting description of the Duke:  
"Frederick the Great, of Prussia was a chess player, and so was the great 
Napolean [sic]. Prince Napolean [sic]  took regular lessons from Rosenthal, 
and so did the Duke of Brunswick, who left his millions to the town of Geneva. 
The Duke also visited the Cafe de la Régence on occasions of premieres at the 
Theatre Française, but passed most  of his time in playing chess with  
Mr. Preti (the founder of "La Strategie") at the Régence. This was in the 
sixties, and we remember the eccentric old gentleman, arrayed in a suit of drab 
color, drab gaiters, drab gloves. He was adorned with a shining black wig, and  
ditto beard a la Henry Quatre, and with an artificial youthful complexion to 
match. In spite of being profusely adorned with diamonds,  of which he had 
a fortune stowed away in a safe imbedded in the  wall of his bedroom, he 
only played the game for one franc with poor Preti, and that solitary coin 
passed to and fro during the whole séance. He looked grotesque in the 
unsuccessful endeavor to appear youthful, when frequent twinges reminded him of 
the futility of his endeavor."  
  
  
  
    
    Jerry Spinrad,  an Associate Professor of Computer Science at 
    Vanderbilt University and amateur chess historian, deeply researched the 
    Duke of Brunswick. He wrote about his findings in the following article 
    (excerpted from a larger article called, Oddball Players).   
    used 
    here by permission.   | 
   
  
    
    
      One 
    player we will discuss is a fairly well known name in chess circles, for one 
    specific game. This is the Duke of Brunswick, and we all know the famous 
    story of how Morphy beat the Duke of Brunswick and Count Isouard in a game 
    played while they were at the opera, and that while Morphy would have 
    preferred to watch the opera he was instead forced to create one of the most 
    beautiful games of all time. However, very few of us realize that the same 
    Duke of Brunswick was one of the wealthiest lunatics of all time, and that 
    his wealth and aspirations was rumored to have played a key role in an 
    important historical event.  
     
    Technically, Charles d'Este-Guelph was no longer the Duke of Brunswick when 
    he played Morphy in Paris, though it would not have been wise to mention it 
    to him. Born in 1804, Charles was chased from his ancestral home in 1830 
    thanks to his spectacular "indiscretions". He was obsessively concerned 
    about recovering his lands, trying to foment revolution and even considering 
    using his vast funds to mount a naval expedition to take back his 
    (landlocked) Duchy. This is not some weird slur, but part of his own 
    rambling speech during his court case when he tried to win back his lands. 
    He notes that his adversaries want to throw him into a madhouse, and 
    emphasizes that his threat  
    of attempting to recover his territory by a naval expedition was not an idle 
    or absurd one, and how he could land at Bremen, cross through Hanoverian 
    territory, and get to Brunswick. As one writer from the Times described the 
    courtroom scene, "After other remarks not quite relevant to the point at 
    issue", the ex-Duke said he should have little honor left if he entered into 
    relations with felons, traitors, and incendiaries (his description of his 
    former subjects); he eventually was called to order by the President of the 
    court.  
     
    This was just the start of a long and outrageous life of exile. I base much 
    of my knowledge of the Duke on an article which appeared shortly after his 
    death (which came in the middle of a chess game; he got up, told his 
    opponent not to cheat him, and went to his room and died). The article, 
    which appeared in Appleton's Journal, November 20, 1875, starts with a quick 
    summary which is worth repeating here.  
     
    "There are but few person who have resided in Paris for any length of time 
    who do not remember the late Duke of Brunswick, that painted, bewigged 
    Lothario, whose follies, eccentricities, and diamonds made him the talk of 
    Europe."  
     
    The strangeness started very early indeed. When he was born, the ceremonial 
    cannons announcing the royal birth beheaded an artilleryman. He came to the 
    throne at an early age, his grandfather and father dying heroically in the 
    battles of Jena and Waterloo respectively.  
     
    After losing his throne in 1830 as described above, he allied himself with 
    anyone he could to get it back. The most important of these attempts is said 
    to have come when Prince Louis Napoleon was imprisoned. The Duke's chief 
    treasurer visited Prince Louis, and left a package carrying 800,000 francs 
    in return for a signed document promising to get the Duke back his throne. 
    This money was used to help the Prince buy his way to freedom, and the Duke 
    thus had a great influence in "conferring upon France the doubtful blessing 
    of the late empire." The Prince became emperor, but he never did get the 
    Duke his throne, a fact that the Duke was quite willing to publicly rebuke 
    him for.  
     
    The Duke built a huge palace in Paris which mixed aspects of fairy tale and 
    horror story. It combined rose colored walls and profuse gilding with 
    security features that appear quite paranoid. There were huge walls with 
    gilded spikes, electric apparatuses (very early for these!) to warn  
    of intruders, complicated machinery to defy thieves and assassins, entrance 
    only with a password, and many other oddities. He kept his strong-box 
    suspended by four chains, which were suspended in a well, needing devices to 
    bring it into view; if you attempted to open the lock to where the Duke 
    viewed this without the code, concealed gun barrels would blow you away, 
    just like in some Indiana Jones movie.  
     
    The Duke did not employ a cook, always eating out at one of the great 
    restaurants. At home, he would only have hot chocolate; the milk for this 
    was brought from the country directly and kept in a locked box, and he 
    trusted no one else to prepare it, but still had his valet taste it first.
     
    His eating patterns were very strange; he ate enormous amounts of sweets, 
    sometimes paying sweet shops large sums of money for the privilege of coming 
    in and eating as much as he could stomach at once. I am no doctor, but I 
    imagine this could be related to his "extreme corpulence" in his later 
    years.  
     
    He was also famous for his eccentric and gaudy appearance. The Duke stayed 
    in bed until the late afternoon, and started his immensely long preparations 
    for going out around 4 PM; he rarely saw the sun during winter months. He 
    was famous for using an the enormous amount of face paint; he also dyed his 
    beard every day, and had different wigs arranged for each variety of facial 
    coloring he assumed. But most of all, the Duke was known for his diamonds.
     
     
    To this day, the Duke is remembered fondly in the diamond trade. He was 
    apparently the greatest collector of colored diamonds in history; having 
    been owned by the Duke of Brunswick is part of a diamond's provenance. He 
    would wear ridiculously elaborate costumes, such as dressing as a 
    Brunswickian general, decorated head to toe with diamonds. In fact, he told 
    several ladies at a party that his undergarments were also festooned with 
    wondrous diamonds, but none took up his offer to show them these particular 
    crown jewels.  
     
    He is also remembered fondly by one other group other than chess players. To 
    understand why the city of Geneva has a large memorial to the Duke of 
    Brunswick, we first must understand his passion for lawsuits. He filed 
    hundreds of lawsuits, once suing a washer-woman over a seven franc bill, and 
    filing at least twelve lawsuits over the repair of a single watch. His 
    greatest lawsuits, however, involved his (illegitimate, but acknowledged) 
    daughter, who he cut off completely after she converted to Catholicism. He 
    lost a lawsuit ordering him to support his daughter and her children, and 
    fled his palace in Paris to avoid the consequences, eventually ending up in 
    Geneva. After several changes of his will, he bequeathed his entire estate 
    to the city of Geneva, due to the wonderful condition of the tombs in the 
    church of St. Peters; he wanted his monument to be eternal. Shortly before 
    his death, he changed his mind again; he had thrown some water out his 
    window and the water drenched a passerby, who threatened a lawsuit. He was 
    preparing to go back to his palace in Paris, but before he could change the 
    will he died. His huge estate went to Geneva, in return for a grandiose 
    monument which they erected according to his wishes.  
     
    We all know the opera-box game; here is a game in which the semi-Duke draws 
    Harrwitz (Harrwitz playing a blindfold simul). If you believe that all chess 
    games should be decided on positional niceties, you should not be reading 
    about 19th century chess. Our antihero finds a nice shot to force a draw in 
    this game. Harrwitz probably would have won earlier if he had not been 
    playing blindfold, but this shows that the Duke was not such a patzer as you 
    might have been led to believe by the more famous game. 
    
      
        Harrwitz - Duke of Brunswick, Harrwitz 
        playing a blindfold simul:  
        1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4. b4 Bxb4 5. c3 Ba5 6. d4 exd4 7. Qb3 
        Qe7  
        8. O-O h6 9. Ba3 d6 10. e5 Qd7 11. cxd4 Nd8 12. exd6 c6 13. Ne5 Qf5  
        14. Qe3 Ne6 15. Bxe6 Qxe6 16. f4 f5 17. Nc3 Bxc3 18. Qxc3 Nf6 19. d7+ 
        Bxd7  
        20. Rfe1 Ne4 21. Qb4 b5 22. Qa5 g5 23. Rac1 gxf4 24. Qc7 Rc8 25. Qxa7 
        Rg8  
        26. Rc5 Rxg2+ 1/2-1/2  
       
     
    I am jealous of the Duke, and not for his 
    diamond studded underwear. He played at least 11 games in consultation 
    against Morphy (of which he drew 1, in consultation with Isouard again and 
    Count Casabianca), he played Kolisch, he played Harrwitz; I guess money 
    gives opportunities, even in chess. 
      
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