Philippe d’Orléans, count de Paris (born Aug. 24, 1838, Paris, Fr.—died Sept. 8, 1894, Stow House, Twickenham, Middlesex, Eng.) was a pretender to the French throne after the death of Louis-Philippe (1850). The death of his father, Ferdinand, Duke d’Orléans, son and heir of King Louis-Philippe, in 1842 made the young Philippe heir to the throne and the candidate of the Orleanists. The title of Count de Paris was created for him.
During the Revolution of 1848 he was taken into exile in England. He and his brother Robert, Duke de Chartres, served as volunteers under the Federal general George B. McClellan in the American Civil War in 1861–62. Back in England, the count married his cousin, Isabelle d’Orléans-Montpensier, in 1864.
After the downfall of Napoleon III (1870), he returned to France as a private person. At Frohsdorf, in Austria, he recognized the right of Henri d’Artois, Count de Chambord, to the French crown (August 1873); but this Legitimist-Orleanist entente broke down in 1875. When the Count de Chambord died (1883), most French Legitimists acknowledged the Count de Paris as the heir to the throne; but the success of his Paris reception celebrating his daughter Marie-Amélie’s marriage in Lisbon to the future Carlos I of Portugal provoked the French republican government to pass the law of June 1886 expelling the heads of all formerly sovereign houses from France. The count retired to England, and, when General Georges Boulanger failed in his machinations, all hopes of an early restoration of the French monarchy were extinguished.