Henri V

In 1830 the July Revolution forced Charles X of France, and His heir Louis-Antoine to abdicate. They did so in favor of their grandson and nephew,respectively, Henri, Duc de Bordeaux and Comte de Chambord. Louis Philippe Duc d'Orléans, was designated Lieutenant général du royaume or Regent of France, and was to announce to the popularly elected Chamber of Deputies Henri's succession. Louis Philippe did not do this, in order to increase his own chances of succession. As a consequence, because the chamber was aware of Louis Philippe's liberal policies and of his popularity with the masses, they proclaimed Louis Philippe, who for eleven days had been acting as the regent for his small cousin, as the new French king, displacing the senior branch of the House of Bourbon. (partially copied from Wikipedia)

My Question is what if Louis-Philippe had stayed loyal to the House of Bourbon and announced him as King or a different Regent was named, Like Louis XVI's daughter, Marie Therese-Charlotte? How would Henri V's reign look? Would France still be ruled by the Bourbons Today? Also, consider the fact that Louis-Philippe's policy's as King contributed to the 1848 revolution in France,which triggered other revolutions in Germany, Austria and Italy so could the entire year of Revolution be avoided?
 
Depends a lot on what Henri's like, really. He could be even worse.
In OTL he and his sister were raised by their aunt, Marie Therese, who was very conservative after her experiences during the reign of terror. Henri famously rejected the french throne in the 1870s over the revolutionary tricolor flag. Let's assume if he stayed on the throne he would have been educated by the Duc d'Orleans, who was fairly liberal.
 
That will depend mostly on how Henri V's personnality and life are affected by the events. As you pointed out, he was raised OTL by his aunt Marie Thérèse Charlotte, the only surviving child of Louis XVI, who was a very conservative woman and opposed to the the ideas of the French Revolution (not very surprising considering what she went through). If she remains Henri's tutor, there is little chance for him to be different from OTL, unless constant bickering with the Chambre des Députés makes him realise he needs to do concessions.

If he is educated by someone else, he can possibly become more liberal and rule according to the Charte proclaimed by his great uncle Louis XVIII. He can also turn the Regime the British way, making it a true constitutionnal Monarchy. We also have to consider Henri comes on the throne at age 10 and will be very young and inexperienced in the political field as such: thus, his contact with the political field will probably influence his choices and decisions.

A fun fact I remarked is that Henri is around the same age as Queen Victoria: he is only one year younger... I wonder if these two couldn't be good friends (as there are no chances of them being married) and how that could affect Franco-British diplomatic relationships in the future.
 
That will depend mostly on how Henri V's personnality and life are affected by the events. As you pointed out, he was raised OTL by his aunt Marie Thérèse Charlotte, the only surviving child of Louis XVI, who was a very conservative woman and opposed to the the ideas of the French Revolution (not very surprising considering what she went through). If she remains Henri's tutor, there is little chance for him to be different from OTL, unless constant bickering with the Chambre des Députés makes him realise he needs to do concessions.

If he is educated by someone else, he can possibly become more liberal and rule according to the Charte proclaimed by his great uncle Louis XVIII. He can also turn the Regime the British way, making it a true constitutionnal Monarchy. We also have to consider Henri comes on the throne at age 10 and will be very young and inexperienced in the political field as such: thus, his contact with the political field will probably influence his choices and decisions.

A fun fact I remarked is that Henri is around the same age as Queen Victoria: he is only one year younger... I wonder if these two couldn't be good friends (as there are no chances of them being married) and how that could affect Franco-British diplomatic relationships in the future.

I was thinking the same think about Queen Victoria myself:D. I can't imagine Marie Therese remaining his tutor after the July Revolution, so I was thinking either the Duc d'Orleans, his mother Caroline, Duchesse de Berry or even his uncle Louis-Antoine, Duc d'Angouleme replacing her. A little known fact is the Duc d'Angouleme became enamored with the British style of government during his time in Britain. I'm actually working on a timeline about this topic so any response or help is appreciated.
 
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