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Prince of Condé is a title in French peerage, attributed for the first time to Louis of Bourbon, brother of Antoine de Bourbon, Duke of Vendome and uncle of Henry IV of France.
Princes of Condé
- Louis I of Bourbon (d. 1569)
- Henry I of Bourbon (r.1569 - 1588)
- Henry II of Bourbon (r.1588 - 1646)
- Louis II of Bourbon the Great Condé (r.1646 - 1686)
- Henry III Jules of Bourbon (r.1686 - 1709)
- Louis III of Bourbon (r.1709 - 1710)
- Louis Henry I of Bourbon (r.1710 - 1740)
- Louis Joseph of Bourbon (r.1740 - 1818)
- Louis Henry II of Bourbon (r.1818 - 1830)
Louis Henry II's only legitimate son, the duke of Enghien, was executed at Vincennes in 1804, on Napoleon's order. Without other sons, brothers or cousins, the line of Bourbon-Condé came to an end with the death of Louis Henry in 1830.