Marie Joseph Anatole ÃÂlie de Riquet et de Caraman, 19th Prince de Chimay (4 July 1858 – 25 July 1937), known as Joseph de Caraman-Chimay, the younger, was a Belgian aristocrat and fencer. He was titled "Prince de Chimay" from 1892 until his death in 1937.
He was born to Joseph de Riquet, Prince de Chimay and Prince de Caraman (of Belgium), and Marie Joséphine Anatole de Montesquiou-Fézensac. Named for its Belgian "château de Chimay", his family was noted for its patronage of music and the arts. One of his sisters was ÃÂlisabeth de Riquet de Caraman-Chimay, the Countess .
In 1897, the Prince and Georges Clemenceau (then the President of the Council of Paris, later the Prime Minister of France), fought a duel with swords over an article published by Clemenceau in L'ÃÂcho de Paris. "Both were wounded simultaneously, Clemenceau receiving a gash in the right arm and the Prince a slight scratch on the shoulder."
The Prince de Chimay was a competitor representing France in the individual épée event at the 1900 Summer Olympics. In 1903, he was injured in a car accident near the village of Rocroi while trying to avoid a cyclist. The car he was in overturned and his chauffeur was killed while he was seriously injured.
In 1935, only his collection of art and historic documents and one wing of his château (which housed a theatre created by Madame Tallien, wife of the 16th Prince de Chimay) were saved when a fire burned the castle.
On 19 May 1890 he married sixteen-year-old American heiress Clara Ward, a daughter of Capt. Eber Brock Ward. Together, they were the parents of two children:
They were divorced on 19 January 1897, after Clara's widely publicized elopement with a gypsy violinist, Janos Rigo. In 1908, he attempted to obtain an annulment of his marriage from the Vatican. By a second marriage to Anne Marie Charlotte Amélie Gilone Le Veneur de Tillières (1889âÂÂ1962) on 24 June 1920, he had two more children:
The Prince de Chimay died on 25 July 1937 in Chimay, Hainaut, Belgium.