Arcadie Meyer, Baroness of Eppinghoven, born Marie-Anne Arcadie Eugénie Claret (30 May 1826 – 13 January 1897), was a Belgians Nobility and the Royal mistress of Leopold I, King of the Belgians for more than twenty years,
On 14 November 1849 in Liège, Meyer gave birth to a son, George Georges-Frédéric Ferdinand Meyer (1849–1904). In 1850, she moved to Wiesbaden, Electorate of Hesse to escape the public scrutiny that had grown unbearable. After the king's wife, Queen Louise (1812–1850) died, Meyer returned to Brussels in 1851 and started to conduct herself and her affair more discreetly. She moved out of the house on the Rue Royale and bought the Château of Stuyvenberg with the king's financial aid. Her new home was closer to the royal family's residence, the Palace of Laeken, and Leopold visited her and their children almost every day. On 25 September 1852, Meyer had a second son, Arthur von Eppinghoven (1852–1940).
The relationship of Arcadie Claret/Meyer and King Leopold lasted until his death on 10 December 1865, for 20 to 23 years. The king wanted to secure the position and livelihood of his mistress and children after his death. In 1851, he sold Meyer an estate in Monheim am Rhein, Kingdom of Prussia with a house and 170 Hectare (420 Acre) of land. The estate had previously been the farm of the nearby abbey called Eppinghoven. King Leopold wanted to bestow a title on his unofficial family and create them Baron of Eppinghoven, which the Belgian parliament refused to approve. In the end, in 1862, Leopold's nephew, Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha granted the hereditary title to two sons, and in 1863 to their mother, too.
|
|