Emmanuel de Crussol, 15th Duke of Uzès (19 July 1927 – 8 September 1999) was a French aristocrat who worked in Morocco as a chemical engineer.
[3] His father died in 1929, just two years after his birth, and he succeeded to the dukedom of Crussol, traditionally vested to the heir apparent of the Dukes of Uzès.
[14] He spoke English, French and Spanish fluently, and had lived in the United States, France, Morocco, Egypt and the Dominican Republic liked to vacation in Austria and Switzerland and visit England where he stayed at Claridge's.
The Duke owned a four-bedroom apartment in Paris (off the Avenue Foch in the 16th arrondissement), a home in Rabat, and his family's ancestral castle, the Château du Duché, in the town of Uzès.
The Duke, who considered himself a liberal, "supported President Charles de Gaulle's decision to get out of Algeria for both practical and idealistic reasons" stating "After all, it was a colonial occupation, and, of course, oppressive".
[14] Before the marriage was annulled in Paris in 1947, they were the parents of:[3] He later had other children, but illegitimate After their divorce, Carolyn remarried to Geoffrey Carpenter Doyle, of Santurce, Puerto Rico and Southampton, New York,[3][16] in 1949.