However, Henry, the grandson of Charles X, Earl of Chamberlain, died. According to the French law of succession based on Salix, the priority of succession to the throne should be given to the next of kin of Count Chamberlain. Ironically, Philip, the Earl of Paris, the head of the branch of Orleans at that time. Patriarchal supporters did not want to merge with Orleans, so they did not hesitate to deny the legitimacy of the decision of King Philip V of Spain to give up the right to inherit the French throne and set up a count's cousin in Spain. Carlos, the leader of the Spanish throne, appointed Juan, Count of Mortison, as their leader.
Because the legitimacy of Count Mortenson's succession to the French throne was questioned, many main royalists turned to support the Orleans. In addition, the great-grandson of Count Mortison died childless in 1936, and the unpopular Spanish King Alfonso XIII became the leader of the main faction, making the Orlean branch the mainstream of Bourbon royalists.
The leaders of today's patriarchy are Anjou and Louis Alfonso Bourbon Pierre, Duke of Cadiz, the eldest son of Spanish King Alfonso XIII. The Orleans sent the Earl of Paris, Henri Robert de Bourbon, the sixth generation grandson of French King Louis-Philippe.
1975, Juan Carlos I, a member of the Bourbon-Palma family, ascended the throne, announcing the third restoration of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain. On June 9, 2065438, Juan Carlos I officially abdicated, and his eldest son was felipe vi. Princess leonor, Felipe's eldest daughter, became the heir to the Spanish throne.