- Source: Charles de Sainte-Maure, duc de Montausier
Charles de" target="_blank">de Sainte-Maure, duc de" target="_blank">de Montausier (6 October 1610 – 17 November 1690), was a French soldier and, from 1668 to 1680, the governor of the dauphin, the eldest son and heir of Louis XIV, King of France.
Biography
Charles was born on 6 October 1610, the second son of Léon de" target="_blank">de Sainte-Maure, Baron of Montausier. His parents were Huguenots, and he was educated at the Protestant Academy of Sedan under Pierre Du Moulin. He served brilliantly at the siege of Casale in 1629. Becoming baron de" target="_blank">de Montausier at the death of his elder brother in 1635, he was the recognised aspirant for the hand of Julie d'Angennes, the eldest daughter of the marquis and marquise de" target="_blank">de Rambouillet. Having served under Bernard of Saxe-Weimar in Germany in 1634, he returned to the French service in 1636, and fought in the Rhenish campaigns of the following years. He was taken prisoner on 25 November 1643 after the defeat of the French forces under the command of Josias von Rantzau in the Battle of Tuttlingen. He remained for ten months in captivity until payment of his ransom was made.
On his return to France, he became a lieutenant-general. On 15 July 1645, he married Julie d'Angennes, "the incomparable Julie", thus terminating a 14-year courtship famous in the annals of French literature because of the Guirlande de" target="_blank">de Julie, a garland of 61 madrigals by 19 poets, among them Montausier, Claude de" target="_blank">de Malleville, Georges de" target="_blank">de Scudéry, possibly Pierre Corneille (if Octave Uzanne is correct in the attribution of three of the six poems signed M.C.), Philippe Habert, Simon Arnauld de" target="_blank">de Pomponne, Jean Desmarets de" target="_blank">de Saint Sorlin, Antoine Gombaud (Le nain de" target="_blank">de la Princesse Julie) and others. It was copied by the famous calligraphist Nicolas Jarry in a magnificent manuscript, on each page of which was a flower painted by Nicolas Robert, and was presented to Julie on her fête day in 1641.
Montausier was named governor of Saintonge and Angoumois after the death of his uncle, the comte de" target="_blank">de Brassac, and became a Roman Catholic before his marriage. During the Fronde, he remained faithful to the Crown in spite of personal grievances against Mazarin. On the conclusion of peace in 1653, the marquis, who had been severely wounded in 1652, obtained high favour at court in spite of the roughness of his manners and the general austerity which made the Parisian public recognize him as the original of Alceste in Molière's Le Misanthrope.
Montausier received from Louis XIV the Order of the Saint Esprit and the government of Normandy. In 1664, the marquisate of Montausier was erected into a duché-pairie). In 1668, Montausier became the governor of the dauphin, a post he kept until 1680. He initiated the series of classics ad usum Delphini, directed by the learned Huet, and gave the closest attention to the education of his charge, who was moved by his iron discipline only to a hatred of learning. Montausier died on 17 November 1690.
Court gossip assigned part of Montausier's favour to the complaisance of his wife, who had been named gouvernante des enfants de" target="_blank">de France in 1661, at the time of the dauphin's birth, until 1664, when she was appointed lady-in-waiting to the queen, a position she used to facilitate Louis XIV's passion for Louise de" target="_blank">de la Vallière, and subsequently to protect Madame de" target="_blank">de Montespan, who found refuge from her husband with her.
Notes
References
(in French) Tellier, Jules (27 November 1887). "La Guirlande de" target="_blank">de Julie". Le Parti National: .
Attribution:
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Montausier, Charles de" target="_blank">de Sainte-Maure". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 760–761. Endnotes:
Petit, Pére Nicolas (1729). Vie du duc de" target="_blank">de Montausier.
Saint-Pierre, Puget de" target="_blank">de (1784). Histoire du duc de" target="_blank">de Montausier.
Roux, Amédée (1860). Un Misanthrope à la cour de" target="_blank">de Louis XIV. Montausier.
Uzanne, Octave (1875). La Guirlande de" target="_blank">de Julie.
Fléchier, Esprit (1691). Oraisons funébres du duc et de" target="_blank">de la duchesse de" target="_blank">de Montausier. Paris.
contemporary memoirs.
External links
Works by Charles de" target="_blank">de Sainte-Maure, duc de" target="_blank">de Montausier at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Charles de Sainte-Maure, duc de Montausier
- Catherine de Vivonne, marquise de Rambouillet
- Françoise-Athénaïs de Rochechouart, Marquise de Montespan
- Nicolas Jarry (calligrapher)
- Rambouillet
- November 17
- Maure (disambiguation)
- Charles Emmanuel de Crussol, 8th Duke of Uzès
- Charles d'Angennes
- October 6
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