Jump to content

Luynes, Indre-et-Loire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by YurikBot (talk | contribs) at 23:08, 28 August 2006 (robot Modifying: fr:Luynes (37230)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Luynes, Indre-et-Loire
Location of
Map
CountryFrance
ArrondissementTours
CantonLuynes
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code

Luynes is a commune of the Indre-et-Loire département in France.

French nobility

Luynes is a territorial name belonging to a noble French house. The family of Albert, which sprang from Thomas Alberti (d. 1455), seigneur de Boussargues, bailli of Viviers and Valence, and mguier of Bagnols and Pont-Saint-Esprit in Languedoc, acquired the estate of Luynes in the 16th century.

Honoré d'Albert (d. 1592), seigneur de Luynes, was in the service of the three last Valois kings and of Henry IV of France, and became colonel of the French bands, commissary of artillery in Languedoc and governor of Beaucaire. He had three sons:

By her marriage with Claude of Lorraine, duke of Chevreuse, Marie de Rohan, the widow of the first duke of Luynes, acquired in 1655 the duchy of Chevreuse, which she gave in 1663 to Louis Charles d'Albert, her son by her first husband; and from that time the title of duke of Chevreuse and duke of Luynes was borne by the eldest sons of the family of Luynes, which also inherited the title of duke of Chaulnes on the extinction of the descendants of Honoré d'Albert in 1698. The branch of the dukes of Luxemburg-Piney became extinct in 1697.

Charles (1578-1621) was the first duke of Luynes.

His brother Honoré (1581-1649), first duke of Chaulnes, was governor of Picardy and marshal of France (1619), and defended his province successfully in 1625 and 1635. Louis Auguste d'Albert d'Ailly (1676-1744), duke of Chaulnes, also became marshal of France (1741). Louis Joseph d'Albert de Luynes (1670-1750), prince of Grimberghen, was in the service of the Emperor Charles VII, and became field-marshal and ambassador in France.

Several members of the family of Albert were distinguished in letters and science. Louis Charles d'Albert (1620-1690), duke of Luynes, son of the constable, was an ascetic writer and friend of the Jansenists; Paul d'Albert de Luynes (1703-1788), cardinal and archbishop of Sens, an astronomer; Michel Ferdinand d'Albert d'Ailly (1714-1769), duke of Chaulnes, a writer on mathematical instruments, and his son Marie Joseph Louis (1741-1793), a chemist; and Honoré Theodore Paul Joseph (1802-1867), duke of Luynes, a writer on archaeology.

References

  • For the first duke see Recueil des pieces les plus curieuses qui ont este faites pendant le regne du connestable M. de Luynes (2nd ed., 1624)
  • Le Vassor, Histoire de Louis XIII (Paris, 1757)
  • Henri Griffet, Histoire du regne de Louis XIII, roi de France et de Navarre (Paris, 1758)
  • V. Cousin, Le Duc et connetable de Luynes, in Journal des savants (1861-1863)
  • B. Zeller, Études critiques sur le règne de Louis XIII: le connetable de Luynes, Montauban et la Valteline (Paris, 1879)
  • E. Pavie, La Guerre entre Louis XIII et Marie de Medicis (Paris, 1899)
  • Lavisse, Histoire de France, vi.2, 141-216 (Paris, 1905).
  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)