François de Montmorency-Bouteville

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François de Montmorency, comte de Bouteville et de Luxé, by Dumonstier

François de Montmorency-Bouteville (1600 – 22 June 1627) was the second son of Louis de

Senlis. He served with distinction at the sieges of Saint-Jean-d'Angély, Montauban, Royan and Montpellier
.

After fighting a

Louis XIII. Eventually Louis XIII let it be known that Montmorency-Bouteville could return to France, but not to Paris or the court.[3]

François d'Harcourt Beuvron, a relative of Thorigny, was determined to avenge Thorigny's death. At the insistence of Louis XIII, a dinner of reconciliation was arranged in Brussels, but failed, and afterward Beuvron issued a challenge. On 12 May 1627 at the

Place de Grève in Paris on 22 June 1627.[6]

His posthumous son,

Adolf Friedrich I
).

Notes

  1. ^ Alix, Frederic (1911). Les abbés du prieuré Saint-Etienne du Plessis-Grimoult, ordre de Saint-Augustin au diocèse de Bayeux [The Abbots of St. Stephen's Priory in Le Plessis-Grimoult, Ordre of St. Augustin in the diocese of Bayeux] (in French). Revue d'histoire de l'Église de France. pp. 728–733.
  2. ^ Clémencet 1818, p. 63.
  3. ^ a b Levi 2000, pp. 104–105
  4. ^ Anselme 1712, p. 657 (Jacques de Matignon, son of Charles de Matignon, Comte de Thorigny  [fr ]).
  5. ^ Salabéry 1834, p. 546; Edwards 1893, p. 349.
  6. ^ Clémencet 1818, p. 63; Levi 2000, p. 106.

References