Jacqueline de Longwy

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Jacqueline de Longwy
Duchess of Montpensier
suo jure Countess of Bar-sur-Seine
Jeanne of Angoulême

Jacqueline de Longwy, Countess of Bar-sur-Seine (before 1520 – 28 August 1561), Duchess of Montpensier, Dauphine of Auvergne was a French noblewoman, and a half-niece of King

Louis III de Bourbon, Duke of Montpensier, and the mother of his six children. She had the office of Première dame d'honneur to the queen dowager regent of France, Catherine de' Medici
, from 1560 until 1561.

Family

Jacqueline was born on an unknown date sometime before 1520, the youngest daughter of

Jeanne of Angoulême
, Countess of Bar-sur-Seine (c.1490- after 1531/1538), the illegitimate half-sister of King Francis I of France.

Jacqueline had two older sisters. The eldest, Françoise de Longwy, Dame de Pagny and de Mirebeau (c.1510- after 14 April 1561), married firstly in 1526,

Philippe de Chabot, Seigneur De Brion, Count of Charny and Buzançois, Admiral of France, and secondly in 1545, Jacques de Perusse, Seigneur d'Escars, by whom she had a son, Cardinal Anne d'Escars de Givry. Her second eldest sister was Claude Louise de Longwy, Abbess of Jouarre
.

Jacqueline's paternal uncle was

Bishop of Amiens
. Her paternal grandparents were Philippe de Longwy, Seigneur of Pagny and Jeanne de Bauffremont, Dame de Mirebeau. Her maternal grandparents were
Charles, Count of Angoulême and his mistress Antoinette de Polignac, Dame de Combronde, who was a lady-in-waiting to the Count of Angoulême's wife, Louise of Savoy. Antoinette (born c.1460) was the daughter of Foucaud de Polignac, Seigneur des Fontaines and Agnès de Chabanais.

Marriage

In 1538, Jacqueline married Louis III de Bourbon-Montpensier,

Emperor Charles V
.

Court career

Jacqueline de Longwy was introduced at court early on, which she attended from 1533 onward. She served as

Fille d’honneur to Eleanor of Austria in 1533-38, as Dame after her marriage in 1538-43; served as Dame to Mary Stuart in 1560, and subsequently appointed Première dame d'honneur to Catherine de' Medici in succession to Françoise de Brézé, when Catherine became regent and was able to appoint her own household.[2]

She was a personal friend of

Antoine de Bourbon to relinquish his claims to the regency of Charles in favor of Catherine de' Medici.[2]

Countess of Bar-sur-Seine

Jacqueline succeeded to the title of suo jure Countess of Bar-sur-Seine upon her mother's death, which occurred on an unknown date sometime after 1531/1538. Her father's titles had passed to her eldest sister, Françoise upon his death in 1520.

In 1543, the dauphinate of

Catherine de Medici to judge the case of misconduct against Mademoiselle de Rohan, a member of the royal family, who was pregnant by the Duke of Nemours under promise of marriage. Three years later, in 1559, Jacqueline and her husband attended the magnificent coronation of King Francis II and Mary, Queen of Scots
.

Death

She died in Paris on 28 August 1561. She had been the Duchess of Montpensier for less than two months.

Through her daughter, Charlotte, Jacqueline was an ancestress of the

British Royal Family
.

Issue

The marriage of Jacqueline and Louis produced one son and five daughters:

  1. François de Bourbon, Duke of Montpensier (1542- 4 June 1592), married in 1566, Renée d'Anjou, Marquise de Mézières (21 October 1550- 1597), daughter of Nicolas d'Anjou, Marquis de Mézières and Gabrielle de Mareuil, by whom he had one son, Henri de Bourbon, Duke of Montpensier.
  2. Françoise de Bourbon (1539–1587), in 1559 married Henri Robert de La Marck (
    Sedan
  3. Anne de Bourbon (1540 1577), in 1561 married François de Cleves,
    Duke of Nevers
  4. Jeanne de Bourbon, Abbess of Jouarre (1541–1620)
  5. Charlotte de Bourbon (1547- 5 May 1582),
    William The Silent of Nassau, Prince of Orange
    , by whom she had six daughters
  6. Louise de Bourbon, Abbess of Faremoutier (1548–1586)

In art

Jacqueline de Longwy's portrait was drawn in 1550 by French painter François Clouet.

Notes

  1. ^ a b Couchman 1997, p. 104.
  2. ^ a b McIlvenna 2016, p. 48.

References

  • Couchman, Jane (1997). "Charlotte of Bourbon's Correspondence: Using Words to Implement Emancipation". In Winn, Colette H.; Kuizenga, Donna (eds.). Women Writers in Pre-revolutionary France: Strategies of Emancipation. Garland Publishing Inc.
  • McIlvenna, Una (2016). Scandal and Reputation at the Court of Catherine de Medici. Routledge.48

Further reading

Court offices
Preceded by Première dame d'honneur to Catherine de' Medici
1560–1561
Succeeded by