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| 8 April 1595<br>[[Amiens]]<br>aged 26-27
| 8 April 1595<br>[[Amiens]]<br>aged 26-27
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|-
|width=auto| '''[[Henri II d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville|Henri II d'Orléans]]'''<br />1573&ndash;1595
|width=auto| '''[[Henri II d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville|Henri II d'Orléans]]'''<br />1595&ndash;1663
| [[File:Henri d'Orleans Duc de Longueville.jpg|100px|center]]
| [[File:Henri d'Orleans Duc de Longueville.jpg|100px|center]]
| 6 April 1595<br>only son of [[Henri I d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville|Henri I d'Orléans]] and [[Catherine Gonzaga (1568-1629)|Catherine Gonzaga]]
| 6 April 1595<br>only son of [[Henri I d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville|Henri I d'Orléans]] and [[Catherine Gonzaga (1568-1629)|Catherine Gonzaga]]

Revision as of 07:02, 15 July 2012

The title Duke of Longueville (Longueville-sur-Scie) was a French title of nobility, though not a peerage of France.

History

It was created in 1505 by King Louis XII of France for his first cousin once removed François d'Orléans, Count of Dunois, son of François d'Orléans, Count of Dunois, son of Jean d'Orléans, himself an illegitimate son of the Duke of Orléans. The title became extinct in 1694 following the death of Marie de Nemours. From 1648, Longueville was also Sovereign Prince of Neuchâtel, a Swiss territory. In 1654 the eighth duke was created a peer as Duke of Coulommiers but the peerage was never registered and so became extinct at his death.

Dukes of Longueville

Coat of arms of the Dukes of Longueville
  1. François II (1478–1513).
  2. Louis I (1480–1516) brother of the preceding.
  3. Claude (1508–1524) son of the preceding.
  4. Louis II (1510–1537) brother of the preceding.
  5. François III (1535–1551) son of the preceding.
  6. Léonor (1540–1573) first cousin of the preceding.
  7. Henri I (1568–1595) son of the preceding.
  8. Henri II (1595–1663) son of the preceding.
  9. Jean Louis Charles (1646–1668), son of the preceding. He resigned the title to his half-brother in 1668.
  10. Charles Paris (1668–1672) half-brother of the preceding. On his death the title went back to his half-brother.
  11. Jean Louis Charles (1672-1694).
Name Portrait Birth Marriages Death
Léonor d'Orléans
1551–1573
1540
eldest son of Françoise d'Orléans, Marquis de Rothelin and Jacqueline de Rohan
Marie, Duchess of Estouteville
1563
six children
7 August 1573
Blois
aged 32-33
Henri I d'Orléans
1573–1595
1568
eldest son of Léonor d'Orléans and Marie, Duchess of Estouteville
Catherine Gonzaga
1588
one son
8 April 1595
Amiens
aged 26-27
Henri II d'Orléans
1595–1663
6 April 1595
only son of Henri I d'Orléans and Catherine Gonzaga
(1) Louise de Bourbon
10 April 1617
three children
(2) Anne Geneviève de Bourbon
2 June 1642
four children
11 May 1663
aged 68
Jean Louis Charles d'Orléans
1663–1668
[1]
12 January 1646
eldest son of Henri II d'Orléans and Anne Geneviève de Bourbon
never married 2 April 1694
aged 48
Charles Paris d'Orléans
1668–1672
29 January 1649
Paris
youngest son of Henri II d'Orléans and Anne Geneviève de Bourbon
never married 12 June 1672
Crossing of the Rhine
aged 23
Jean Louis Charles d'Orléans
1672–1694
12 January 1646
eldest son of Henri II d'Orléans and Anne Geneviève de Bourbon
never married 2 April 1694
aged 48

Other members of the family

References

  1. ^ He resigned the title to his half-brother in 1668.