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  1. Charles de Lorraine (17 February 1524 – 26 December 1574), Duke of Chevreuse, was a French Cardinal, a member of the powerful House of Guise. He was known at first as the Cardinal of Guise, and then as the second Cardinal of Lorraine , after the death of his uncle, Jean, Cardinal of Lorraine (1550).

  2. 21 de may. de 2018 · It was he who established the eminence of the Guises. In 1513 Claude married Antoinette de Bourbon, sister of Charles, Duke of Vend ô me. Among their 12 children were Francis, second Duke of Guise; Charles, Cardinal de Lorraine; Louis, Cardinal de Guise; Ren é, Marquis d'Elbeuf; and Mary, mother of Mary Stuart of Scotland.

  3. Charles I de Lorraine. Charles I de Lorraine, duc d'Elbeuf ( Joinville, 18 October 1556 – Moulins, 4 August 1605) was a French noble, military commander and governor during the French Wars of Religion. The son of the most minor cadet house of the children of Claude, Duke of Guise, Elbeuf initially lacked the prominence of his cousins, however ...

  4. Charles de Lorraine, duc de Mayenne (26 March 1554 –3 October 1611) [1] was a French noble, governor, military commander and rebel during the latter French Wars of Religion. Born in 1554, the second son of François de Lorraine, duke of Guise and Anne d'Este, Mayenne inherited his fathers' position of Grand Chambellan in 1563 upon his death.

  5. Not long after the Death of Charles, his Son Henry Duke of Guise appears upon the Stage of the World, newly returned from Poland, whither he went to serve his first Apprenticeship in Page 7 War; first at Saumur, next at the Seige of Poitiers, which he de∣fended against the Admiral Coligny, (for the War now broke forth again between the ...

  6. 17 de ene. de 2024 · Louise of Guise (10 January 1520, Bar-le-Duc – 18 October 1542), married Charles I, Duke of Arschot on 20 February 1541 . Renée of Guise (2 September 1522 – 3 April 1602), Abbess of St. Pierre, Reims . Charles, Duke of Chevreuse, Archbishop of Reims and Cardinal of Guise (1524–1574) Claude, Duke of Aumale (1526–1573)

  7. Guise sent his cousin Charles, Duke of Aumale, to lead a rising in Picardy (which could also support the retreat of the Spanish Armada). Alarmed, Henry III ordered Guise to remain in Champagne; he defied the king and on 9 May 1588 Guise entered Paris, bringing to a head his ambiguous challenge to royal authority in the Day of the Barricades and forcing King Henry to flee.