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  1. 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.

  2. Lords, Marquesses and Dukes of Elbeuf. The Seigneurie of Elbeuf, later a marquisate, dukedom, and peerage, was based on the territory of Elbeuf in the Vexin, possessed first by the Counts of Valois and then the Counts of Meulan before passing to the House of Harcourt. In 1265, it was erected into a seigneurie for them.

  3. Charles I de Lorraine, duc d'Elbeuf 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 his succession to the Rieux inheritance made him important.

  4. No longer welcome at court, he and his brother Charles, Duke of Mayenne decided to crusade against the Ottoman Empire in Hungary. In September 1568, he reached his majority, just as Charles returned to the centre of French politics with his readmission to the Privy Council. [11]

  5. 6 de sept. de 2020 · The third Duke of Elbeuf, Charles III (1620-1692), himself never rose to great prominence. He spent much of his time living in his provincial governorship of Picardy (to which had been added Artois, Boulonnais, and the other ‘Pays Conquis’, lands acquired from the Spanish in the 1650s).

  6. Entre sus títulos nobiliarios estaban los de conde de Armañac, conde de Brionne, vizconde de Marsán, caballero de la Orden del Espíritu Santo, gran escudero de Francia, senescal de Borgoña y comandante de Cerdeña. Sus padres fueron Charles, Duque de Elbeuf y la condesa de Charny, Marguerite de Chabot. 1 .

  7. Charles II, Duke of Elbeuf (5 November 1596 – 5 November 1657), was a French nobleman, the son of Charles I, Duke of Elbeuf, by his wife, Marguerite de Chabot. He succeeded his father in the Elbeuf dukedom ( Elbœuf is an alternate, anglicized spelling) in 1605.