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  1. 18 de dic. de 2017 · This article examines a major figure of the court of Louis XIV who has never received a full academic study. It demonstrates how a royal favourite in a same-sex context in the early modern period can be analysed in a similar manner to more well-known royal mistresses, or “maitresses en titre”. It presents a thorough portrait of Prince Philippe of Lorraine, better known as the Chevalier de ...

  2. 27 de oct. de 2023 · Guise. Father. Henri de Lorraine, comte d'Harcourt. Mother. Marguerite-Philippe du Cambout. Philippe of Lorraine (1643 – 8 December 1702), known as the Chevalier de Lorraine, was a French nobleman and member of the House of Guise, cadet of the Ducal House of Lorraine. He was the renowned lover of Philippe I, Duke of Orléans, brother of Louis ...

  3. 1 de feb. de 2020 · Philippe de Lorraine-Armagnac, dit Chevalier de Lorraine (1673-1702), était un gentilhomme entreprenant indifféremment porté sur les hommes et les femmes. Il fut l'amant de Monsieur, duc d'Orléans et frère du roi Louis XIV. Il fut seigneur de Fromont de 1695 jusqu'à sa mort en 1702.

  4. 22 de sept. de 2021 · Philippe de Lorraine, known as the “Chevalier de Lorraine” was born in 1643. He was the son of Hen... The Chevalier De Lorraine - Lover of Philippe D'Orléans: .

    • 3 min
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    • The Kings of France
  5. Her arrival in November 1671 came just over a year after the death of Monsieur's first wife, Henrietta. The rumours that she had been poisoned by Monsieur's jealous lovers singled out the chevalier de Lorraine, exiled to Rome at Henriette's request. The court shuddered at the spectacle of royal mortality.

  6. 64. The Chevalier de Lorraine said he would renounce any grâces he might get from the king, on one condition from Monsieur: “de le déclarer publiquement pour son favori” (and Cosnac suspects that he was put up to this by the Abbé d’Effiat or the poet Benserade, since the Chevalier was not capable of “une telle politique”). 152.

  7. Originally styled the Chevalier de Guise, he succeeded as Duke of Chevreuse upon the death of his great-uncle Charles of Guise, Cardinal of Lorraine, a title he later resigned to his brother Claude. After his father's assassination in 1588, Charles succeeded him as Duke of Guise, but was kept in prison in Tours for three years, escaping in 1591.