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  1. Mathieu Jean Felicité de Montmorency, duc de Montmorency-Laval (10 July 1767 – 24 March 1826) was a French statesman during the French Revolution and Bourbon Restoration. He was elected as the youngest member of the National Assembly in 1789.

  2. When Mathieu I de Montmorency was born about 1090, in Montmorency, Val-d'Oise, Île-de-France, France, his father, Sgr. Bouchard IV de Montmorency, was 21 and his mother, Dame Agnès De Beaumont Sur Oise, De Conflans, was 18. He married Alice Fitzroy in 1126, in Montmorency, Seine-et-Oise, France. They were the parents of at least 5 sons.

  3. 23 de dic. de 2012 · As such, he is sometimes called Mathieu de Montmorency-Laye or simply Mathieu de Laye. Bio: Born in AD 1189, Matthew is a scion of a prominent line of the French nobility, the House of Montmorency , whose ancestral home lies some ten miles outside of Paris, in the province known as the Île-de-France .

  4. Matthieu I of Montmorency received in 1138 the post of constable, and died in 1160. His first wife was Aline, a natural daughter of Henry I of England ; his second, Adelaide de Maurienne , widow of Louis VI and mother of Louis VII , and according to Duchesne , he shared the regency of France with Suger , during the absence of the latter king on the Second Crusade .

  5. Matthieu Ier de Montmorency (c. 1100 1160) was lord of Montmorency, of Écouenof Marly le Roi, in Conflans Sainte Honorine and Attichy. He was also Constable of France from 1138 to 1160 under Louis VII.

  6. Matthew II or Mathieu II (died 24 November 1230), called the Great or the Great Constable, was lord of Montmorency from 1189 and Constable of France from 1218 to 1230. Matthew was the son of Bouchard V de Montmorency and Lauretta de Hainaut, [1] daughter of Baldwin IV of Hainault. His paternal grandparents were Matthieu I of Montmorency ...

  7. El antiguo castillo de Montmorency en 1708. La Casa de Montmorency fue una de las más antiguas, ilustres y prestigiosas dinastías feudales de la alta nobleza francesa. Siempre fueron considerados en el primer lugar de la jerarquía nobiliaria de Francia, luego de la Casa Real.