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  1. Charles de Lorraine. 1 reference. retrieved. 7 August 2020. WeRelate person ID. Charles_de_Lorraine_(10) 0 references. WikiTree person ID. Lorraine-274. subject named as.

  2. Charles made war on Hugh, even taking Rheims and Laon. However, on Maundy Thursday (26 March) 991, he was captured, through the perfidy of the Bishop Adalberon, and was imprisoned by Hugh in Orléans. He was succeeded as Duke of Lower Lorraine by his son Otto. There is uncertainty over the date and place of Charles' death.

  3. Charles of Lorraine’s was the governor of the Austrian Netherlands from 1744 to 1780, an intellectual, curious about science, and a connoisseur of Diderot and d’Alembert’s encyclopedia. He was interested in occultism, an art lover, and a passionate collector. Open each first Saturday of the month, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

  4. 22 de feb. de 2024 · History. Charles of Lorraine was the governor of the Austrian Netherlands from 1744 to 1780. He was an avid art and science enthusiast and collector. His palace, the construction of which started in 1757, later housed the Royal Library’s reading rooms and is now used for events and exhibitions. Events at this venue.

  5. Charles was born at Nancy, the capital of Lorraine. He was the second son of Duke Charles III and Claude de France, daughter of King Henry II. He studied at the University of Pont-à-Mousson, which his father had founded, and at the University of Trier before moving to the Sorbonne in Paris. Charles was marked out for a career in the church.

  6. The Palace of Charles of Lorraine ( French: Palais de Charles de Lorraine; Dutch: Paleis van Karel van Lotharingen) is a neoclassical palace in the Royal Quarter of Brussels, Belgium. Its construction started in 1757 to serve as the residence of the Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands, Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine, replacing the Palace ...

  7. Charles de Lorraine was a popular Governor-General of the Austrian Netherlands long before Belgium existed as a state (1744 -1780). What remains of his palace in Brussels has been carefully restored and recently reopened to the public. It now houses exhibitions of the Royal Library of Belgium, like the Bruegel exhibition we visited (on until 16 ...