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  1. François III de Longueville (1535–1551) was the eldest son of Louis II d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville and Marie de Guise. He succeeded his father, who died on 9 June 1537, to the duchy of Longueville.

  2. François Ier d'Orléans, de la maison capétienne Orléans-Longueville, ( 1447 – 1491 ), est pair de France, comte de Dunois, de Longueville, et de Tancarville, baron de Varenguebec, vicomte de Melun, seigneur de Parthenay, de Beaugency, de Château-Renault, gouverneur du Dauphiné et de Normandie, connétable et chambellan de ...

  3. François d'Orléans-Longueville, duc de Fronsac. François III dOrléans (1570 – 1631), Duke of Château-Thierry and of Fronsac, Count of Saint-Pol was governor of Orléans, Blois and Tours and a general of the French Wars of Religion. He was the second born son of Eleonor of Neuchâtel .

    • Family
    • Infancy
    • Marriage
    • Widowhood
    • Issue
    • Sources

    Her paternal grandparents were Louis d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville, Sovereign Count of Neuchâtel, Prince of Chatel-Aillon, and Princess Johanna of Baden-Hachberg, Sovereign Countess of Neuchâtel and Margravine of Rothelin, and her maternal grandparents were Charles de Rohan, Viscount of Fronsac and Jeanne de Saint-Séverin. Françoise had an older b...

    Françoise was born on 5 April 1549 in Châteaudun, France. She was the only daughter of François d'Orléans, Marquis of Rothelin, and Jacqueline de Rohan. Her father had died on 25 October 1548, less than six months before her birth. From birth she was known as Mademoiselle de Longueville.

    On 8 November 1565, in the Château de Vendôme, Françoise married Louis I de Bourbon, Prince of Condé, the youngest brother of King Antoine of Navarre and a Huguenot general. This made Francoise the sister-in-law of the powerful Jeanne d'Albret, who was queen regnant of Navarre and the spiritual leader of the Huguenots. Condé's first wife, Eléanor d...

    On 13 March 1569, in the Third War of Religion, Françoise's husband was slain at the Battle of Jarnac when the Huguenot army was defeated by the Catholic forces led by Marshal Gaspard de Saulx, sieur de Tavannes, and the Duke of Anjou, who would later rule as King Henry III. Queen Elizabeth I of England, herself being Protestant, promised to lend m...

    Françoise and Louis had: 1. Charles, Count of Soissons (3 November 1566 – 1 November 1612), married Anne de Montafié(1577–1644) 2. Louis de Bourbon (1567–1569), died in childhood. 3. Benjamin de Bourbon (1569–1573), died in childhood.

    Barbier, Jean Paul (2002). Ma bibliothèque Poétique(in French). Librairie Droz S.A.
    Quantin, Jean-Louis; Waquet, Jean-Claude (2007). Papes, princes et savants dans l'Europe moderne mélanges à la mémoire de Bruno Neveu(in French). Librairie Droz S.A.
    Reger, William (2016). The Limits of Empire: European Imperial Formations in Early Modern World History Essays in Honor of Geoffrey Parker. Taylor & Francis.
    Roelker, Nancy Lyman (1968). Queen of Navarre, Jeanne d'Albret, 1528-1572. Harvard University Press.
  4. François d'Orléans, 1st Duke of Longueville (1470 – 12 February 1513) was the 1st Duke of Longueville and head of the Longueville cadet branch of the House of Valois. In 1505, Louis XII of France created him a duke. Marriage.

  5. Introduction. François d'Orléans-Longueville, duc de Fronsac. French noble / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. François III d’Orléans (1570 – 1631), Duke of Château-Thierry and of Fronsac, Count of Saint-Pol was governor of Orléans, Blois and Tours and a general of the French Wars of Religion.

  6. Francisco II de Orléans-Longueville ( circa 1481 - Châteaudun, 15 de febrero de 1513 ), 1 2 duque de Longueville, fue un poderoso caballero francés de una rama bastarda de los Capetos, la Orléans-Longueville . Vida.