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  1. Louis de Lorraine, cardinal de Guise et prince-évêque de Metz (21 October 1527, in Joinville, Champagne – 29 March 1578, in Paris) was a French Roman Catholic cardinal and Bishop during the Italian Wars and French Wars of Religion.

    • 29 March 1578
    • Metz
  2. Louis de Lorraine (21 October 1527, Joinville, Champagne – 29 March 1578, Paris) was a French Roman Catholic cardinal and Bishop of Metz. He was the nephew of Cardinal Jean de Lorraine. Louis is sometimes known as the cardinal de Guise.

    • Male
    • Q898203?
    • Louis I de Lorraine, cardinal de Guise
  3. : 277–278 Guise's brother, Louis II, Cardinal of Guise, was likewise assassinated the next day. The deed aroused such outrage among the remaining relatives and allies of Guise that Henry III was forced to take refuge with Henry of Navarre.

  4. Louis I of Bar (between 1370 and 1375 – 23 June 1430) was a French bishop of the 15th century and the de jure Duke of Bar from 1415 to 1430, ruling from the 1420s alongside his grand-nephew René of Anjou . Life. He was a son of Robert I of Bar and his wife Marie Valois, (daughter of John II of France ). [1] .

  5. On December 23, 1588, at the Château de Blois, Guise was summoned to attend the king, and was at once assassinated. His brother Louis II, Cardinal of Guise was assassinated the next day. The deed aroused such outrage among the remaining relatives and allies of Guise that Henry III was forced to take refuge with Henry of Navarre.

  6. Henry, 3rd Duke of Guise (January 31, 1550 – December 23, 1588) was the son of Francis, Duke of Guise. Following the death of his father he became one of the leaders of the Catholic faction in the French Wars of Religion , and he was prominent in the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre in 1572 .

  7. 3 de feb. de 2019 · Entre saint Louis et son frère les différences l'emportent. Pour la chronologie et pour la diplomatique. La chancellerie royale a amorti des biens d'église, non seulement à l'occasion des passages outre-mer de 1248 et 1270, mais pendant la plupart des autres années, avec une recrudescence en 1255-1257, période vide pour la chancellerie alphonsine.