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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 I de Lorraine, cardinal de Guise (born Oct. 21, 1527—died May 29, 1578) was the brother of François, 2nd duc de Guise. Named bishop of Troyes (1545) and of Albi (1550), he became in 1553 “cardinal de Guise”—to distinguish him from his brother, the eminent Charles, cardinal de Lorraine ( q.v. ). Unlike his brothers, he preferred ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. After an apparent reconciliation between the French King and the Duke, King Henry III had both the Duke of Guise and his brother, Louis of Lorraine, Cardinal of Guise (1555–1588), murdered in December 1588 during a meeting in the Royal Chateau at Blois.

  4. 2 de dic. de 2020 · Louis de Lorraine (October 21, 1527, Joinville, Champagne – March 29, 1578, Paris) was the fourth son of Claude, Duke of Guise and Antoinette de Bourbon, and the younger brother of Charles of Guise, Cardinal of Lorraine. He was the nephew of Cardinal Jean de Lorraine. He is sometimes known as the cardinal de Guise.

  5. He is also listed as Louis I de Lorraine, cardinal de Guise. His last name is also listed as De Guise Lorraine. Nephew of Cardinal Jean de Lorraine (1518). Brother of Cardinal Charles I de Guise de Lorraine (1547). Uncle of Cardinal Louis II de Guise (1578). Grand-uncle of Cardinal Louis III de Guise (1615). Education.

  6. Louis de Lorraine, cardinal de Guise et prince-évêque de Metz was a French Roman Catholic cardinal and Bishop during the Italian Wars and French Wars of Religion. The third son of Claude, Duke of Guise and Antoinette de Bourbon he was destined from a young age for a church career.

  7. To regain control, Henry III of France arranged the assassination of Henri and his brother Louis, the cardinal of Guise. In the 1600s the Guise-Lorraine family gradually lost political influence, although it held on to its wealth and its church offices.