- Charles Juste de Beauvau
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Charles Juste Prince of Beauvau Charles Juste by Elise Bruyère Spouse(s) Marie Charlotte de La Tour d'Auvergne Issue Anne Louise Marie, Princess of Poix Full name Charles Juste de Beauvau Father Marc de Beauvau Mother Anne Marguerite de Ligneville Born 10 August 1720
Lunéville, Lorraine, FranceDied 21 May 1793 (aged 72)
Hôtel de Beauvau, Paris, FranceCharles Juste de Beauvau (10 September 1720 – 21 May 1793), 2nd Prince of Beauvau (1754), Marshal of France (1783) was a French scholar, nobleman and general. The son of Marc de Beauvau, he was also brother to Madame de Boufflers and through her uncle to the poet Stanislas de Boufflers.
Contents
Biography
Charles Juste was born at the Hôtel de Beauvau-Craon in Lunéville, capital of the Duchy of Lorraine. His family were the most powerful in Lorraine after the ruling Duke of Lorraine.
His mother, Anne Marguerite de Ligneville, was the mistress of Leopold, Duke of Lorraine, husband of Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans (niece of Louis XIV). He was the thirteenth of twenty children.
He married twice; firstly on 3 April 1745 to Marie Charlotte de La Tour d'Auvergne (20 December 1729–6 September 1763), daughter of Emmanuel Théodose de La Tour d'Auvergne and his last wife Louise Henriette Françoise de Lorraine. The couple had one child who married into the Noailles family. His first wife Marie Charlotte died of Smallpox aged 33.
Marie Charlotte died in 1763. The next year, on 14 March, he married again; this time to Marie Charlotte Sylvie de Rohan-Chabot, a cousin of Charles, Prince of Soubise. The couple had no children Marie Charlotte Sylvie outliving her husband till 1807.
He entered military service for France and was made a lieutenant of the Calvary on 10 December 1738; colonel of the guard (Lorraine) on 1 May 1740 and distinguished himself under the leadership of the Duke of Belle-Isle at the Siege of Prague in 1742. Created a Brigadier on 16 May 1746 he was later created a Field marshal on 10 May 1748. He was later elevated to Lieutenant General on 28 December 1758. He gained further distinction in 1762 while serving in Spain.
He was named the Governor of Languedoc on 12 June 1747, he was later created the governor of Provence.
A Grandee of Spain, first class from 11 May 1754, he became a Knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit, the highest decoration in Ancien régime France (1 January 1757).
He had dealings with the Académie française. He kept a fashionable salon, keeping company with the likes of Jean Devaines, the philosopher Jean-François Marmontel, the poet Jean François de Saint-Lambert as well as his nephew Stanislas de Boufflers.
He was created a Marshal of France in 1783. In 1789, he served in the Secretary of State for War for six months. A supporter of reforms, he was untroubled by the French Revolution and died in his bed at the height of the Reign of Terror.
The maréchal de Beauvau, died at the hôtel de Beauvau, his Parisian residence on the Place Beauvau, named after him. The hôtel was built by the architect Nicolas Le Camus de Mézières around 1770 for Charles Juste. The hôtel de Beauvau has housed the Ministry of the Interior since 1861. He owned the Château du Val at Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a property later acquired by Benjamin Franklin.
His nephew Marc Étienne Gabriel de Beauvau (1773–1849) became the next Prince of Beauvau.
The present Noailles duc de Mouchy is a direct descendant of Charles Juste.
Issue
Anne Louise Marie de Beauvau, Mademoiselle de Beauvau (1 April 1750 – 20 November 1834) married Philippe Louis de Noailles and had issue.
References
- "Charles Juste de Beauvau", in Marie-Nicolas Bouillet and Alexis Chassang (eds.), Dictionnaire universel d'histoire et de géographie, 1878
External links
Académie Française Seat 28 Jean Louis Guez de Balzac (1634) · Hardouin de Péréfixe de Beaumont (1654) · François de Harlay de Champvallon (1671) · André Dacier (1695) · Guillaume Dubois (1722) · Charles Jean François Hénault (1723) · Charles Juste de Beauvau (1771) · Philippe-Antoine Merlin de Douai (1803) · Antoine François Claude Ferrand (1816) · Casimir Delavigne (1825) · Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve (1844) · Jules Janin (1870) · John Lemoinne (1875) · Ferdinand Brunetière (1893) · Henri Barboux (1907) · Henry Roujon (1911) · Louis Barthou (1918) · Claude Farrère (1935) · Henri Troyat (1959) · Jean Christophe Rufin (2008)
Categories:- 1720 births
- 1793 deaths
- Members of the Académie française
- Marshals of France
- Beauvau family
- Governors of Provence
- Recipients of the Order of the Holy Spirit
- Princes of Beauvau-Craon
- French nobility
- People from Lunéville
- Noblemen of France
- Members of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres
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