- Charles Henri, Prince of Commercy
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Charles Henri Prince of Commercy
Prince of VaudémontCharles Henri in 1708 Spouse Anne Elisabeth de Lorraine Issue Charles Thomas, Prince of Vaudémont Full name Charles Henri de Lorraine[1] House House of Lorraine Father Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine Mother Béatrice de Cusance Born 17 April 1649
Brussels, BelgiumDied 14 January 1723 (aged 73)
Château de Commercy, Lorraine, FranceCharles Henri of Lorraine (French pronunciation: [ʃaʁl ɑ̃ʁi pʁɛ̃s dy kɔmɛʁsi pʁɛ̃s dy vodemɔ̃]) (17 April 1649 – 14 January 1723) was the legitimated son of Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine, and Béatrix de Cusance. His was given the Principality of Commercy in 1708 by his cousin Leopold, Duke of Lorraine. He was also the Count of Falkenstein.[2]
Contents
Biography
Charles Henri was the third child and only surviving son of the second marriage of Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine (there had been no children from his first marriage). This second marriage, contracted while Duke Charles was in exile, was not canonically recognized because the separation between the duke and his first wife, Nicole de Lorraine, was not recognized as a valid annulment by the Holy See. Charles Henri's claim to inherit Lorraine was therefore disputed, and rule of the duchy had been obtained by his father's younger brother through French intervention. He was born in Brussels.
On 27 April 1669, in Bar-le-Duc, he married a cousin, Anne Elisabeth de Lorraine,[3] daughter of Charles de Lorraine, Duke of Elbeuf of the House of Guise. They had one son, Charles Thomas de Lorraine (1670–1704), who later took his father's non-territorial title, Prince of Vaudémont. This son was killed in battle near Ostiglia.
In exile like his father, Charles Henri served in the Spanish-Habsburg army against France, fighting in numerous battles. In 1675, he was made a knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece. He served in the Nine Years' War in Flanders under William III of England.
He was attached to the household of le Grand Dauphin along with his two nieces, the Princess of Epinoy and Béatrice Hiéronyme de Lorraine, future Abbess of Remiremont.
In 1698, he was appointed Governor of Milan.
In 1700, the last Habsburg king of Spain, Charles II, died. Charles was replaced by Louis XIV's grandson, Philip, Duke of Anjou, triggering the War of Spanish Succession in which the territory around Milan was one of the major battlefields.
The Prince of Vaudémont accepted the new king as sovereign of Lombardy, but he was not trusted: Saint Simon suggests he passed on military information to the enemy. It is a fact that his son, Charles Thomas, became an Austrian commander.
After the Battle of Turin, the French and Spanish were forced to withdraw from Italy, and Charles Henri signed a treaty with the Imperial commander, Prince Eugene of Savoy, putting Lombardy under Austrian rule.
In 1708, the Duke of Lorraine, his cousin Leopold, gave Charles Henri the minuscule principality of Commercy. He engaged the famous architect Germain Boffrand to build the beautiful château de Commercy. The principality was later given to Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans, widow of Leopold.
Charles Henri de Lorraine died at the château de Commercy at the age of seventy-three, his only son having predeceased him.
Issue
- Charles Thomas de Lorraine, Prince of Vaudémont (7 March 1670 – 12 May 1704) died unmarried.
Ancestry
Ancestors of Charles Henri, Prince of Commercy 16. Antoine, Duke of Lorraine 8. Francis I, Duke of Lorraine 17. Renée de Bourbon 4. Charles III, Duke of Lorraine 18. Christian II of Denmark 9. Christina of Denmark 19. Isabella of Austria 2. Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine 20. Francis I of France 10. Henry II of France 21. Claude of France 5. Claude of Valois 22. Lorenzo II de' Medici, Duke of Urbino 11. Catherine de' Medici 23. Madeleine de La Tour d'Auvergne 1. Charles Henri de Lorraine, Prince of Commercy 24. Claude II de Cusance 12. Evandelin Simon de Cusance 25. Philiberte de Lugny 6. Claude François de Cusance 26. François de Vergy 13. Béatrice de Vergy 27. Claudine de Pontailler 3. Béatrice de Cusance 28. Maximilian van Witthem, Viscount of Sebourg 14. Jean van Witthem, Viscount of Sebourg 29. Gillette van Halewyn, Heiress of Boesinghe 7. Ernestine van Witthem 30. Jean IX de Merode, Sire of Petershem 15. Maria Margareta de Merode 31. Mencia de Berghes Titles and styles
- 17 April 1649 – 7 March 1670 His Highness the Count of Vaudémont
- 7 March 1670 – 31 December 1707[4] His Highness the Prince of Vaudémont
- 31 December 1707 – 14 January 1723 His Highness the Prince of Commercy
References
- ^ Davies, Norman, Europe:A History, (Oxford University Press, 1996), 169; In the Middle Ages, the feudal nobility needed to associate themselves with the fief or landed property which justified their rank. As a result, they adopted place-named surnames using either a prefix such as von or di, or suffix, such as -ski. Hence the French prince Charles de Lorraine would be known in German as "Karl von Lotharingen" or in Polish as "Karol Lotarinski."
- ^ van de Pas, Leo. "Charles Henri de Lorraine". Genealogics.org. http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00012926&tree=LEO. Retrieved 2010-07-06.
- ^ Le grand dictionnaire historique, p. 411.
- ^ Table des traités entre la France et les puissances étrangères. http://books.google.com/books?id=YxoJAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA332&dq=principaut%C3%A9+de+Commercy&hl=fr&ei=zPExTPnlFMGBOLzPuM0E&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CDcQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=principaut%C3%A9%20de%20Commercy&f=false. Retrieved 2010-07-06.
See also
Princes of Lorraine The generations start from the children of Réné II 1st Generation Prince Charles* · Prince François* · Antoine, Duke of Lorraine · Prince Nicolas* · Claude, Duke of Guise · Jean, Cardinal of Lorraine* · Louis, Count of Vaudémont · Prince François*2nd Generation François I · Nicolas, Duke of Mercœur · Prince Jean · Prince Antoine · Francis, Duke of Guise · Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine* · Claude, Duke of Aumale · Louis, Cardinal of Guise* · René, Marquis of Elbeuf3rd Generation Charles III · Philippe Emmanuel, Duke of Mercœur · Henri, Duke of Guise · Charles, Duke of Aumale · Charles, Duke of Elbeuf4th Generation Henri II · Prince Charles* · François II · Charles, Duke of Mayenne · Prince Philippe Louis* · Charles, Duke of Guise · Charles, Duke of Elbeuf · Louis, Cardinal of Guise · Claude, Duke of Chevreuse · Prince François Alexandre5th Generation Prince Henri* · Charles IV · Nicolas François, Duke of Lorraine · Henri, Duke of Guise* · Louis, Duke of Joyeuse* · Henri, Count of Harcourt · Charles, Duke of Elbeuf* · Henri, Abbot of Hombliéres* · François Marie, Prince of Lillebonne* · François Louis, Count of Harcourt* · Louis, Count of Armagnac · Philippe, Chevalier de Lorraine6th Generation Ferdinand, Hereditary Prince* · Charles V · Charles Henri, Prince of Commercy* · Louis Joseph, Duke of Guise* · Alfonse Louis, Abbot of Royaumont* · Raimond Bérenger, Abbot of Faron de Meaux* · Henri, Duke of Elbeuf* · Emmanuel Maurice, Duke of Elbeuf* · Henri, Count of Brionne · Alphonse Henri, Count of Harcourt · Charles, Count of Marsan7th Generation Léopold I · Charles Joseph, Bishop of Olomouc* · Prince Charles Ferdinand* · Prince Joseph Innocent* · François Antoine, Abbot of Malmedy* · Charles Thomas, Prince of Vaudémont · François Joseph, Duke of Guise* · Henri, Count of Brionne · Charles, Count of Armagnac · Louis, Prince of Lambesc · Joseph, Count of Harcourt · Charles Louis, Count of Marsan8th Generation Louis, Hereditary Prince* · Louis, Hereditary Prince* · Léopold Clément, Hereditary Prince* · Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor · Prince Charles Alexandre* · Louis, Prince of Brionne · Gaston, Count of Marsan* · Camille, Prince of Marsan*9th Generation Charles Eugene, Prince of Lambesc, Duke of Elbeuf* · Joseph, Prince of Vaudémont*- died without surviving issue
Categories:- 1649 births
- 1723 deaths
- House of Lorraine
- French nobility
- People from Brussels
- Princes of Lorraine
- French military personnel of the War of the Spanish Succession
- Governors of the Duchy of Milan
- Princes of Vaudémont
- Recipients of the Order of the Golden Fleece
- Knights of the Golden Fleece
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