- Louis de Brézé, seigneur d'Anet
Louis de Brézé, seigneur d'Anet and comte de Maulevrier (died
July 23 ,1531 ) was a French nobleman, the grandson of King Charles VII of France by his natural daughter with his mistressAgnes Sorel .Birthright, marriage, political intrigues
Louis was the son of Jacques de Brézé,
Sénéchal of Normandy, and Charlotte de France, the middle of the king's three daughters byAgnès Sorel . His paternal grandfather wasPierre de Brézé , who had built a Gothic château near the foundation of the dismantled "donjon " of Anet. This Louis inherited at his father's death in 1490. Louis's first wife was Catherine de Dreux.He married
Diane de Poitiers onMarch 29 ,1515 , and they had two daughters. Louis was much older than Diane, but they were loyal to one another and had a happy marriage until his death. [Wilson, Katharina M. (1991). "An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers", p. 994. Garland Publishing, Inc. ISBN 0824085477.] He was influential at court, being named Sénéchal of Normandy and Master of the Hunt. His home was the family seat, theChâteau d'Anet , which stood in a royal hunting preserve in the valley of theEure .In 1523, Louis discovered a plot against King Francis I. He did not know at the time that his father-in-law,
Jean de Poitiers, Seigneur de Saint Vallier , was involved in the plot. Louis was condemned to death over that involvement, but reprieved by the king due to his having no direct involvement.Before his death in 1531, Louis encouraged the marriage of Prince Henry to the Pope's great-niece,
Catherine de' Medici , thus setting up the triangle that was to continue until Henry's death, with his widow, Diane de Poitiers, becoming Henry's mistress. For Diane King Henry II rebuilt the oldChâteau d'Anet , which became one of the firstFrench Renaissance châteaux, and she would be entrusted with much of the management of royal court business.The tomb that Diane erected for Louis in the cathedral of
Rouen was one of the early projects of the great French Renaissance sculptor,Jean Goujon . [Blunt, Anthony, and Beresford, Richard (1999). "Art and Architecture in France, 1500-1700", pp. 77-78. Yale University Press. ISBN 0300077483.]References
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