Anne Jules de Noailles, 2nd Duke of Noailles
Anne Jules de Noailles, 2nd Duke of Noailles (5 February 1650 - 2 October 1708) was a French nobleman from the House of Noailles.[1] A well regarded military man of his day, he was a general under King Louis XIV of France and was later the subject of a painting by the famous court painter Hyacinthe Rigaud.
Anne Jules de Noailles | |
---|---|
2nd Duke of Noailles | |
Full name
Anne Jules de Noailles | |
Born | Paris | 5 February 1650
Died | 2 October 1708 Versailles | (aged 58)
Noble family | of Noailles |
Spouse(s) | Marie Françoise de Bournonville |
Issue
Mańe Christine, Duchess of Gramont Louis Paul, Count of Ayen Marie Charlotte, Marquise of Coëtquen Adrien Maurice, Duke of Noailles Lucie Félicité, Duchess of Estrées Marie Thérèse, Duchess of La Vallière Emmanuel Jules. Count of Noailles Marie Françoise, Marquise of Lavardin Marie Victoire, Countess of Toulouse Marie Émilie, Marquise of Châteauregnaud Jules Adrien, Count of Noailles Anne Louise, Marquise Mancini | |
Father | Anne de Noailles |
Mother | Louise Boyer |
Family
changeSon of Anne de Noailles and his wife, Louise Boyer, he acceded to the title of Duke of Noailles on his father's death in 1678. He was married to Marie Françoise de Bournonville, with whom he had children. One of the chief generals of France towards the end of the reign of Louis XIV, and, after raising the regiment of Noailles in 1689, he commanded in Spain during both the Nine Years' War and the War of the Spanish Succession. He was made a marshal of France in 1693. He died on October 2, 1708.[2]
Children
changeAnne Jules de Noailles had many children
- Marie Christine de Noailles (1672–1748), married (1687) Antoine de Gramont, Duke of Gramont;,[3] Marshal of France (1671–1725)
- Louis Marie de Noailles (°1675);
- Louis Paul de Noailles (°1676), Count of Ayen;
- Marie Charlotte de Noailles (1677–1723), married (1696) Malo, marquis of Coëtquen;[3]
- Adrien Maurice de Noailles (1678–1766), 3rd Duke of Noailles; married Françoise Charlotte d'Aubigné,[3] niece of Madame de Maintenon;
- Anne Louise de Noailles (°1679);
- Jean Anne de Noailles (°1681);
- Julie Françoise de Noailles (°1682);
- Lucie Félicité de Noailles (°1683), married (1698) Victor Marie d'Estrées (1660–1737),[3] a Marshal of France;
- Marie Thérèse de Noailles (°1684–1784), married (1698) Charles François de la Baume Le Blanc, Duke of La Vallière;[3]
- Emmanuel Jules de Noailles (1686–1702), Count of Noailles;
- Marie Françoise de Noailles (°1687), married (1703) Emmanuel de Beaumanoir, marquis of Lavardin;[3]
- Marie Victoire de Noailles (1688–1766), married (1707) Louis de Pardaillan de Gondrin (1688–1712), then (1723) his half-uncle the Count of Toulouse;
- Marie Émilie de Noailles (1689–1723) married (1713) Emmanuel Rousselet, marquis of Châteauregnaud;
- Jules Adrien de Noailles (1690–1710), Count of Noailles;
- Marie Uranie de Noailles (°1691), nun;
- Anne Louise de Noailles (°1695) married (1716) François Le Tellier, marquis of Louvois (died 1719)[3] and had issue; married again to Jacques Hippolyte Mancini, Marquis Mancini and had issue; present prince of Monaco is descended from this line.
References
change- ↑ Encyclopædia Americana, Volume 9, eds. Francis Lieber; E Wigglesworth; T G Bradford; Henry Vethake (Philadelphia, Blanchard and Lea, 1857), p. 299
- ↑ Anselme de Sainte-Marie; Ange de Sainte-Rosaliea, Histoire de la Maison Royale de France, et des grands officiers de la Couronne (Paris: Par la Compagnie des Libraries Affociez, 1730–1), p. 129
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Eduard Maria Oettinger; Hugo Schramm-Macdonald; Karl August Kesselmeyer, Moniteur des dates (Leipzig, L. Denicke, 1869), p. 64