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Marie Anne de Bourbon

Marie Anne de Bourbon, Légitimée de France, born Marie Anne de La Blaume Le Blanc, by her marriage Princess of Conti then Princess Dowager of Conti, suo jure Duchess of La Vallière and of Vaujours (2 October 1666 – 3 May 1739) was a French noblewoman as the eldest legitimised daughter of Louis XIV, King of France, born from his mistress Louise de La Vallière, and the king's favourite daughter. She married Louis Armand I, Prince of Conti, in 1680 and was widowed in 1685. She never married again and had no issue. Upon her mother's death, she became the suo jure Duchess of La Vallière and of Vaujours.

Marie-Anne de Bourbon
Princess of Conti
Duchess of La Vallière and Vaujours
BornMarie-Anne de La Blaume Le Blanc de La Vallière
(1666-10-02)2 October 1666
Castle of Vincennes, Vincennes, Kingdom of France
DiedMay 3, 1739(1739-05-03) (aged 72)
Paris, Kingdom of France
Burial
SpouseLouis Armand I, Prince of Conti
HouseBourbon
FatherLouis XIV
MotherLouise de La Vallière
Signature

Early life (1666–1680) edit

Marie-Anne de La Blaume Le Blanc de la Vallière was born 2 October 1666 in the Castle of Vincennes in secret to an unmarried mother, Louise de La Blaume Le Blanc de La Vallière, Mademoiselle de La Vallière (1644–1710), who had been the mistress of Louis XIV, King of France for about 5 years by then. She had had three full brothers, at least one of whom, Charles (1663–1665) had already died by the time she was born, while two of them, Philippe (1665–1666) and Louis (1665–1666) died sometime during the year of her birth.[1]

On 14 May 1667, she was legitimised, after which she could use the surname de Bourbon ("of Bourbon"), while her legitimate half-siblings were known as de France ("of France"), and she was created Mademoiselle de Blois. On the same day, her mother was given the titles of Duchess of La Vallière and of Vaujours, which she perceived as a kind of retirement gift and a sign of the end of her relationship with the king.[2] On 2 October 1667, Blois' youngest full sibling, Louis (1667–1683) was born.[1] The two children were placed in the care of Madame Colbert (born Marie Charron), the wife of Chief Minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619–1683).[citation needed]

Married life (1680–1685) edit

On 16 January 1680, at the age of 13, Blois was married to her distant relative, 18-year-old Louis-Armand I de Bourbon, Prince of Conti (1661–1885), in the chapel of the Castle of Saint-Germain-en-Laye. She was given a dowry of 1 million livres.[citation needed] As Conti was a prince du sang ("Prince of the Blood"), a male member of the House of Bourbon legitimately descended from a sovereign, while Blois was illegitimate, their marriage caused a scandal. This was the first but not the last such marriage, as Louis XIV married many of his illegitimate daughters into the royal family.[citation needed] Even though the prince fell in love with his bride at first sight, their wedding night was disastrous. During its five years, their marriage remained childless, and the princess shocked the royal court by openly stating that her husband was not good at sex.[citation needed] In June 1682, her beloved brother Louis, by then legitimised and created the Count of Vermandois,[3] was exiled for his participation in La Sainte Congregation des Glorieux Pédérastes ("Holy Congregation of Glorious Pederasts"), a secret group of young aristocrats practicing le vice italien ("the Italian vice"), male homosexual sodomy.[4] The following year, on 18 November 1683, he died in disgrace at the age of 16, devastating the princess.[citation needed]

 
The Mademoiselle de Blois and her brother Louis, Count of Vermandois Louis-Édouard Rioult's copy of a 17th century painting.

For a little over 4 years following her marriage, she was one of the most important ladies at her father's court, outranked only by Queen Maria Theresa, Maria Anna, the Dauphine (from 7 March 1780), Elizabeth Charlotte, Duchess of Orléans and the two daughters of the Duke of Orléans, Princesses Anne-Marie, Madame Royale (until 10 April 1684) and Élisabeth-Charlotte, Mademoiselle de Chartres then Madame Royale.[5] However, in May 1685, her 11-year-old half-sister Louise-Françoise de Bourbon, Mademoiselle de Tours (1673–1743) was married to Louis de Bourbon, Duke of Bourbon (1668–1710).[6] As the groom was the heir to the title of Prince of Condé, and the Bourbon-Conti branch descended from the Bourbon-Condé branch of the royal house, the new duchess outranked the Princess of Conti,[5] leading to tension between the sisters.[citation needed]

In 1685, the Princess of Conti contracted smallpox, which then spread to her husband. While she recovered, he succumbed after 5 days.[citation needed] After his death, she was known as Madame la Princesse Douairière de Conti ("Madam the Dowager Princess of Conti") or la Grande Princesse de Conti ("the Great Princess of Conti").[citation needed]

Widowed life (1685–1739) edit

 
Infanta Maria Anna of Spain, the Dowager Princess' grandniece and ward between 1721 and 1725.

The question of rank and precedence always remained central to the dowager princess' life.[citation needed] In February 1692, her half-sister Françoise-Marie de Bourbon (1677–1749), who inherited her maiden title of Mademoiselle de Blois, was married to Philippe, Duke of Chartres (1674–1723), heir to the title of Duke of Orléans. From the day of the wedding, their 15-year-old sister outranked both the 26-year-old dowager and the 19-year-old Duchess of Bourbon.[5] She was given a dowry of 2 million livres, twice the amount that the Princess of Conti and the Duchess of Bourbon had received,[7] as well as the Palais-Royal.[8] The young girl deliberately flaunted her position, much to the annoyance of the two formal rivals, who were from then on openly hostile to their sister.[7]

After the death of Louis XIV on 1 September 1715, leaving his 4-year-old great grandson the throne, a regency was established and the dowager princess' brother-in-law, Philippe II, Duke of Orléans (1674–1723) was appointed regent, de facto ruling the country between 1715 and 1723, a period of French history known as régence.[8] In 1721, the princess was put in charge of the education of Louis XV's 3-year-old fiancée, Infanta Mariana Victoria of Spain (1718–1781), her grandniece.[citation needed] The engagement was called off 4 years later, as an heir to the throne was desperately desired, but the infanta was too young to conceive. She was sent back to Spain in 1725 and later became the Queen (consort) of Portugal.[citation needed] After her departure, the princess dowager retired from court and spent her remaining years mainly in the countryside.[citation needed]

Marriage proposals edit

 
The Dowager Princess of Conti refusing the marriage proposal of the Sultan of Morocco on a contemporay painting.

It is possible that in 1698, the 32-year-old dowager princess, renowned for her beauty, received a marriage proposal from her 15-year-old nephew Philippe, Duke of Anjou (1683–1746), a younger son of her legitimate half-brother Louis, the Grand Dauphin of France (1661–1711), who would later become King of Spain.[citation needed] She also refused a proposal from the Sultan of Morocco, Ismail Ibn Sharif (circa 1645–1727),[9] preferring her freedom as a widow.[citation needed]

The three Princesses Dowager of Conti edit

In 1709, the heir of her late husband, François-Louis, Prince of Conti (1664–1709) died, leaving a second dowager princess of Conti, born Marie-Thérèse de Bourbon, Mademoiselle de Bourbon (1666–1732). From then on, they were known Madame la Princesse de Conti Première Douairière ("Madam the Princess of Conti First Dowager") and Madame la Princesse de Conti Seconde (until 1727)/Douxième (from 1727) Douairière ("Madam the Princess of Conti Second Dowager"). In 1713, the first dowager helped to secure the marriage of her late husband's nephew, Louis-Armand II Prince of Conti and her half-niece, Louise Élisabeth de Bourbon, Mademoiselle de Charolais (1693–1775), who became Madame La Princesse de Conti Troisième/Dernière Douairière (Madam the Princess of Conti Third/Last Dowager) in 1727.[5]

 
The Castle of Choisy in the second half of the 17th century.

Houses edit

In 1710, the princess' mother, who had lived as a Carmelite nun in a Paris convent, died, leaving to her the substantial fortune she had acquired as a royal mistress, as well as her titles of Duchess of La Vallière and of Vaujours (duchesse de La Vallière et de Vaujours).[citation needed] In 1713, she bought the Hôtel de Lorges on Saint Augustin Street (rue Saint-Augustin) in Paris, where she lived from 1715.[10] In 1716, she also bought the Castle of Choisy,[citation needed] and in 1718, she was given the Castle of Champs-sur-Marne by the new king, her grandnephew Louis XV ("Louis the Beloved"; 1710–1774). She later gave this castle to her nephew and heir, Charles-François de La Blaume Le Blanc to settle some debts.[citation needed]

Relationship with her family edit

Both as a child and as an adult, the Princess of Conti had a great relationship with her father, becoming his favourite daughter, while his favourite child overall was her younger half-brother, Louis-Auguste, Duke of Maine (1670–1736).[citation needed] She was also close with her only full brother, Louis, Count of Vermandois (1667–1683), whose early death in 1683 at the age of 16 devastated her.[citation needed] She had a strained relantionship with her half-sisters who outranked her after their marriage (Louise-Françoise, Duchess of Bourbon/Princess of Condé, (1673–1743) and Françoise-Marie, Duchess of Anjou/of Orléans).[7]

With her only legitimate half-sibling, Louis, Grand Dauphin (1661–1711), she had a close relationship, and often visited him at his country estate, the Castle of Meudon.[citation needed] There, she met the Knight of Clermont-Chaste, a young and poor aristocrat, and fell in love with him. The knight was hoping to take advantage of his position, but Louis XIV learned of the romance, he exiled him.[citation needed] It is possible that the king learned of the affair through his daughter-in-law,[citation needed] born Émilie de Joly de Choin, Mademoiselle de Choin (1670–1732), who had been introduced to the grand dauphin by the Princess of Conti. Mademoiselle de Choin was the princess' maid of honour.[citation needed]

The princess seems to have disliked the grand dauphin's first wife, born Maria Anna of Bavaria (1660–1690). Once, when the princess dowager saw her sleeping, she commented that the Dauphine was "as ugly asleep as she was awake". Awakened, the Dauphine replied that she did not "have the advantage of being a love child".[citation needed] After the dauphine's death in 1690, her widower secretly married Mademoiselle de Choin. The princess dowager mourned his death in 1711 deeply.[citation needed]

The Princess Dowager of Conti died of a brain tumor on 3 May 1739 in Paris.[citation needed] She was buried in the Chapel of Our Lady in the Saint-Roch Church (Église Saint-Roch) in Paris.[citation needed] Her titles and fortune were inherited by her nephew, Charles-François de La Baume Le Blanc, and then by his son, famous bibliophile Lous-César de La Baume Le Blanc (1708–1780).[citation needed]

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Petitfils, Jean-Christian (1 June 2011). Louise de La Vallière (in French). Paris: Tempus. ISBN 978-2-262-03649-2. OCLC 758347684.
  2. ^ Calon, Olivier (8 November 2017). "Ah! s'il n'était pas le roi – Louise de la Vallière". Les petites phrases qui ont fait la grande histoire (in French) (1st ed.). Paris: La Librairie Vuibert. pp. 84–85d. ISBN 978-2-311-10216-1. OCLC 1027762736.
  3. ^ Riley, Philip F. (30 June 2001). A Lust for Virtue. Louis XIV's Attack on Sin in Seventeenth-Century France. Praeger. p. 106. ISBN 978-0313317088. OCLC 50321974.
  4. ^ Crompton, Louis (31 October 2006). Homosexuality & Civilization. Belknap Press, Harvard University Press. p. 340. ISBN 978-0-674-02233-1. OCLC 1088127490.
  5. ^ a b c d "The French Royal Family: Titles and Customs". www.heraldica.org. Retrieved 2022-05-29.
  6. ^ Hilton, Lisa (1 October 2003). The Real Queen of France. Athénaïs & Louis XIV. London: Time Warner Books UK. ISBN 978-0349115726. OCLC 62263797.
  7. ^ a b c Williams, Hugh Noel (1913). Unruly daughters; a romance of the house of Orléans. University of California Libraries. New York, G. P. Putnam's sons.
  8. ^ a b Dufresne, Claude (1991). Les Orléans (in French). Paris: Criterion. pp. 77–78. ISBN 978-2903702571. OCLC 25026641.
  9. ^ Prescott Wormeley, Katharine, ed. (1899). "Correspondence of Madame". The Correspondence of Madame Princess Palatine, Marie-Adélaïde de Savoie and Madame de Maintenon. Boston: Hary, Pratt & Company. p. 47. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  10. ^ Lefeuve, Charles (1875). "Rue Neuve Saint-Augustins. IIe arrondissement de Paris. Histoire de Paris rue par rue, maison par maison". Paris Pittoresque. Retrieved 2022-05-29.

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For other people named Marie Anne de Bourbon see Marie Anne de Bourbon disambiguation Marie Anne de Bourbon Legitimee de France born Marie Anne de La Blaume Le Blanc by her marriage Princess of Conti then Princess Dowager of Conti suo jure Duchess of La Valliere and of Vaujours 2 October 1666 3 May 1739 was a French noblewoman as the eldest legitimised daughter of Louis XIV King of France born from his mistress Louise de La Valliere and the king s favourite daughter She married Louis Armand I Prince of Conti in 1680 and was widowed in 1685 She never married again and had no issue Upon her mother s death she became the suo jure Duchess of La Valliere and of Vaujours Marie Anne de BourbonPrincess of ContiDuchess of La Valliere and VaujoursPortrait by Francois de Troy c 1690BornMarie Anne de La Blaume Le Blanc de La Valliere 1666 10 02 2 October 1666Castle of Vincennes Vincennes Kingdom of FranceDiedMay 3 1739 1739 05 03 aged 72 Paris Kingdom of FranceBurialSaint Roch ParisSpouseLouis Armand I Prince of ContiHouseBourbonFatherLouis XIVMotherLouise de La ValliereSignature Contents 1 Early life 1666 1680 2 Married life 1680 1685 3 Widowed life 1685 1739 3 1 Marriage proposals 3 2 The three Princesses Dowager of Conti 3 3 Houses 4 Relationship with her family 5 Ancestry 6 ReferencesEarly life 1666 1680 editMarie Anne de La Blaume Le Blanc de la Valliere was born 2 October 1666 in the Castle of Vincennes in secret to an unmarried mother Louise de La Blaume Le Blanc de La Valliere Mademoiselle de La Valliere 1644 1710 who had been the mistress of Louis XIV King of France for about 5 years by then She had had three full brothers at least one of whom Charles 1663 1665 had already died by the time she was born while two of them Philippe 1665 1666 and Louis 1665 1666 died sometime during the year of her birth 1 On 14 May 1667 she was legitimised after which she could use the surname de Bourbon of Bourbon while her legitimate half siblings were known as de France of France and she was created Mademoiselle de Blois On the same day her mother was given the titles of Duchess of La Valliere and of Vaujours which she perceived as a kind of retirement gift and a sign of the end of her relationship with the king 2 On 2 October 1667 Blois youngest full sibling Louis 1667 1683 was born 1 The two children were placed in the care of Madame Colbert born Marie Charron the wife of Chief Minister Jean Baptiste Colbert 1619 1683 citation needed Married life 1680 1685 editOn 16 January 1680 at the age of 13 Blois was married to her distant relative 18 year old Louis Armand I de Bourbon Prince of Conti 1661 1885 in the chapel of the Castle of Saint Germain en Laye She was given a dowry of 1 million livres citation needed As Conti was a prince du sang Prince of the Blood a male member of the House of Bourbon legitimately descended from a sovereign while Blois was illegitimate their marriage caused a scandal This was the first but not the last such marriage as Louis XIV married many of his illegitimate daughters into the royal family citation needed Even though the prince fell in love with his bride at first sight their wedding night was disastrous During its five years their marriage remained childless and the princess shocked the royal court by openly stating that her husband was not good at sex citation needed In June 1682 her beloved brother Louis by then legitimised and created the Count of Vermandois 3 was exiled for his participation in La Sainte Congregation des Glorieux Pederastes Holy Congregation of Glorious Pederasts a secret group of young aristocrats practicing le vice italien the Italian vice male homosexual sodomy 4 The following year on 18 November 1683 he died in disgrace at the age of 16 devastating the princess citation needed nbsp The Mademoiselle de Blois and her brother Louis Count of Vermandois Louis Edouard Rioult s copy of a 17th century painting nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marie Anne de Bourbon 1666 1739 For a little over 4 years following her marriage she was one of the most important ladies at her father s court outranked only by Queen Maria Theresa Maria Anna the Dauphine from 7 March 1780 Elizabeth Charlotte Duchess of Orleans and the two daughters of the Duke of Orleans Princesses Anne Marie Madame Royale until 10 April 1684 and Elisabeth Charlotte Mademoiselle de Chartres then Madame Royale 5 However in May 1685 her 11 year old half sister Louise Francoise de Bourbon Mademoiselle de Tours 1673 1743 was married to Louis de Bourbon Duke of Bourbon 1668 1710 6 As the groom was the heir to the title of Prince of Conde and the Bourbon Conti branch descended from the Bourbon Conde branch of the royal house the new duchess outranked the Princess of Conti 5 leading to tension between the sisters citation needed In 1685 the Princess of Conti contracted smallpox which then spread to her husband While she recovered he succumbed after 5 days citation needed After his death she was known as Madame la Princesse Douairiere de Conti Madam the Dowager Princess of Conti or la Grande Princesse de Conti the Great Princess of Conti citation needed Widowed life 1685 1739 edit nbsp Infanta Maria Anna of Spain the Dowager Princess grandniece and ward between 1721 and 1725 The question of rank and precedence always remained central to the dowager princess life citation needed In February 1692 her half sister Francoise Marie de Bourbon 1677 1749 who inherited her maiden title of Mademoiselle de Blois was married to Philippe Duke of Chartres 1674 1723 heir to the title of Duke of Orleans From the day of the wedding their 15 year old sister outranked both the 26 year old dowager and the 19 year old Duchess of Bourbon 5 She was given a dowry of 2 million livres twice the amount that the Princess of Conti and the Duchess of Bourbon had received 7 as well as the Palais Royal 8 The young girl deliberately flaunted her position much to the annoyance of the two formal rivals who were from then on openly hostile to their sister 7 After the death of Louis XIV on 1 September 1715 leaving his 4 year old great grandson the throne a regency was established and the dowager princess brother in law Philippe II Duke of Orleans 1674 1723 was appointed regent de facto ruling the country between 1715 and 1723 a period of French history known as regence 8 In 1721 the princess was put in charge of the education of Louis XV s 3 year old fiancee Infanta Mariana Victoria of Spain 1718 1781 her grandniece citation needed The engagement was called off 4 years later as an heir to the throne was desperately desired but the infanta was too young to conceive She was sent back to Spain in 1725 and later became the Queen consort of Portugal citation needed After her departure the princess dowager retired from court and spent her remaining years mainly in the countryside citation needed Marriage proposals edit nbsp The Dowager Princess of Conti refusing the marriage proposal of the Sultan of Morocco on a contemporay painting It is possible that in 1698 the 32 year old dowager princess renowned for her beauty received a marriage proposal from her 15 year old nephew Philippe Duke of Anjou 1683 1746 a younger son of her legitimate half brother Louis the Grand Dauphin of France 1661 1711 who would later become King of Spain citation needed She also refused a proposal from the Sultan of Morocco Ismail Ibn Sharif circa 1645 1727 9 preferring her freedom as a widow citation needed The three Princesses Dowager of Conti edit In 1709 the heir of her late husband Francois Louis Prince of Conti 1664 1709 died leaving a second dowager princess of Conti born Marie Therese de Bourbon Mademoiselle de Bourbon 1666 1732 From then on they were known Madame la Princesse de Conti Premiere Douairiere Madam the Princess of Conti First Dowager and Madame la Princesse de Conti Seconde until 1727 Douxieme from 1727 Douairiere Madam the Princess of Conti Second Dowager In 1713 the first dowager helped to secure the marriage of her late husband s nephew Louis Armand II Prince of Conti and her half niece Louise Elisabeth de Bourbon Mademoiselle de Charolais 1693 1775 who became Madame La Princesse de Conti Troisieme Derniere Douairiere Madam the Princess of Conti Third Last Dowager in 1727 5 nbsp The Castle of Choisy in the second half of the 17th century Houses edit In 1710 the princess mother who had lived as a Carmelite nun in a Paris convent died leaving to her the substantial fortune she had acquired as a royal mistress as well as her titles of Duchess of La Valliere and of Vaujours duchesse de La Valliere et de Vaujours citation needed In 1713 she bought the Hotel de Lorges on Saint Augustin Street rue Saint Augustin in Paris where she lived from 1715 10 In 1716 she also bought the Castle of Choisy citation needed and in 1718 she was given the Castle of Champs sur Marne by the new king her grandnephew Louis XV Louis the Beloved 1710 1774 She later gave this castle to her nephew and heir Charles Francois de La Blaume Le Blanc to settle some debts citation needed Relationship with her family editBoth as a child and as an adult the Princess of Conti had a great relationship with her father becoming his favourite daughter while his favourite child overall was her younger half brother Louis Auguste Duke of Maine 1670 1736 citation needed She was also close with her only full brother Louis Count of Vermandois 1667 1683 whose early death in 1683 at the age of 16 devastated her citation needed She had a strained relantionship with her half sisters who outranked her after their marriage Louise Francoise Duchess of Bourbon Princess of Conde 1673 1743 and Francoise Marie Duchess of Anjou of Orleans 7 With her only legitimate half sibling Louis Grand Dauphin 1661 1711 she had a close relationship and often visited him at his country estate the Castle of Meudon citation needed There she met the Knight of Clermont Chaste a young and poor aristocrat and fell in love with him The knight was hoping to take advantage of his position but Louis XIV learned of the romance he exiled him citation needed It is possible that the king learned of the affair through his daughter in law citation needed born Emilie de Joly de Choin Mademoiselle de Choin 1670 1732 who had been introduced to the grand dauphin by the Princess of Conti Mademoiselle de Choin was the princess maid of honour citation needed The princess seems to have disliked the grand dauphin s first wife born Maria Anna of Bavaria 1660 1690 Once when the princess dowager saw her sleeping she commented that the Dauphine was as ugly asleep as she was awake Awakened the Dauphine replied that she did not have the advantage of being a love child citation needed After the dauphine s death in 1690 her widower secretly married Mademoiselle de Choin The princess dowager mourned his death in 1711 deeply citation needed The Princess Dowager of Conti died of a brain tumor on 3 May 1739 in Paris citation needed She was buried in the Chapel of Our Lady in the Saint Roch Church Eglise Saint Roch in Paris citation needed Her titles and fortune were inherited by her nephew Charles Francois de La Baume Le Blanc and then by his son famous bibliophile Lous Cesar de La Baume Le Blanc 1708 1780 citation needed Ancestry editAncestors of Marie Anne de Bourbon8 Henry IV of France4 Louis XIII of France9 Marie de Medici2 Louis XIV of France10 Philip III of Spain5 Anne of Austria11 Margaret of Austria1 Marie Anne de Bourbon12 Jean de La Baume Le Blanc baron de la Papelardiere6 Laurent de La Baume Le Blanc seigneur de La Valliere13 Francoise de Beauvau3 Louise de La Valliere14 Jean Le Prevost seigneur de la Coutelaye7 Francoise Le Prevost15 Elisabeth Martin de MauroyReferences edit a b Petitfils Jean Christian 1 June 2011 Louise de La Valliere in French Paris Tempus ISBN 978 2 262 03649 2 OCLC 758347684 Calon Olivier 8 November 2017 Ah s il n etait pas le roi Louise de la Valliere Les petites phrases qui ont fait la grande histoire in French 1st ed Paris La Librairie Vuibert pp 84 85d ISBN 978 2 311 10216 1 OCLC 1027762736 Riley Philip F 30 June 2001 A Lust for Virtue Louis XIV s Attack on Sin in Seventeenth Century France Praeger p 106 ISBN 978 0313317088 OCLC 50321974 Crompton Louis 31 October 2006 Homosexuality amp Civilization Belknap Press Harvard University Press p 340 ISBN 978 0 674 02233 1 OCLC 1088127490 a b c d The French Royal Family Titles and Customs www heraldica org Retrieved 2022 05 29 Hilton Lisa 1 October 2003 The Real Queen of France Athenais amp Louis XIV London Time Warner Books UK ISBN 978 0349115726 OCLC 62263797 a b c Williams Hugh Noel 1913 Unruly daughters a romance of the house of Orleans University of California Libraries New York G P Putnam s sons a b Dufresne Claude 1991 Les Orleans in French Paris Criterion pp 77 78 ISBN 978 2903702571 OCLC 25026641 Prescott Wormeley Katharine ed 1899 Correspondence of Madame The Correspondence of Madame Princess Palatine Marie Adelaide de Savoie and Madame de Maintenon Boston Hary Pratt amp Company p 47 Retrieved 2022 06 16 Lefeuve Charles 1875 Rue Neuve Saint Augustins IIe arrondissement de Paris Histoire de Paris rue par rue maison par maison Paris Pittoresque Retrieved 2022 05 29 Marie Anne de BourbonHouse of BourbonCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyBorn 2 October 1666 Died 3 May 1739French nobilityPreceded byN A Mademoiselle de Blois1681 1692 Succeeded byFrancoise Marie de BourbonPreceded byLouis Joseph de Bourbon Duke of Vendome Duchess of Penthievre1696 1697 Succeeded byLouis Alexandre de Bourbon Count of ToulousePreceded byLouis Joseph de Bourbon Duke of Vendome Duchess of Etampes1712 1718 Succeeded byLouise Elisabeth de BourbonPreceded byLouise de La Valliere Duchess of La Valliere1680 1698 Succeeded byCharles Francois de La Baume Le Blancfirstly AS marquis de La VallierePreceded byAnne Marie Martinozzi Princess of Conti1680 1739 Succeeded byMarie Therese de Bourbon nbsp Biography portal nbsp Europe portal nbsp History portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marie Anne de Bourbon amp oldid 1190342445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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