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Vidame de Chartres

Vidame de Chartres was a title in the French nobility. There are a few vidame titles in France, of which that of Chartres is probably the best known, because a number of holders have been notable in widely different ways over the centuries. Vidame was originally the name for the commander of a bishop's military force in the Early Middle Ages, when bishops, like other great lords, needed troops for security. The title eventually developed into a heritable noble title, like others linked to a specific estate. The title therefore passed to the new owner when the estate was sold, as happened a number of times in this case.

The medieval Château de la Ferté Vidame, built by the Vendômes
The ruins of the Château de la Ferté-Vidame in 2005
François de Vendôme, Vidame de Chartres, drawing with colour, workshop of François Clouet, about 1550

By the later Middle Ages, the title was held by the owner of the chateau and estate of La Ferté-Vidame (documented by 985), Eure-et-Loir, some 40 kilometres from Chartres. In the 17th century the holder was still supposed to pay an annual fee to the Bishop of Chartres (for holding the land associated with the role, while not performing the duties), ceremonially presented during the mass in Chartres Cathedral on the feast day of the Purification of the Virgin.[1]

Middle Ages

The vidame of the day took part in the First Crusade (1095–1099).[2] The title was held by the de Ferrières family by the 12th century. They had acquired it through marriage with the sister and heiress of the 10th vidame of the family of the lords of Étienne. Confusingly, this was an entirely different de Ferrières family to that holding the title in the 16th century.[3] Holders included Guillaume de Ferrières (grandson of the first de Ferrières vidame, c.1150 – ?April 1204), who took part in the Third (1188–92) and Fourth Crusades (1201–4), and died in Romania as part of the latter. He is assumed to be the trouvère (north French troubador poet-composer) recorded only as the "Vidame de Chartres", to whom eight songs have been attributed. Through his sister the title passed to the lords of Meslay-le-Vidame, Eure-et-Loir.[4]

About 1380 the Vidame's sister and eventual heir Jeanne de Chartres married Robert de Vendôme, who became Vidame after the death of his brother-in-law around 1401.[5] Robert de Vendôme came from a branch of the Vendôme family, a well-connected junior branch of the House of Bourbon. The Vendômes held the title until 1560. They largely rebuilt the chateau to give it the impressive feudal appearance, with eight towers, that it kept until the 1770s.

Renaissance to French Revolution

The title passed to François de Vendôme (c. 1522 – 22 December 1560),[6] who was a successful soldier who figures largely in accounts of the brilliant but decadent French court of the period. The account in the colourful memoirs of Brantôme (1540–1614) place him in the centre of intrigues with Queen Catherine de' Medici (1519–1589), Diane de Poitiers (1499–1566), and the Guise brothers, Francis, Duke of Guise (1519–1563), Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine (1524–1574) and Claude, Duke of Aumale (1526–1573), with all of whom he was at odds by the end of his life. Although not apparently a Huguenot himself, he became attached to the Huguenot convert Louis, Prince of Condé (1530–1569) as the strongest anti-Guise figure. The Vidame was put in the Bastille after the Amboise conspiracy of 1560, in which he seems to have not been involved, and died days after the death of Francis II of France, which would probably have led to his release.[7]

François de Vendôme, always referred to as the Vidame de Chartres, is a major character in La Princesse de Clèves, an anonymous French novel published in March 1678, which mixes historical and fictional characters.[8] It is regarded by many as the beginning of the modern tradition of the psychological novel, and as a great classic work. Its author is generally held to be Madame de La Fayette. The action takes place between October 1558 and November 1559 at the court of Henry II of France, and the account of the Vidame's character broadly agrees with that of Brantôme. The Vidame was further depicted, in similar terms, in Catherine De Medici by Honoré de Balzac, as "the first and only amour" of the widowed queen.[9]

When Vendôme died the title passed to Jean de Ferrières (1520–1586),[10] a leading Huguenot politician and military commander in the French Wars of Religion, who was forced to spend periods in exile in England. He was eventually captured when fighting for the future Henri IV of France by the crown's Catholic forces, and died in captivity when he could not raise the ransom demanded. After de Ferrières died, the title passed by descent to Préjean de la Fin (d. 1624), another plotter, this time against the Bourbon dynasty.

Dukes of Saint-Simon, and after

 
Claude de Rouvroy, duc de Saint-Simon, father of the memoirist

By the time La Princesse de Clèves was published the chateau and title belonged to Claude de Rouvroy, duc de Saint-Simon (1607–1693), who had bought La Ferté-Vidame in 1635, the same year his dukedom was created. His son Louis, the second and last duke and famous memoirist (1675–1755), used it as a courtesy title at court until his father's death; the contrast between the debonair fictional character and the very short teenager may have given rise to some amusement. In turn it was used by his sons. According to the second duke, his father (a younger son) had bought the estate at the request of King Louis XIII – and perhaps with his funds, to give him a seat befitting his new rank as a ducal peer of France.[11]

La Ferté-Vidame passed to the Grimaldi family when Saint-Simon's grand-daughter married a younger son of Jacques I, Prince of Monaco. In 1764 La Ferté-Vidame was bought by Jean-Joseph de Laborde (1724–1794), a very wealthy businessman, who became a fermier général, politician and banker to the king. Laborde built the neo-classical mansion (architect Antoine Matthieu Le Carpentier, from 1771) whose ruined shell remains today. In politics, he was ahead of his time and of the French Revolution, and (with Mirabeau) was one of the only noble députés (from the bailliage d'Étampes) to accept demotion to the Third Estate upon the Revolution. However, this was not enough to save him from being guillotined under the "loi des suspects" on the orders of Louis de Saint-Just, in one of the last fits of the Reign of Terror in May 1794.[12]

After only 20 years the estate was sold to Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre (1725–1793), grandson of Louis XIV of France by Louis Alexandre, Count of Toulouse, his legitimized son with Madame de Montespan (and incidentally, along with his brother, especially detested by Saint-Simon). The sale was in 1784 for 5.5 million francs, a very large sum.[13] The duke died of natural causes in 1793, the last vidame of the Ancien regime. At the Bourbon Restoration, the chateau was restored to his daughter, Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon, Duchess of Orléans. On her death in 1821, the domaine passed to her eldest son Louis-Philippe I, future king of the French.[14]

Holders of the title

Notable holders before the revolution include:

Notes

  1. ^ Formel (1982)
  2. ^ Riley-Smith, Jonathan. The First Crusades. p. 88.
  3. ^ Formel (1995)
  4. ^ Formel (1995)
  5. ^ Formel-Levavasseur, 44 says the marriage was in 1374, other sources say 1385
  6. ^ . There are contradictory accounts of the precise date and place of his death in Paris in December 1560, see de Pétigny, 336–339
  7. ^ de Pétigny, 327–349
  8. ^ "Personnages – La princesse de Clèves"
  9. ^ Catherine De Medici, end of the Introduction
  10. ^ de Pétigny, 340
  11. ^ Formel (1982)
  12. ^ Formel (1990); Bardet, Jean-Pierre (ed), Etat et société en France aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles: Mélanges offerts à Yves Durand, 181–184, 2000, Presses Paris Sorbonne, ISBN 2840501511, 9782840501510, google books
  13. ^ Formel-Levavasseur, 41
  14. ^ Formel (1990)

References

  • Formel-Levavasseur, François, Le duc de Saint-Simon, comte de la Ferté-Vidame, mémorialiste et épistolier, 2012, BoD – Books on Demand France, ISBN 2810626316, 9782810626311, google books, in French
  • Formel, François (1982), "Présence des Saint-Simons à La Ferté-Vidame (1635–1764)", extracted from the Bulletin Municipal de La Ferté-Vidame (1982 p. 9-10), in French
  • Formel, François (1990), "Diner de Têtes à La Ferté-Vidame: Le mari d’une impératrice chez le banquier du Roi", extracted from the Bulletin Municipal de La Ferté-Vidame (1989–1990, p. 38-50), in French
  • Formel, François (1995), ""Des prédecesseurs des Saint-Simons..., extracted from the Bulletin Municipal de La Ferté-Vidame (1994–1995, p. 63–66), in French
  • de Pétigny, Jean, "Testament de François de Vendôme, Vidame de Chartres", Bibliothèque de l’école des Chartes, 1850, Paris, pp. 327–349, in French

vidame, chartres, title, french, nobility, there, vidame, titles, france, which, that, chartres, probably, best, known, because, number, holders, have, been, notable, widely, different, ways, over, centuries, vidame, originally, name, commander, bishop, milita. Vidame de Chartres was a title in the French nobility There are a few vidame titles in France of which that of Chartres is probably the best known because a number of holders have been notable in widely different ways over the centuries Vidame was originally the name for the commander of a bishop s military force in the Early Middle Ages when bishops like other great lords needed troops for security The title eventually developed into a heritable noble title like others linked to a specific estate The title therefore passed to the new owner when the estate was sold as happened a number of times in this case The medieval Chateau de la Ferte Vidame built by the VendomesThe ruins of the Chateau de la Ferte Vidame in 2005Francois de Vendome Vidame de Chartres drawing with colour workshop of Francois Clouet about 1550By the later Middle Ages the title was held by the owner of the chateau and estate of La Ferte Vidame documented by 985 Eure et Loir some 40 kilometres from Chartres In the 17th century the holder was still supposed to pay an annual fee to the Bishop of Chartres for holding the land associated with the role while not performing the duties ceremonially presented during the mass in Chartres Cathedral on the feast day of the Purification of the Virgin 1 Contents 1 Middle Ages 2 Renaissance to French Revolution 2 1 Dukes of Saint Simon and after 3 Holders of the title 4 Notes 5 ReferencesMiddle Ages EditThe vidame of the day took part in the First Crusade 1095 1099 2 The title was held by the de Ferrieres family by the 12th century They had acquired it through marriage with the sister and heiress of the 10th vidame of the family of the lords of Etienne Confusingly this was an entirely different de Ferrieres family to that holding the title in the 16th century 3 Holders included Guillaume de Ferrieres grandson of the first de Ferrieres vidame c 1150 April 1204 who took part in the Third 1188 92 and Fourth Crusades 1201 4 and died in Romania as part of the latter He is assumed to be the trouvere north French troubador poet composer recorded only as the Vidame de Chartres to whom eight songs have been attributed Through his sister the title passed to the lords of Meslay le Vidame Eure et Loir 4 About 1380 the Vidame s sister and eventual heir Jeanne de Chartres married Robert de Vendome who became Vidame after the death of his brother in law around 1401 5 Robert de Vendome came from a branch of the Vendome family a well connected junior branch of the House of Bourbon The Vendomes held the title until 1560 They largely rebuilt the chateau to give it the impressive feudal appearance with eight towers that it kept until the 1770s Renaissance to French Revolution EditThe title passed to Francois de Vendome c 1522 22 December 1560 6 who was a successful soldier who figures largely in accounts of the brilliant but decadent French court of the period The account in the colourful memoirs of Brantome 1540 1614 place him in the centre of intrigues with Queen Catherine de Medici 1519 1589 Diane de Poitiers 1499 1566 and the Guise brothers Francis Duke of Guise 1519 1563 Charles Cardinal of Lorraine 1524 1574 and Claude Duke of Aumale 1526 1573 with all of whom he was at odds by the end of his life Although not apparently a Huguenot himself he became attached to the Huguenot convert Louis Prince of Conde 1530 1569 as the strongest anti Guise figure The Vidame was put in the Bastille after the Amboise conspiracy of 1560 in which he seems to have not been involved and died days after the death of Francis II of France which would probably have led to his release 7 Francois de Vendome always referred to as the Vidame de Chartres is a major character in La Princesse de Cleves an anonymous French novel published in March 1678 which mixes historical and fictional characters 8 It is regarded by many as the beginning of the modern tradition of the psychological novel and as a great classic work Its author is generally held to be Madame de La Fayette The action takes place between October 1558 and November 1559 at the court of Henry II of France and the account of the Vidame s character broadly agrees with that of Brantome The Vidame was further depicted in similar terms in Catherine De Medici by Honore de Balzac as the first and only amour of the widowed queen 9 When Vendome died the title passed to Jean de Ferrieres 1520 1586 10 a leading Huguenot politician and military commander in the French Wars of Religion who was forced to spend periods in exile in England He was eventually captured when fighting for the future Henri IV of France by the crown s Catholic forces and died in captivity when he could not raise the ransom demanded After de Ferrieres died the title passed by descent to Prejean de la Fin d 1624 another plotter this time against the Bourbon dynasty Dukes of Saint Simon and after Edit Claude de Rouvroy duc de Saint Simon father of the memoiristBy the time La Princesse de Cleves was published the chateau and title belonged to Claude de Rouvroy duc de Saint Simon 1607 1693 who had bought La Ferte Vidame in 1635 the same year his dukedom was created His son Louis the second and last duke and famous memoirist 1675 1755 used it as a courtesy title at court until his father s death the contrast between the debonair fictional character and the very short teenager may have given rise to some amusement In turn it was used by his sons According to the second duke his father a younger son had bought the estate at the request of King Louis XIII and perhaps with his funds to give him a seat befitting his new rank as a ducal peer of France 11 La Ferte Vidame passed to the Grimaldi family when Saint Simon s grand daughter married a younger son of Jacques I Prince of Monaco In 1764 La Ferte Vidame was bought by Jean Joseph de Laborde 1724 1794 a very wealthy businessman who became a fermier general politician and banker to the king Laborde built the neo classical mansion architect Antoine Matthieu Le Carpentier from 1771 whose ruined shell remains today In politics he was ahead of his time and of the French Revolution and with Mirabeau was one of the only noble deputes from the bailliage d Etampes to accept demotion to the Third Estate upon the Revolution However this was not enough to save him from being guillotined under the loi des suspects on the orders of Louis de Saint Just in one of the last fits of the Reign of Terror in May 1794 12 After only 20 years the estate was sold to Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthievre 1725 1793 grandson of Louis XIV of France by Louis Alexandre Count of Toulouse his legitimized son with Madame de Montespan and incidentally along with his brother especially detested by Saint Simon The sale was in 1784 for 5 5 million francs a very large sum 13 The duke died of natural causes in 1793 the last vidame of the Ancien regime At the Bourbon Restoration the chateau was restored to his daughter Louise Marie Adelaide de Bourbon Duchess of Orleans On her death in 1821 the domaine passed to her eldest son Louis Philippe I future king of the French 14 Holders of the title EditNotable holders before the revolution include Guillaume de Ferrieres c 1150 April 1204 crusader and trouvere Francois de Vendome c 1522 22 December 1560 soldier and courtier Jean de Ferrieres 1520 1586 Huguenot politician and military commander Claude de Rouvroy duc de Saint Simon 1607 1693 royal favourite Louis de Rouvroy duc de Saint Simon 1675 1755 the second and last duke and famous memoirist Jean Joseph de Laborde 1724 1794 businessman turned politician Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon Duke of Penthievre 1725 1793 grandson of Louis XIV of FranceNotes Edit Formel 1982 Riley Smith Jonathan The First Crusades p 88 Formel 1995 Formel 1995 Formel Levavasseur 44 says the marriage was in 1374 other sources say 1385 There are contradictory accounts of the precise date and place of his death in Paris in December 1560 see de Petigny 336 339 de Petigny 327 349 Personnages La princesse de Cleves Catherine De Medici end of the Introduction de Petigny 340 Formel 1982 Formel 1990 Bardet Jean Pierre ed Etat et societe en France aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siecles Melanges offerts a Yves Durand 181 184 2000 Presses Paris Sorbonne ISBN 2840501511 9782840501510 google books Formel Levavasseur 41 Formel 1990 References EditFormel Levavasseur Francois Le duc de Saint Simon comte de la Ferte Vidame memorialiste et epistolier 2012 BoD Books on Demand France ISBN 2810626316 9782810626311 google books in French Formel Francois 1982 Presence des Saint Simons a La Ferte Vidame 1635 1764 extracted from the Bulletin Municipal de La Ferte Vidame 1982 p 9 10 in French Formel Francois 1990 Diner de Tetes a La Ferte Vidame Le mari d une imperatrice chez le banquier du Roi extracted from the Bulletin Municipal de La Ferte Vidame 1989 1990 p 38 50 in French Formel Francois 1995 Des predecesseurs des Saint Simons extracted from the Bulletin Municipal de La Ferte Vidame 1994 1995 p 63 66 in French de Petigny Jean Testament de Francois de Vendome Vidame de Chartres Bibliotheque de l ecole des Chartes 1850 Paris pp 327 349 in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vidame de Chartres amp oldid 1144552942, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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