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Henri-Auguste de Loménie (1594 – 3 November 1666), Count of Brienne, Seigneur de La Ville-aux-Clercs was a French politician. He was secretary of state for the navy from 1615 to February 1643, and then secretary of state for foreign affairs from 1643 to 1663 under Mazarin during the minority of Louis XIV. From the Loménie family (originating in Flavignac in Limousin), he was the son of Antoine de Loménie, secretary of state to Henry IV and a Huguenot convert.
The Count de Brienne was naturally destined to public office. He traveled to Germany, Poland and Italy, by order of his father, the last as well prepare for his career. He was back in Paris towards the end of 1609, that he was noticed by Henry IV, who allowed him to attend the board sometimes. Marie de Medici, regent of France, commissioned him in 1614 to negotiate with some members of the États généraux, "whose minds were unwell", and his clever response obtained from them the nomination of a president acceptable to the court. This success earned him in 1617, master of ceremonies and provost of king's orders. Until the death of his father, his principal occupation "was to accompany the King and gain the honor of his good graces, to which he succeeds."
The British Embassy, where he was responsible for negotiating the marriage of Henrietta Maria of France with the Charles I of England. However, when he seemed to have met with success in its attempt at accommodatation, he was disowned by Louis XIII and Richelieu. The kindness of the queen mother of Louis XI to him was also the affection of the princess to Madame de Brienne, his wife, whom the whole court knew to be the closest confidante of Anne of Austria. This influence kept him in power until the death of Mazarin, but before that time, his influence began to wane.
The impairment of the Count of Brienne was not soon enough for the young and voluntary authority of Louis XIV; high diplomatic capacities should preferably also attract the attention of the king, a great kingdom was coming, and he had to carry and moderate both the ideas of the gigantic new prince, physical strength and moral well above that of the Count de Brienne. Hugues de Lyonne was charged in 1663, with the Department of Foreign Affairs, replacing him. He died in 1666.
He wrote his memoirs for the instruction of her children: Memory containing the most remarkable events of the reign of Louis XIII and Louis XIV than to the death of Cardinal Mazarin.
Descendants
editBy a contract of 7 February 1623,[1] he married Louise de Béon (1602–1665), who brought him the title of Count of Brienne. They had seven children:
- Marie-Antoinette (c. 1624 – 8 December 1704), married 4 June 1642 to Nicolas-Joachim, Marquis de Rouault de Gamaches (born 1621, died at Beauchamps on 22 October 1687)
- Louis-Henri de Loménie de Brienne (born 13 January 1636, died at Château-Landon 17 April 1698), became Secrétaire d'État des Affaires Ètrangères, succeeding his father from 24 August 1651[2] to 14 April 1663, Conseiller d’État on 12 September 1651, retired at Les Pères de l’Oratoire from 24 January 1664 to 12 June 1670, committed by a lettre de cachet to an insane asylum, the Abbey of Saint-Lazare, from 27 January 1674 to 1692
- Charles-François (born 1638, died 7 April 1720), Abbot of in Picardie from 1653 to 1720, Abbot of Saint-Germain d'Auxerre, and of Saint-Cyprien de Poitiers, received as docteur in the Sorbonne on 8 March 1665, appointed Bishop of Coutances by the king on 5 December 1666 and confirmed by papal bull of 12 December 1667, consecrated by François de Harlay de Champvallon, Archbishop of Rouen, in the church of the Carmelite nuns at Saint-Denis on 19 February 1668, took possession of his diocese on 28 October 1668[3]
- Alexandre-Bernard (born c. 1640, died 1673[4]), joined the Order of Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem at the age of 5 on 16 June 1645,[5] named Consul of Cairo and Alexandria by lettres patentes on 30 November 1647[6] and on 21 February 1656[7]
- Jeanne, died young
- Madeleine, died young
Footnotes
edit- ^ René Toustain de Billy, Histoire ecclésiastique du diocèse de Coutances, 1886, t.3, p.328
- ^ Félix Vicq-d'Azur, Jean Le Rond d'Alembert, Encyclopédie Méthodique, ou Par Ordre De Matières : Par Une Société, 1788, vol. 25, p. 528.
- ^ René Toustain de Billy, Histoire ecclésiastique du diocèse de Coutances, 1886, t.3, p. 332
- ^ René Toustain de Billy, Histoire ecclésiastique du diocèse de Coutances, 1886, t.3, p. 330
- ^ René Aubert de Vertot, Histoire des Chevaliers hospitaliers de S. Jean de Jérusalem, appellez depuis les Chevaliers de Rhodes, et aujourd'hui les Chevaliers de Malte, 1726, t. 4, p. 111
- ^ Archives du ministère des Affaires étrangères, Turquie, correspondance politique, vol. 5, fol. 346 et 360 cited by Henry de Castries, Les Sources inédites de l'histoire du Maroc. Archives et bibliothèques de France, 1911, t. 3, p. XCV
- ^ Archives départementales des Bouches-du-Rhone, B3359 fol.151 r°-153 v° cited by Guéraud Poumarède, "Naissance d'une institution, royale : les consuls de la nation française au levant et en Barbarie au XVIe et XVIIe siècles", Annuaire bulletin de la Société de l'histoire de France, 2001, p. 76 n.72
References
edit- "Notice sur le Comte de Brienne" in introduction à ses Mémoires in Nouvelle Collection des Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de France (Michaud-Poujoulat, publié en 1838)
- "Notice sur le Comte de Brienne" in Michaud and Poujoulat, Nouvelle Collection des Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de France, vol. 3, 1850.