César de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme

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César de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme, de Beaufort et d'Etampes (Château de Coucy, 3 June 159422 October 1665, Paris) was the son of Henry IV of France and his mistress Gabrielle d'Estrées.

He was legitimized in 1595, and was created duc de Vendôme by his father in 1598. The next year, he became duc de Beaufort and Étampes upon the death of his mother.

On 16 July 1608, at the Château de Fontainebleau, he married Françoise, duchesse de Mercoeur et de Penthièvre (d. 1669), a wealthy heiress. The couple had three children:

César spent much of his life intriguing against Marie de' Medici and then his half-brother Louis XIII of France. Implicated in the conspiracy of Chalais against Cardinal Richelieu, he and his brother Alexandre, the Chevalier de Vendôme, were imprisoned in the Château de Vincennes in 1626. He was released in 1630 and exiled to Holland.

In 1632, he returned to France and took part in the cabale des Importants against Cardinal Mazarin with his second son François. Exiled again, this time to England, he did not return until 1642. The marriage of his son Louis to Laura Mancini brought about his reconciliation with Mazarin, and he supported Anne of Austria throughout the Fronde. In 1651, he was appointed Admiral of France, and Grand Master of Navigation in 1655.

Nobility of France
Preceded by
New Creation
Duc de Vendôme
1598–1665
Succeeded by
Louis II
Preceded by
Gabrielle d'Estrées
Duc d'Étampes
1599–1665
Duc de Beaufort
1599–1665
Succeeded by
François