François Roger de Gaignières

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François Roger de Gaignières (December 30, 1642 - 1715), French genealogist, antiquary and collector, was the son of Aimé de Gaignires, secretary to the governor of Burgundy.

He became cuyer (esquire) to Louis Joseph, duke of Guise, and afterwards to Louis Joseph's aunt, Marie of Guise, by whom in 1679 he was appointed governor of her principality of Joinville. At an early age he began to make a collection of original materials for history generally, and, in particular, for that of the French church and court.

He brought together a large collection of original letters and other documents, together with portraits and prints, and had copies made of a great number of the most curious antiquarian objects, such as seals, tombstones, stained glass, miniatures and tapestry. In 1711 he presented the whole of his collections to the king. The bulk of them is preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale at Paris, and a certain number in the Bodleian library at Oxford.

See:

  • Georges Duplessis, Roger de Gaignières (Paris, 1870)
  • Léopold Delisle, Cabinet des manuscrits, t. i. pp. 335-356
  • Henri Bouchot, Les Portraits aux crayon des XVI et XVII siècles (Paris, 1884)
  • Ch. de Grandmaison, Gaignières, ses correspondants et ses collections de portraits (Niort, 1892).

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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