Hercule, Duke of Montbazon

Hercule
Duke of Montbazon

Hercule de Rohan. Engraving by Pierre Daret (1610-1675)
Spouse Marie de Bretagne d'Avaugour
Madeleine de Lenoncourt
Issue
Detail
Louis, Prince of Guéméné
Marie, Duchess of Chevreuse
François, Prince of Soubise
Anne, Duchess of Luynes
Full name
Hercule de Rohan
House House of Rohan
Father Louis de Rohan
Mother Eléanore de Rohan
Born 27 August 1568
Died 16 October 1654 (aged 86)[1]
Château de Couziers, France
Burial Rochefort-en-Yvelines, France

Hercule de Rohan (27 August 1568 16 October 1654) was a member of the princely House of Rohan. The second Duke of Montbazon, he is an ancestor of the present Princes of Guéméné. His daughter was the famous Frondeur the duchesse de Chevreuse. He was a Peer of France.[1]

Biography

Born the seventh of fourteen children of Louis de Rohan, prince de Guéméné and his wife Eléanore de Rohan, he was given the title of Count of Rochefort-en-Yvelines prior to becoming the Duke of Montbazon in 1589 at the death of his brother. He married his brothers widow;

He married twice; firstly to Madeleine de Lenoncourt, daughter of Henri de Lenoncourt, third of the name, and his wife Françoise de Laval, sister of the maréchal de Bois-Dauphin. The couple were married on 24 October 1594 and had two children.

His first son Louis, was the Prince of Guéméné and thus the head of the surviving main line of the House of Rohan; his eldest daughter, Marie was later a woman of great personal charm who placed herself at the center of many of the intrigues of the first half of the 17th century in France. She married Charles d'Albert and had issue.

Hercule's first wife Madeleine had died in 1628. The same year he married again to Marie de Bretagne d'Avaugour, daughter of Claude de Bretagne, Count of Vertus and Catherine Fouquet de La Varenne.[1]

His second wife was hailed as one of the most beautiful and most notorious women of her time. Hercule and Marie had three children, of whom two, François and Anne, would have progeny. François founded the Soubise line of the Rohan's and married his cousin Anne de Rohan-Chabot (later mistress of Louis XIV) and Anne, his youngest child married Louis Charles d'Albert de Luynes, her nephew by her older sister Marie.[1]

Hercule served Henri III and his successor Henri IV against the Catholic League. He was lieutenant-general of Brittany and then later, the governor of Nantes; he became the latter in 1598. Henri IV made him governor of Paris and the Ile-de-France. He was also the and master of the hounds.

Hercule was riding in the carriage with Henri IV when the king was assassinated by François Ravaillac on 14 May 1610. Hercule himself was wounded in the attack.[1] Hercule commanded the funeral procession for Henri's heart [2]

He died at the Château de Couziers eighty-six years old. He was buried at Rochefort-en-Yvelines in France, in local church's chapel called Chapel of princes.[1][3]

Issue

Issue with first wife:

Issue with second wife:

Titles, styles, honours and arms

Titles and styles

References and notes