Adrien, Count of Rougé
Adrien Gabriel Victurnien, Count de Rougé (2 July 1782 in Everly – 16 June 1838 in Guyencourt), was a French statesman, distinguished soldier, and Peer of France.
Adrien was a son of Bonabes, Marquis de Rougé and his wife Natalie Victurnienne. He served under the Comte d'Artois, later King Charles X, in the Army of the Princes, first as a second lieutenant in the Infantry, then in 1800 as a "chasseur noble" in the Mortemart regiment. He served then as an officer of the King's Mousquetaires in 1814.
From 1815 to 1823, he was a member of the Chamber of Deputies, representing the Departement of the Somme. In 1816, Charles X appointed him to the Peerage with the title of Comte. For a time he commanded one of the four subdivisions of the army stationed in Paris. He became the leader of the Knights of the Faith, a very powerful secret ultra conservative organisation. Like his older brother, Alexis Bonabes, Marquis de Rougé (head of the entire House of Rougé, Rougé du Plessis-Bellière et de Fay), he refused his allegiance to the government of King Louis Philippe.
Family
By his wife, Caroline de Forbin d'Oppède, on 18 September 1809, in Arnouville, they had four children:
- Félix, Comte de Rougé 1810-1893
- Armel, Comte de Rougé 1813-1898
- Marie de Rougé 1816-1860
- Delphine de Rougé 1820-1852.[1]