Comte de Troisville

Jean-Armand du Peyrer, Comte de Troisville (or Tresville) (1598 8 May 1672) was a French officer. He was fictionalized under the name Monsieur de Tréville in Alexandre Dumas's 1844 novel The Three Musketeers.

Portrait of the Comte de Tréville by Le Nain, which had been hanging in the salon of Troisvilles Castle near to Tardets. Sold by 1954 in Paris, this portrait is now in private collection.[1]

Biography

Origins

Du Peyrer was born at Oloron-Sainte-Marie. He was not from aristocratic stock, but of recent nobility. It was his father, Jean du Peyrer, who introduced the name de Trois-villes or Tréville into the family. In 1607 he bought the region of Trois-Villes which effectively brought him nobility, according to the customs of the Basque Country at the time. This purchase also allowed the elder Du Peyrer the right to be considered a gentleman and to sit upon the council of gentlemen in the viscountcy of Soule. He died at Trois-Villes.

References

  1. In summer 2016, the portrait is shown at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth (Texas, USA) as a part of the exhibition The Brothers Le Nain: Painters of Seventeenth-Century France: http://lenain.kimbellart.org/exhibit/portraiture/portrait-comte-de-tréville-0 Archived 2016-08-16 at the Wayback Machine



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