Louis de Beauvau

Louis I de Beauvau (1416 1462), lord of Beauvau and Sermaise in Anjou, was the first son of Pierre, Baron of Beauvau, and Jeanne de Craon. Ambassador to Henry VI of England, retainer of the House of Anjou, and close friend of René I of Anjou, he was made a knight of the Ordre du Croissant.

Louis de Beauvau

Biography

Born in 1416, Louis was the son of Pierre, Baron of Beauvau,[1][2] and Jeanne de Craon, daughter of Pierre de Craon.[3] Following the service to the House of Anjou by his father,[4] Louis entered the employ of Duke René of Anjou.[5] In 1431, Louis was appointed governor of Lorraine, by Duke René. Tasked with the mission of eradicating écorcheurs, he mastered the situation in a year and a half and brought peace to the duchy. Following this success, he was appointed Seneschal of Anjou,[6] Grand Seneschal of Provence,[7] and Rene's Premier Chamberlain.[2] Louis's duties in Anjou included being curator of the University of Anjou.[8]

In June 1447, Louis was part of a prestigious embassy sent to Henry VI of England from Charles VII of France, asking for the return of the county of Maine in return for an extension of the truce.[9] Henry VI agreed and the county of Maine was returned to France by 15 March 1448.[9] After such success, Rene honoured Louis by making him the first of his knights of the Ordre du Croissant in 1448.[10][11]

Louis first wife Margaret de Chambley

In 1459, as an envoy of Duke Rene and the Angevins, Louis traveled from the French court to Florence, negotiating with Piero de Pazzi.[12] The bulk of Rene's money and contacts existed in this city.[12] He was sent to Rome in 1472, to negotiate with Pope Sixtus IV, Rene's rightful entitlement to the Kingdom of Naples.[11]

Family

Louis married twice. First wife:

Marguerite de Chambley, daughter of Ferry de Chambley and Jean de Launay,[13] around 1435/1437, they had:

Second wife:

Anne de Beaujeu[15] daughter of Edouard de Beaujeu and Jacqueline de Beaujeu before 1501 they had:
  • Alix de Beauveu b. between 1422 and 1474 who married Rene de Beauveu before 1510

Literature

Louis de Beauvau authored the poem:

  • Le Pas de la bergiere, an account of the Pas de la Bergère tournament, which took place from 3–8 June 1449 on the former island of Jarnègues at Tarascon at Duke René's.[16]
  • Roman de Troyle et Criseida, the first French translation of Il Filostrato by Giovanni Boccaccio, around 1453-1455, is attributed to Louis.[17] Other authors attribute this translation to his father Pierre de Beauvau.[6]

References

  1. Bianciotto 1994, p. 305.
  2. Spangler 2017, p. 644-645.
  3. Favier 2008, p. table 5.
  4. Bianciotto 1994, p. 111.
  5. Kekewich 2008, p. 64.
  6. Chaucer 2013, p. 23.
  7. Cook 1911, p. 404.
  8. Haug 2013, p. 141.
  9. Kekewich 2008, p. 115.
  10. Margolis 2016, p. 54.
  11. Spangler 2017, p. 645.
  12. Margolis 2016, p. 158.
  13. Bianciotto 1994, p. 212.
  14. Du Tillet 1994, p. 220.
  15. Bianciotto 1994, p. 247.
  16. Kekewich 2008, p. 134.
  17. Margolis 2016, p. 111.

Sources

  • Bianciotto, Gabriel (1994). Le Roman de Troyle. Vol.1. Publications de l'Universite de Rouen.
  • Chaucer, Geoffrey (2013). Windeatt, B.A. (ed.). Troilus and Criseyde: "The Book of Troilus". Routledge.
  • Cook, Theodore Andrea (1911). Old Provence. Vol.2. Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Favier, Jean (2008). Le Roi René (in French). Fayard.
  • Haug, Hélène (2013). "Maistre Pierre de Hurion, agille imitateur. Bilan sur les auteurs actifs à la cour de René d'Anjou (1434-1480)". Romania (in French). 521–522: 130–151.
  • Kekewich, Margaret L. (2008). The Good King: René of Anjou and Fifteenth Century Europe. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Margolis, Oren Jason (2016). The Politics of Culture in Quattrocento Europe: René of Anjou in Italy. Oxford University Press.
  • Spangler, Jonathan (2017). "Transferring Affections: Princes, Favourites and the Peripatetic Houses of Lorraine and Beauvau as Trans-Regional Families". In Haider-Wilson, Barbara (ed.). Internationale Geschichte in Theorie Und Praxis/International History in Theory and Practice (1st ed.). Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, Wien. pp. 635–664.
  • Du Tillet, Jean (1994). Brown, Elizabeth A. R. (ed.). Jean Du Tillet and the French wars of religion: five tracts, 1562-1569. Binghamton University Press.
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