Sébastien, Duke of Penthièvre

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Sébastien de Luxembourg Martigues

Sebastien de Luxembourg, duke of Penthièvre (1530-1569) was viscount of Martigues, count and later duke of Penthièvre (1566–1569) and a peer of France.

He was the son of François de Luxembourg and Charlotte de Brosse, daughter of René de Brosse. Nephew of Jean de Brosse, duc d'Étampes, he was allowed to inherit his uncle's taken estates and was subsequently created the 1st Duke of Penthièvre.

He participated at the Siege of Leith in 1560. He arrived in January and the Protestants captured two of his ships laden with supplies, and it was said he was so angry he tore his beard out - "he rent his hair from his beard so clean as though he had been new shaven." In April he joked that the English army had arrived only to besiege the village of Restalrig. He returned to France aboard the Primrose in July.[1]

In 1556 he married Marie de Beaucaire (1535-1613), a daughter of Jean de Beaucaire sieur de Puyguillon, or Péguillon, and Guyonne de Breüil. She was a lady in waiting to Mary, Queen of Scots.[2] He asked the queen of Scots to be godmother to his daughter Marie in 1562 and she sent David Beaton of Melgund as her representative.[3] His daughter and heiress Marie de Luxembourg married Philippe-Emmanuel de Lorraine, duc de Mercœur, the rebel in Brittany.

He was killed on 19 November 1569 at the Siege of Saint-Jean-d'Angely.

French nobility
Preceded by
Jean IV
Comte de Penthièvre
1564–1566
Succeeded by
Marie de Luxembourg

References[]

  1. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar of State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 289, 380, 455.
  2. ^ Rosalind K. Marshall, 'Prosoprographical Analysis', Nadine Akkerman & Birgit Houben, The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe (Brill, 2014), pp. 221-2.
  3. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar of State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 621, 635.
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