Marie de Rohan-Montbazon, duchess de Chevreuse

French princess
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Quick Facts
Born:
December 1600
Died:
August 12, 1679, Gagny, France (aged 78)

Marie de Rohan-Montbazon, duchess de Chevreuse (born December 1600—died August 12, 1679, Gagny, France) was a French princess, a tireless participant in the conspiracies against the ministerial government during Louis XIII’s reign (1610–43) and the regency (1643–51) for Louis XIV.

The daughter of Hercule de Rohan, duc de Montbazon, Marie was married in 1617 to Charles d’Albert, later duc de Luynes. The following year she became superintendent of the household of Louis XIII’s queen, Anne of Austria. Widowed in December 1621, she married the influential Claude de Lorraine, duc de Chevreuse, in April 1622. In 1625 her attempts to promote a liaison between Anne and the English lord George Villiers, 1st duke of Buckingham, failed when Buckingham scandalized the French court by openly declaring his passion for the Queen. Exiled to Poitou for her part in a plot (1626) against Louis XIII’s powerful minister, the Cardinal de Richelieu, the Duchesse soon withdrew to the duchy of Lorraine, where she persuaded Duke Charles IV to join Buckingham’s anti-French coalition.

Permitted by Richelieu to return to France in 1628, Mme de Chevreuse was exiled to Touraine in 1633 for betraying to Spain state secrets extracted from her lover, the Marquis de Châteauneuf, keeper of the seals. France went to war with Spain in 1635, and two years later Richelieu discovered that the Queen and Mme de Chevreuse were conducting treasonable correspondence with the Spanish court. The Duchesse fled in disguise to Spain.

When Anne became regent upon the accession of her young son, Louis XIV, Mme de Chevreuse was again allowed to return to France. She immediately resumed her intrigues. In the abortive conspiracy of “les Importants,” she plotted with a group of high nobles to assassinate the Queen’s first minister, Cardinal Jules Mazarin (1643). Anne sent her into exile, but she returned to Paris in 1649 during the first phase of the aristocratic uprising against Mazarin known as the Fronde (1648–53). Although she helped form the coalition of noble and bourgeois elements that supported the revolt of the Prince de Condé (the Great Condé) in 1651, Mme de Chevreuse was reconciled to Mazarin after Condé broke his agreement to marry his brother to her daughter Charlotte. In 1652 the Duchesse retired to Dampierre.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.