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Duke of Brissac
View on Wikipedia| Cossé-Brissac | |
|---|---|
Coat of arms of the family | |
| Country | France |
| Founded | Late Middle Ages |
| Current head | Charles-André de Cossé, 14th Duke of Brissac |
| Titles |
|
| Estate | Château de Brissac |
Duke of Brissac (French: duc de Brissac) is a title of French nobility in the Peerage of France, which was originally created in 1611 for Charles II de Cossé, Count of Brissac. This title has been held since April 2021 by Charles-André de Cossé (b. 1962), who is the 14th Duke of Brissac. The ancestral home of the ducal family is the Château de Brissac, which is still owned by the family.[1]
Early history
[edit]The fief of Brissac in Anjou had been acquired at the end of the 15th century by a French family named Cossé from the same province. René de Cossé (1460-1540) married into the Gouffier family, which was at that time very powerful at court. He was awarded the title of premier panetier to King Louis XII.[2]
Two sons of René de Cossé were prominent French military commanders and became Marshals of France. The fief of Brissac was assigned the status of a County in 1560 and allotted to René's elder son, Charles de Cossé, Count of Brissac, who was grand master of artillery and governor of Piedmont and Picardy. It was he who introduced the Italian violin to the French court. The second son of René was Artus de Cossé (1512-1582), who held the offices of Grand Panetier of France and superintendent of finance, and he distinguished himself in the French Wars of Religion.[2]
The younger son of Charles de Cossé, Count of Brissac, was Charles II de Cossé. He fought for the Catholic League and, as military governor of Paris, opened the gates of that city to Henry IV, who appointed him Marshal of France in 1594. The County of Brissac was raised in status to a Duchy in the Peerage of France in 1611.[2] At that point, Charles II de Cossé became the first Duke of Brissac.
Subsequent history
[edit]
Notable Dukes of Brissac include Jean Paul Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac, who was the seventh Duke of Brissac and a Grand Panetier of France. He was a French general during the reign of King Louis XV and was noteworthy for leading the French vanguard at the Battle of Minden, after which he became a Marshal of France.
The seventh Duke of Brissac was eventually succeeded by his second son, Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac. Noted for his devotion to Louis XVI, Brissac served as the commander of the briefly established Constitutional Guard of the King. On 9 September 1792, he was killed during the September Massacres at Versailles. His body was butchered and his head severed. The head was wrapped in a cloth and carried by a peasant mob to the Château de Louveciennes where it was thrown through an open window, landing in the salon of his lover, Madame du Barry.
After the death of Louis-Hercule in 1792 without a living male-line descendant, the ducal title passed to Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac (1775–1848). He was the eldest son of Hyacinthe-Hugues de Cossé-Brissac, Duke of Cossé (1746–1813), whose father was René-Hugues de Cossé-Brissac, Count of Cossé (1702–1754). René-Hugues was the third son of Artus de Cossé-Brissac, 5th Duke of Brissac (1668–1709), the father of the 6th and 7th Dukes of Brissac. After Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac died in 1848, the ducal title was held by his successive descendants in the male line, including François, 11th Duke of Brissac, Pierre, 12th Duke of Brissac, and François, 13th Duke of Brissac.
The current holder of the ducal title is Charles-André de Cossé-Brissac, 14th Duke of Brissac. The heir apparent to this title is his eldest son, Laszlo de Cossé-Brissac, Marquis of Brissac.[3]
Dukes of Brissac
[edit]
First creation
[edit]- 1611-1621 Charles de Cossé, 1st Duke of Brissac.
- 1621-1651 François de Cossé, 2nd Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
- 1651-1661 Louis de Cossé, 3rd Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
- 1661-1698 Henri Albert de Cossé, 4th Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
- 1698-1702 Artus Timoléon Louis de Cossé 5th Duke of Brissac (cousin of the above)
- 1702-1732 Charles Timoléon Louis de Cossé, 6th Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
- 1732-1756 Jean Paul Timoléon de Cossé 7th Duke of Brissac (brother of the above)
- 1756-1759 Louis Joseph Timoléon de Cossé, 8th Duke of Brissac (called the Duke of Cossé), (son of the above)
- 1759-1792 Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé, 8th Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
Second creation
[edit]During the First Restoration, in an application ratified on 4 June 1814, Louis XVIII revived the peerage before it was restored as a hereditary peerage in 1817.
- 1814-1848 Timoléon de Cossé, 9th Duke of Brissac (cousin of the above)
- 1848-1883 Marie Arthur Timoléon de Cossé, 10th Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
- 1883-1944 François de Cossé, 11th Duke of Brissac (grandson of the above)
- 1944-1993 Pierre de Cossé, 12th Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
- 1993-2021 François de Cossé, 13th Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
- Since 2021 Charles-André de Cossé, 14th Duke of Brissac (son of the above)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Le Figaro Magazine, article by Stéphane Bern, published on 11/07/2008
- ^ a b c Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 574.
- ^ "Charles-André de Cossé - Notre château a traversé l'histoire". Le Figaro. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
External links
[edit]- Château de Brissac – official website
Duke of Brissac
View on GrokipediaThe Duke of Brissac (French: Duc de Brissac) is a hereditary title of French nobility in the peerage of France, created in 1611 for Charles II de Cossé, a marshal of France, and held by the heads of the House of Cossé-Brissac, an ancient noble family that acquired the seigneury of Brissac in the 15th century.[1][2] The family has maintained possession of the Château de Brissac, a Renaissance-era castle in the Loire Valley reconstructed in the early 17th century and recognized as the tallest in France due to its seven stories and 204 rooms.[2][3] Title holders have featured prominently in French military campaigns, court service, and governance, with several serving as marshals, governors, and peers under the Ancien Régime, though some faced execution during the French Revolution for their royalist stance.[4] The current bearer of the title is Charles-André de Cossé-Brissac, the 14th Duke, who resides at the château.[2][3]
Origins of the Title
Establishment of the Lordship of Brissac
The Lordship of Brissac emerged in the context of Anjou's feudal expansion, with the initial fortress constructed around the 10th century by a Count of Anjou to defend strategic positions along the Loire River valley.[5] This early motte-and-bailey structure established the site's role as a military outpost, forming the basis for the lordship as a fief under the counts' direct authority before being enfeoffed to vassals.[6] The precise founder among the early counts, such as Foulques II or his successors, remains undocumented in surviving records, reflecting the typical oral and charter-based transmission of feudal titles in medieval France. By the late Middle Ages, the lordship had passed to regional nobility, with Jean de la Haye attested as seigneur de Brissac in 1434, when he transferred the fief to Pierre de Brézé, seneschal of Normandy and advisor to King Charles VII.[7] Brézé, leveraging his influence and resources from royal service, initiated reconstructions around 1435, adding towers and fortifying the site amid the Hundred Years' War's lingering threats, though he died at the Battle of Montlhéry in 1465 without fully completing the works.[8] These developments solidified Brissac as a prominent seigneury, encompassing lands, rights over local justice, and tolls, typical of Angevin fiefs that balanced military utility with seigneurial income. The lordship's continuity through such holdings underscores the feudal system's reliance on inheritance and royal grants, predating its elevation under later owners.Acquisition by the Cossé Family
The seigneurie of Brissac, encompassing the castle and surrounding lands in Anjou, was purchased on 26 May 1502 by René de Cossé, a nobleman from the province, from Louis de Brézé, grandson of the military commander Pierre de Brézé who had previously held the estate.[9][10] This transaction marked the transfer of the fief from the Brézé lineage, which had controlled it since the mid-15th century, to the Cossé family, thereby establishing their longstanding association with the property.[10] René de Cossé, already seigneur de Beaulieu, integrated Brissac into his holdings and adopted the territorial designation Cossé-Brissac, reflecting the convention of French nobility to incorporate lordship names into family titles.[9] The acquisition occurred under the reign of Louis XII, prior to René's appointment as governor of Anjou and Maine by Francis I in the subsequent decade, underscoring the Cossé family's rising influence in regional administration and court circles.[9] The Cossé-Brissac line has continuously owned the estate since this purchase, preserving it through subsequent historical upheavals, including the Wars of Religion, with no recorded interruptions in possession.[10] This enduring tenure distinguishes the family among French noble houses, as the property remains a private residence under their stewardship as of the 21st century.[10]Creation and Early Ducal Line
Elevation to Duchy in 1611
![Blason Maison de Cossé-Brissac.svg.png][float-right] In April 1611, King Louis XIII of France elevated the County of Brissac to a duchy in the peerage by letters patent, granting the title to Charles II de Cossé, who had inherited the county from his father.[11] This creation marked the formal establishment of the ducal line within the Cossé family, conferring the privileges of a duke-peer, including precedence in the royal council and judicial rights over the territory.[11] The elevation recognized de Cossé's longstanding military service to the crown, including his role as Marshal of France since 1594 and his contributions during the French Wars of Religion and subsequent conflicts.[8] The patent specified the duchy-peerage as hereditary in the male line, with the seat at the Château de Brissac, which the family had owned since the early 16th century.[8] This act aligned with Louis XIII's early policies to reward loyal nobles amid the consolidation of royal authority following Henry IV's assassination in 1610.[12] Prior to the elevation, Brissac held county status, but the ducal grant enhanced the family's influence in Anjou and at court, integrating it into the upper echelons of the peerage.Charles de Cossé as First Duke
Charles II de Cossé (c. 1550 – June 1621), son of the Marshal of France Charles I de Cossé, Count of Brissac (1506–1563), inherited the lordship of Brissac and rose through military and administrative roles amid the French Wars of Religion.[10] Initially aligned with the Catholic League, he held the position of military governor of Paris by 1594, where he negotiated with city aldermen to facilitate the peaceful entry of Henry IV on 22 March 1594, averting a siege after the king's conversion to Catholicism.[10] [13] This act of capitulation shifted his loyalty to the Bourbon monarchy, earning him recognition as Henry IV rewarded key figures who enabled the stabilization of royal authority in the capital.[13] In acknowledgment of these services, Henry IV elevated the County of Brissac to a duchy in the peerage of France on 19 February 1611, making Charles II the inaugural Duke of Brissac with precedence among peers.[13] The king also provided funds for the reconstruction of the Château de Brissac, which Charles II oversaw from 1601 to 1621, transforming the medieval fortress into a Renaissance-style residence that blended defensive architecture with opulent interiors, including its seven-story towers that remain the tallest in France.[10] As duke, he continued courtly duties, leveraging the family's Anjou roots and prior marshal legacy to maintain influence, though his later years focused on estate management rather than active command.[10] Charles II's tenure as first duke solidified the Cossé-Brissac line's status, bridging the turbulent religious conflicts to the early absolutist era under the Bourbons, with his strategic pivot in 1594 exemplifying pragmatic allegiance shifts that preserved noble privileges amid civil strife. He died in June 1621, succeeded by his son René, who continued the ducal inheritance.[13][10]Historical Role and Contributions
Military Service and Loyalty to the Monarchy
Charles I de Cossé, who held the county of Brissac and whose son became the first duke, exemplified the family's military commitment through his role as colonel-general of cavalry from 1548 to 1549 and Grand Master of Artillery, culminating in his elevation to Marshal of France in 1550 by Henry II for valor in the Italian Wars, including a wound sustained commanding artillery abroad.[8] He further defended French interests in Piedmont against Habsburg forces in 1559 and led the recapture of Le Havre from English occupiers in 1563, operations that reinforced royal control amid religious and foreign conflicts.[14] Charles II de Cossé, the inaugural Duke of Brissac from 1611, continued this tradition as a key commander in the French Wars of Religion, serving as vice-admiral in the Azores campaigns of 1580–1583 against Spanish and Portuguese forces and as military governor of Paris, where his decision to open the city gates to Henry IV in 1594—despite prior alignment with the Catholic League—secured minimal bloodshed and earned him the marshalate that year, affirming his allegiance to the Bourbon monarchy.[15] [14] This fidelity extended to later ducal holders, as seen in Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac, 8th Duke (1734–1792), appointed maréchal de camp in 1780 and commander of Louis XVI's Constitutional Guard in 1791, whom he staffed deliberately with soldiers devoted to the king to counter revolutionary threats, maintaining royalist resolve until his assassination by a mob en route to Paris in September 1792.[16] [17] The family's repeated marshalships—four in total across generations—underscored a pattern of service prioritizing monarchical stability over factional divisions.[18]Involvement in French Wars of Religion and Beyond
Charles II de Cossé, who would become the first Duke of Brissac, initially fought on behalf of the Catholic League during the later phases of the French Wars of Religion, aligning with the House of Guise against royal authority under Henry III. He played a prominent role in the Day of the Barricades on 12 May 1588, a Catholic insurrection in Paris that forced Henry III to flee the city amid accusations of his leniency toward Protestants.[19] As military governor of Paris under League control, de Cossé negotiated directly with the newly converted Henry IV in early 1594, ultimately opening the city's gates on 22 March and enabling a peaceful surrender without bloodshed or plunder. In recognition of this defection, which shifted League-held Paris to royal control, Henry IV appointed him Marshal of France on 25 March 1594.[20][21] De Cossé's allegiance to Henry IV extended to preserving family holdings; the Château de Brissac, occupied by Protestants in 1589 and severely damaged during the conflicts, faced scheduled demolition as a fortress, but his support for the king spared it from destruction.[13] Following the Edict of Nantes in 1598, which concluded the wars, de Cossé continued as a loyal crown marshal, commanding forces and serving as governor of Paris until his death around 1621. His military fidelity culminated in the elevation of Brissac to a peerage-duchy on 19 March 1611 by Marie de' Medici's regency for Louis XIII, formalizing the title's prominence in the post-war monarchy.[9]Impact of the French Revolution
Persecution of the Dukes
Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé, the 8th Duke of Brissac, encountered direct persecution amid the escalating violence against royalist nobles following the formation of the king's Garde Constitutionnelle on 6 October 1789. As its commander, he staffed the unit with personnel sympathetic to Louis XVI, prompting suspicions from the National Assembly, which disbanded the guard amid fears of counter-revolutionary plotting.[22] Accused of treason for allegedly urging guardsmen to remain loyal to the monarchy, the duke was arrested and initially confined in Orléans before being transported toward Paris.[23] On 9 September 1792, during the September Massacres—a spasm of mob violence preceding the formal Reign of Terror—the duke's convoy reached Versailles, where revolutionaries intercepted the prisoners. Dragged from his wagon with hands shackled, he was hacked to death by swords wielded by the assailants; his body was further mutilated, with ears severed and head impaled on a spike before being hurled through the window of his mistress, Madame du Barry, at her nearby residence.[23] [24] This execution exemplified the revolutionary targeting of high-ranking aristocrats perceived as threats, occurring without trial and amid widespread paranoia over prison uprisings.[24] The duke's death without surviving male-issue from his line temporarily disrupted the ducal succession, though the title later devolved to a collateral relative. Broader family assets, including the Château de Brissac, were seized and ransacked by revolutionaries between 1789 and 1799, stripping the Cossé-Brissac holdings of valuables and briefly placing the estate outside family control.[25] Other relatives, such as Catherine de Cossé, faced arrest and guillotine execution on charges of treason, underscoring the lineage's vulnerability to revolutionary reprisals against noble bloodlines.Suppression and Survival of the Line
The French Revolution's radical phase severely threatened the Cossé-Brissac lineage, culminating in the violent death of Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac, the 8th Duke, on September 9, 1792, during the September Massacres in Versailles.[26] As commander of the Garde Nationale de Paris under the constitutional monarchy, he was arrested amid rising Jacobin paranoia, transported to Paris, and lynched by a revolutionary mob, who severed his head and paraded it on a pike before the Legislative Assembly.[23] This event exemplified the broader suppression of noble lines, with the National Assembly having abolished feudal privileges and hereditary titles on the night of August 4, 1789, and formally ending noble corporations by decree on June 19, 1790, effectively erasing legal recognition of the ducal house.[26] The 8th Duke's death without surviving male issue from his direct line—his marriage to Marie Louise Françoise de Mailly-Nesle produced no heirs—compounded the peril, as revolutionary policies included confiscation of émigré and noble properties, with the family's Château de Brissac plundered by local revolutionaries between 1789 and 1799.[25] Many Cossé-Brissac kin, like other nobles, faced execution, imprisonment, or forced emigration, with over 20,000 French aristocrats fleeing abroad by 1792 to evade guillotines and civil penalties.[27] Despite these assaults, the Cossé-Brissac male line endured through collateral branches, particularly via Pierre-Paul de Cossé's son, Timoléon de Cossé (1775–1848), a nephew of the 8th Duke, who navigated the turmoil—likely through obscurity or temporary exile—and outlived the revolutionary and Napoleonic eras to reclaim familial prominence.[18] This resilience mirrored patterns among resilient noble houses, where younger or peripheral males evaded purges by avoiding public roles or blending into provincial life, preserving patrilineal descent amid the estimated execution or exile of up to 40% of France's high nobility by 1794.[27] The family's continuity enabled the title's revival in 1814 under the Bourbon Restoration, affirming the line's survival against revolutionary intent to eradicate aristocratic inheritance.[18]Restoration and Modern Era
Recreation of the Title
Following the suppression of noble titles during the French Revolution, the title of Duke of Brissac was revived during the Bourbon Restoration. King Louis XVIII ratified the recreation on 4 June 1814, granting it to Augustin Marie Paul Pétronille Timoléon de Cossé (13 January 1775 – 8 April 1848), a cousin of the eighth and last duke of the first creation, Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé-Brissac, who had been assassinated in September 1792 without surviving male issue in the direct line.[28] Timoléon de Cossé, son of Hyacinthe-Hugues-Timoléon de Cossé, marquis de Cossé (a brother of the seventh duke), had previously served as a Napoleonic prefect, including in Marengo and other departments, but aligned with the restored monarchy.[9] De Cossé was appointed a peer of France on 14 June 1814, entitling him to a seat in the Chamber of Peers and confirming the ducal rank with associated privileges under the constitutional charter of 1814.[28] [9] This second creation preserved the peerage's transmission by primogeniture within the Cossé-Brissac branch, bypassing the revolutionary abolition while recognizing familial continuity through collateral descent. The title's holder also retained oversight of the family's ancestral seat, the Château de Brissac, which had survived partial confiscation and sale during the revolutionary period.[28] The recreation reflected broader Restoration efforts to reinstate pre-revolutionary nobility, though selectively; de Cossé's prior imperial service did not preclude his elevation, as Louis XVIII prioritized loyalist reconstruction over ideological purity in peerage appointments.[28] Subsequent holders, starting with de Cossé's son Marie Arthur Timoléon (1813–1883), maintained the title through the July Monarchy and beyond, adapting to republican and imperial interruptions while upholding hereditary claims.[9]Contemporary Dukes and Preservation Efforts
The dukedom of Brissac passed to Charles-André de Cossé-Brissac as the 14th Duke upon the death of his father, François de Cossé, on April 6, 2021.[29] Born in 1962, Charles-André resides at the Château de Brissac with his wife, Duchess Larissa, and their four children: Laszlo (the Marquis de Brissac and heir apparent, born 1994), Irina, Délia, and Annabel.[14] The family continues the Cossé-Brissac tradition of inhabiting the estate, which has been in their possession since 1502.[14] Preservation efforts center on maintaining the château as both a private residence and a public attraction to fund upkeep. The 13th Duke, François, devoted significant portions of his life to safeguarding the property, including its historical structures and collections.[30] Under Charles-André's stewardship, the château remains open to visitors daily except Tuesdays, offering guided tours of its 204 rooms, medieval kitchens, and ornate salons, which generate revenue for conservation.[31] Additional income derives from hosting receptions and providing chambres d'hôtes accommodations within the grounds.[31] These initiatives, combined with the site's designation as a monument historique, support ongoing restoration and prevent decay in the 17th-century Renaissance structure.[8] The family also preserves 70 hectares of surrounding parkland, where traditional hunting practices continue.[32]List of Dukes
First Creation (1611–1790)
The dukedom of Brissac was created on 13 April 1611 by letters patent of Louis XIII, elevating the county of Brissac to a duchy-peerage in favor of Charles II de Cossé, a marshal of France who had served Henry IV loyally, including as governor of Paris.[9][33] The title passed through direct male descent until the French Revolution, when noble privileges were suppressed in 1790, though the final holder retained the style until his execution in 1792.[34] The holders of the first creation were:- 1st Duke (1611–1621): Charles II de Cossé (c. 1550–1621), marshal of France and peer, son of René de Cossé; he commanded forces in the Wars of Religion and was rewarded for opening Paris to Henry IV in 1594.[34][35]
- 2nd Duke (1621–1651): François de Cossé (1581–1651), eldest son of the 1st Duke; he served in military roles under Louis XIII but predeceased potential further honors.[9]
- 3rd Duke (1651–1661): Louis de Cossé (1620–1661), son of the 2nd Duke; his short tenure ended without notable independent commands recorded beyond family inheritance.[34]
- 4th Duke (1661–1700): Artus de Cossé (1628–1700), brother of the 3rd Duke; he succeeded via fraternal line as no direct heirs survived.[34]
- 5th Duke (1700–1755): Pierre-Paul de Cossé (1674–1755), son of the 4th Duke; he held court positions under Louis XIV and Louis XV, maintaining family estates.[34]
- 6th Duke (1755–1792): Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé (1734–1792), grandson of the 5th Duke via his son; appointed commandant of the Garde Constitutionnelle by Louis XVI in 1791, he was arrested during the Revolution and guillotined at Versailles on 9 September 1792 after a mob massacre en route from Paris.[34][36]
Second Creation (1814–present)
The dukedom of Brissac was recreated on 4 June 1814 by King Louis XVIII during the Bourbon Restoration, granting the title of duke and peer of France to Augustin Marie Paul Pétronille Timoléon de Cossé (13 January 1775 – 8 April 1848), a surviving cousin of Louis Hercule Timoléon de Cossé, the last holder of the first creation, who had been executed in 1792.[28] Timoléon de Cossé had inherited the family estates after the Revolutionary confiscations and served as a deputy in the Chambre des députés during the Restoration.[33] He was succeeded by his eldest son:- Marie Arthur Timoléon de Cossé (21 July 1813 – 4 July 1883), 2nd holder of the second creation, who married Sophie Le Fitte de La Roche in 1840 and focused on estate management amid the July Monarchy and Second Empire.[33]
- François Marie Eugène Timoléon de Cossé (3 March 1868 – 24 August 1944), who inherited in 1883, served in World War I, and authored works on family history.[33] He was succeeded by his son:
- Pierre Marie René de Cossé (5 May 1900 – 24 June 1996), who managed the Château de Brissac through World War II occupations and wrote The Dukes of Brissac: History of an Illustrious French Family (1979), preserving archival records of the lineage.[33]
- Eugène Marie Timoléon François de Cossé (19 February 1929 – 6 April 2021), who developed equestrian activities at Brissac and supported cultural preservation efforts.[29][37]
- Charles-André de Cossé (born 3 November 1962), son of the previous, married to Larissa Széchényi de Sárvár-Felsövidek since 1990, with whom he has four children; he oversees the family seat at Château de Brissac as a historic monument and vinicultural estate.[29][38][39]


