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BREZE , the name of a See also: noble Angevin See also: family, the most famous member of which was See also: PIERRE DE BREzE (e
.
1410-1465), one of the trusted soldiers and statesmen of See also: Charles VII
.
He had made his name as a soldier in the
See also: English See also: wars when in 1433 he joined with Yolande, See also: queen of See also: Sicily, the See also: constable See also: Richmond and others, in See also: chasing from power Charles VII.'s See also: minister La Tremoille
.
He was knighted by Charles of See also: Anjou in 1434, and presently entered the royal council
.
In 1437 he became seneschal of Anjou, and in 1440 of See also: Poitou
.
During the See also: Praguerie he rendered See also: great service to the royal cause against the dauphin See also: Louis and the revolted nobles, a service which was remembered against him after Louis's accession to the
See also: throne
.
He fought against the English in See also: Normandy in 1440-1441, and in See also: Guienne in 1442
.
In the next See also: year he became See also: chamberlain to Charles VII., and gained the chief power in the
See also: state through the influence of See also: Agnes See also: Sorel, superseding his early See also: allies Richmond and Charles of Anjou
.
The six years (1444–1450) of his ascendancy were the most prosperous See also: period of the reign of Charles VII
.
His most dangerous opponent was the dauphin Louis, who in 1448 brought against him accusations which led to a formal trial resulting in a See also: complete exoneration of Breze and his restoration to favour
.
He fought in Normandy in 1450-1451, and became seneschal of the province after the See also: death of Agnes Sorel and the consequent decline of his influence at See also: court
.
He made an ineffective descent on the English See also: coast at See also: Sandwich in 1457, and was preparing an expedition in favour of See also: Margaret of Anjou when the accession of Louis XI. brought him disgrace and a See also: short imprisonment
.
In 1462, however, his son Jacques married Louis's See also: half-See also: sister, See also: Charlotte de Valois, daughter of Agnes Sorel
.
In 1462 he accompanied Margaret to Scotland with a force of 2000 men, and after the See also: battle of See also: Hexham he brought her back to See also: Flanders
.
On his return he was reappointed seneschal of Normandy, and See also: fell in the battle of Montlhery on the 16th of See also: July 1465
.
He was succeeded as seneschal of Normandy by his eldest son Jacques de Breze (c
.
1440-1490), count of Maulevrier; and by his See also: grandson, See also: husband of the famous Diane de See also: Poitiers, Louis de Breze (d
.
1531), whose See also: tomb in See also: Rouen See also: cathedral, attributed to See also: Jean Goujon and Jean See also: Cousin, is a splendid example of French See also: Renaissance See also: work
.
The lordship of Breze passed eventually to Claire Clemence de Maille, princess of Conde, by whom it was sold to See also: Thomas
See also: Dreux, who took the name of Dreux Breze, when it was erected into a marquisate
.
See also: HENRI EVRARD, See also: marquis de Dreux-Breze (1762–1829), succeeded his See also: father as master of the ceremonies to Louis XVI. in 1781
.
On the meeting of the states-general in 1789 it fell to him to regulate the questions of See also: etiquette and precedence between the three estates
.
That as the immediate representative of the See also: crown he should wound the susceptibilities of the deputies was perhaps inevitable, but little attempt was made to adapt traditional etiquette to changed circumstances
.
Breze did not formally intimate to President See also: Bailly the proclamation of the royal seance until the 20th of See also: June, when the carpenters were about to enter the See also: hall to prepare for the event, thus provoking the session in the tennis court
.
After the royal seance Breze was sent to reiterate Louis's orders that the estates should meet separately, when
See also: Mirabeau replied that the hall could not be cleared except by force
.
After the fall of the Tuileries Breze emigrated for a short See also: time, but though he returned to See also: France he was spared during the Terror
.
At the Restoration he was made a peer of France, and resumed his functions as See also: guardian of an antiquated ceremonial
.
He died on the 27th of See also: January 1829, when he was succeeded in the See also: peerage and at court by his son Scipion (1793–1845)
.
The best contemporary account of Pierre de Breze is given in the Chroniques of the Burgundian chronicler, Georges See also: Chastellain, wha had been his secretary
.
Chastellain addressed a Deprecation tr Louis XI. on his behalf at the time of his disgrace
.
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