Online Encyclopedia

DUKE FRANCOIS HENRI DE MONTMORENCYBOU...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 145 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

DUKE FRANCOIS
See also:
HENRI DE MONTMORENCYBOUTEVILLE LUXEMBURG
  of (1628-1695), marshal of France, the comrade and successor of the
See also:
great Conde, was born at Paris on the 8th of
See also:
January 1628 . His
See also:
father, the comte de Montmorency-Bouteville, had been executed six months before his birth for killing the
See also:
marquis de Beuvron in a duel, but his aunt,
See also:
Charlotte de Montmorency, princess of Conde, took charge of him and educated him with her son, the duc d'Enghien . The young Montmorency (or Bouteville as he was then called) attached himself to his cousin, and shared his successes and reverses throughout the troubles of the
See also:
Fronde . He returned to France in 1659 and was pardoned, and Conde, then much attached to the duchesse de
See also:
Chatillon, Montmorency's
See also:
sister, contrived the
See also:
marriage of his adherent and cousin to the greatest heiress in France, Madeleine de Luxemburg-Piney, princesse de Tingry and heiress of the Luxemburg dukedom (1661), after which he was created duc de Luxembourg and peer of France . At the opening of the War of Devolution (1667-68), Conde, and consequently Luxemburg, had no command, but during the second
See also:
campaign he served as Conde's
See also:
lieutenant-general in the
See also:
conquest of Franche Comte . During the four years of peace which followed Luxemburg cultivated the faYour of Louvois, and in 1672 held a high command against the Dutch . He defeated the prince of Orange at Woerden and ravaged Holland, and in 1673 made his famous retreat from Utrecht to Maestricht with only 20,000 men in face of 70,000, an exploit which placed him in the first rank of generals . In 1674 he was made captain of the gardes du corps, and in 1675 marshal of France . In r676 he was placed at the head of the army of the Rhine, but failed to keep the duke of
See also:
Lorraine out of Philipsburg; in 1677 he stormed
See also:
Valenciennes; and in 1678 he defeated the prince of Orange, who attacked him at St Denis after the signature of the peace of Nijmwegen . His reputation was now high, and it is reputed that he quarrelled with Louvois, who managed to involve him in the " affair of the poisons " (see LA VOISIN, CATHERINE) and get him sent to the Bastille . Rousset in his Hisloire de Louvois has shown that this
See also:
quarrel is probably apocryphal . There is no doubt that Luxemburg spent some months of i68o in the Bastille, but on his release took up his
See also:
post at court as capitaine
See also:
des gardes .

When the war of 1690

broke out, the king and Louvois recognized that Luxemburg was the only general
See also:
fit to cope with the prince of Orange, and he was put in command of the army of Flanders . On the 1st of
See also:
July 1690 he won a great victory over the prince of Waldeck at
See also:
Fleurus . In the following
See also:
year he commanded the army which covered the king's siege of Mons and defeated William III . of England at Leuze on September 18, 1691 . Again in the confiscated in 1806, and which were given by the congress to the next campaign he covered the king's siege of Namur, and defeated William at Steenkirk (q.v.) on
See also:
June 5, 1692; and on July 29, 1693, he won his greatest victory over his old adversary at
See also:
Neerwinden, after which he was called le tapissier de Notre Dame from the number of captured colours that he sent to the
See also:
cathedral . He wa4 received with
See also:
enthusiasm at Paris by all but the king, who looked coldly on a relative and adherent of the Condes . St Simon describes in the first
See also:
volume of his
See also:
Memoirs how, instead of ranking as eighteenth peer of France according to his patent of 1661, he claimed through his wife to be duc de Piney of an old creation of 1571, which would place him second on the roll . The affair is described with St Simon's usual
See also:
interest in the peerage, and was chiefly checked through his assiduity . In the campaign of 1694, Luxemburg did little in Flanders, except that he conducted a famous march from Vignamont to Tournay in face of the enemy . On his return to
See also:
Versailles for the winter he fell
See also:
ill, and died on January 4, 1695 . In his last moments he was attended by the famous Jesuit priest Bourdaloue, who said on his
See also:
death, " I have not lived his
See also:
life, but I would wish to die his death." Luxemburg's morals were
See also:
bad even in those times, and he had shown little sign of religious conviction . But as a general he was Conde's grandest pupil .

Though slothful like Conde in the management of a campaign, at the moment of

See also:
battle he seemed seized with happy inspirations, against which no ardour of William's and no steadiness of Dutch or
See also:
English soldiers could stand . His death and Catinat's disgrace close the second period of the military
See also:
history of the reign of Louis XIV., and ! Catinat and Luxemburg, though inferior to Conde and Turenne, were far
See also:
superior to Tallard and Villeroi . He was distinguished for a pungent wit . One of his retorts referred to his deformity . " I never can beat that cursed humpback," William was reputed to have said of him . " How does he know I have a hump ? " retorted Luxemburg, " he has never seen my back." He
See also:
left four sons, the youngest of whom was a marshal of France as Marechal de Montmorency . See, besides the various memoirs and histories of the time, Beau-rain's Histoire militaire du duc de Luxembourg (Hague and Paris, 1756) ; Memoires pour servir a l'histoire du marechal duc de Luxembourg (Hague and Paris, 1758) ; Courcelles, Dictionnaire des generaux francais (Paris, 1823), vol. viii . There are some interesting facts in Desormeaux's Histoire de la maison de Montmorency (1764), vols. iv. and v . Camille Rousset's Louvois and the
See also:
recent biography of Luxemburg by Count de Segur (1907) should also be studied .

End of Article: DUKE FRANCOIS HENRI DE MONTMORENCYBOUTEVILLE LUXEMBURG
[back]
LUXEMBURG
[next]
LUXOR

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.