Online Encyclopedia

ANNE MONTMORENCY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 788 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANNE MONTMORENCY  , Due DE (1493—1567), constable of France, was born at
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Chantilly, and was brought up with the future King Francis I., whom he followed into Italy in 1515, distinguishing himself especially at Marignano . In 1516 he became governor of
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Novara; in 1520 he was
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present at the Field of
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Cloth of Gold, and afterwards had charge of important negotiations in England . Successful in the defence of Mezieres (1521), and as
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commander of the Swiss troops in the
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Italian
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campaign of the same
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year, he was made marshal of France in 1522, accompanied Francis into Italy in 1524, and was taken prisoner at Pavia in 1525 . Released soon afterwards, he was one of the negotiators of the treaty of
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Madrid, and in 1530 reconducted the king's sons into France . On the renewal of the war by Charles V.'s invasion of France in 1536, Montmorency compelled the emperor to raise the siege of
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Marseilles; he afterwards accompanied the king of France into Picardy, and on the termination of the
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Netherlands campaign marched to the
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relief of
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Turin . In 1538, on the ratification of the ten years' truce, he was rewarded with the office of constable, but in 1541 he fell into disgrace, and did not return to public
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life until the accession of Henry II. in 1547 . In 1548 he repressed the insurrections in the south-west, particularly at
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Bordeaux, with
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great severity, and in 1549-50 conducted the war in the Boulonnais, negotiating the treaty for the surrender of Boulogne on the 24th of March 1550 . In 1551 his
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barony was erected into a duchy . Soon afterwards his armies found employment in the north-east in connexion with the seizure of
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Metz,
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Toul and
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Verdun by the French king . His attempt to relieve St Quentin resulted in his defeat and captivity (Aug . 1o, 1557), and he did not regain his liberty until the peace of Cateau-Cambresis in 1559 . Supplanted in the
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interval by the Guises, he was treated with coldness by the new king, Francis II., and compelled to give up his master-
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ship of the royal household—his son, however, being appointed marshal by way of indemnity .

On the accession of Charles IX. in 156o he resumed his offices and dignities, and, uniting with his former enemies, the Guises, played an important

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part in the Huguenot war of 1562 . Though the arms of his party were victorious at
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Dreux, he himself fell into the hands of the enemy, and was not liberated until the treaty of Amboise (March 19, 1563) . In 1567 he again triumphed at St Denis, but received the
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death-blow of which he died at Paris, on the 15th of March, 1567 . See F . Decrue, Anne de Montmorency (Paris, 1885), and Anne, duc de Montmorency (Paris, 1889) .

End of Article: ANNE MONTMORENCY
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