Online Encyclopedia

ROHAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 460 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROHAN  , the name of one of the most illustrious of the feudal families of

France, derived from that of a small
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town in
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Morbihan,
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Brittany . The
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family appears to have sprung from the viscounts of Porhoet, and claims connexion with the ancient sovereigns of Brittany . Since the 12th century it held an important place in the
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history of Brittany, and strengthened its position by alliances with the greatest houses in France . It was divided into several branches, the eldest of which, that of the viscounts of Rohan, became
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extinct in 1527 . Of the younger branches the most famous is that of Guemenee, from which sprang the branches of Montbazon, Soubise and Gie . The seigneurs of Frontenay, an offshoot of this last branch, inherited by
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marriage the
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property of the eldest branch of the house . Hercule de Rohan, duc de Montbazon (1568—1654) served Henry III. and Henry IV. against the
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League, and was made by Henry IV. governor of Paris and the Isle of France, and master of the hounds . His grandson, Louis de Rohan-Guemenee, the chevalier de Rohan, who was notorious for his dissolute
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life, conspired with the Dutch against Louis XIV. and was beheaded in Paris in 1674 . In the 18th century the Soubise branch furnished •several prelates, cardinals and bishops of Strassburg, among others the famous cardinal de Rohan, the hero of the affair of the
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diamond necklace . The seigneurs of Gie, a branch founded by
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Pierre de Rohan (1453—1513), a cadet of the branch of Guemenee and marshal of France, were conspicuous on the
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Protestant side during the
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wars of religion . Rene de Rohan, seigneur of
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Pontivy and Frontenay, commanded the Calvinist army in 1570, and defended
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Lusignan with
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great valour when it was besieged by the Catholics (1574-75) . His son Henry, the first duke of Rohan, also distinguished himself in the Protestant army .

His only

child,
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Marguerite de Rohan, married in 1645
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Henri Chabot, a cadet of a great family of
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Poitou . This marriage was opposed by her
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mother, Marguerite de Bethune, who put forward a
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rival heir called Tancred, whom she claimed to be her son by the duke of Rohan . This Tancred perished in the
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Fronde in 1649 . The property and titles of Henry de Rohan thus passed to the Chabot family, which under the name of Rohan-Chabot produced some distinguished soldiers and a cardinal archbishop of
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Besancon . The male
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line of the Rohans is now represented by an offshoot of the Rohan-Guemenee branch .

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Additional information and Comments

This is a question. Who was the Monsignor Rohan who was instrumental in the election of pope Julius II in 1503? Monsignor suggests that he was a cleric---probably a cardinal. But the only Rohan I find in this period is Pierre de Rohan, seigneur de Gie, who was a field marshall in the French army.
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