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Charles Alexandre de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré

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Noble family
  
House of Croÿ

Unit
  
Bandes d'ordonnance

Occupation
  
soldier

Charles Alexandre de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Married
  
(1) Yolande de Ligne (1585–1611) (2) Geneviève de Lascaris d'Urfé (1597–1656)

Father
  
Charles Philippe de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré (1549–1613)

Mother
  
Diane de Dammartin, Countess of Fontenoy (1552–1625)

Buried
  
Chapel Church, Brussels

Died
  
5 November 1624, Brussels, Belgium

Parents
  
Charles Philippe de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré

Award
  
Order of the Golden Fleece (1617)

Grandparents
  
Philippe II de Croÿ, Anna of Lorraine

People also search for
  
Charles Philippe de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré, Philippe II de Croÿ, Ernest de Croÿ

Charles Alexandre de Croÿ (1574–1624), Marquis of Havré, Count of Fontenoy, Knight of the Golden Fleece, was a military commander and memoirist from the Habsburg Netherlands and a murder victim.

Contents

Life

Charles Alexander was born in 1574, the son of Charles Philippe de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré (1549–1613) and Diane de Dammartin, Countess of Fontenoy (1552–1625).

Pursuing a military career, he served in a relief column during the Siege of Amiens (1597). The following year he accompanied Archduke Albert on his journey to Spain to marry the Infanta Isabella, as a gentleman of the court.

In 1601 he became captain of an elite cavalry company serving in the Siege of Ostend, and in 1602 commandant of the fifteen Bandes d'ordonnance. He spent eleven months as a hostage of the mutineers during the Mutiny of Hoogstraten, during which time he started to write his memoirs, which were eventually published posthumously in 1642.

On 27 May 1605 he was appointed to the Archduke's Council of War. In 1606 he represented the Archduke at the wedding of the Duke of Lorraine's son and heir, Henry of Bar, and Margerita Gonzaga.

In 1617, on the occasion of his second marriage, he was invested as a knight of the Golden Fleece.

At the outbreak of the Thirty Years' War he was seconded to the imperial army and served in the Battle of White Mountain, but in 1624 he retired from military service to take up a position in civilian administration. On 10 November 1624 he was shot dead through a window of his own house in Brussels, reputedly by one of his pages in revenge for an insult.

Writings

  • Memoires geurriers de ce qu'y c'est passé aux Pays Bas, depuis le commencement de l'an 1600 iusques a la fin de l'année 1606 (Antwerp, Hieronymus Verdussen 1642), Available on Google Books.
  • References

    Charles Alexandre de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré Wikipedia