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Charles II de Lalaing

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Spouse(s)
  
Margaret of Croy

Name
  
Charles de

Grandparents
  
Joost de Lalaing

Mother
  
Jacoba of Luxembourg

Children
  
Philip de Lalaing


Father
  
Charles I de Lalaing

Parents
  
Charles I de Lalaing

Noble family
  
House of Lalaing

Died
  
November 22, 1558

Charles II de Lalaing

People also search for
  
Charles I de Lalaing, Philip de Lalaing, Joost de Lalaing

Great-grandparents
  
Simon de Lalaing

Charles II of Lalaing (Lallaing? 1506 – Brussels, 23 November 1558) was Count of Lalaing, Lord of Escornaix and stadtholder of the County of Hainaut.

Contents

Charles II de Lalaing Charles II de Lalaing Wikipdia

Family

Charles II de Lalaing httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

He was the eldest son of Charles I de Lalaing (died 1525) and Jacqueline of Luxemburg-Fiennes (died 1511), and succeeded his father as second Count of Lalaing. His younger brother was Philip de Lalaing, 2nd Count of Hoogstraten, who became Stadtholder of Guelders, Zutphen and Jülich.

Charles married on August 30, 1528 with Margaret of Croÿ (died 1549), daughter of Charles I of Croÿ-Chimay. They had 13 children of which 12 died young, except :

  • Philip de Lalaing (1537-1582), Lord of Escornaix and also stadtholder of Hainaut.
  • After Margaret's death, Charles remarried in 1550 with Marie of Montmorency. They had 4 children :

  • Hughes de Lalaing, Lord of Condé (1551–1618)
  • Charles de Lalaing (died 1553)
  • Emanuel Philibert de Lalaing, Lord of Montigny and Margrave of Renty (1557–1590)
  • Philippe-Christine de Lalaing, also known at Marie-Christine de Lalaing (died 1582)
  • Career

    In 1531, at the age of 25, Charles became a Knight in the Order of the Golden Fleece. In 1534–35 he took part in Charles V's Tunis Campaign. He also served as one of the foremost commanders in the later stages of the Guelders Wars.

    In 1540 Lalaing became a member of the Council of State (Raad van State) and in 1544 head of the Council of Finance. In 1549 he was appointed Governor and High Bailiff of the County of Hainaut. He remained governor until his death, but resigned as bailiff in 1556. When the Governor of the Netherlands, Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy, left for Italy in 1557 to fight the French in the Italian War of 1551–1559, Charles became his temporary substitute.

    References

    Charles II de Lalaing Wikipedia