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Emmanuel Maurice, Duke of Elbeuf

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Father
  
Charles de Lorraine

Died
  
July 17, 1763, France

Name
  
Emmanuel Duke

House
  
House of Lorraine

Born
  
30 December 1677 Hotel d'Elboeuf, Paris, France (
1677-12-30
)

Spouse
  
Marie Therese de Stramboni Innocentia Catherine du Plessis

Mother
  
Elisabeth de La Tour d'Auvergne

Parents
  
Charles III, Duke of Elbeuf

Grandparents
  
Catherine Henriette de Bourbon, Charles II, Duke of Elbeuf

Great-grandparents
  
Henry IV of France, Gabrielle d'Estrees, Charles I, Duke of Elbeuf

People also search for
  
Charles III, Duke of Elbeuf

Emmanuel Maurice de Lorraine (Emmanuel Maurice; 30 December 1677 – 17 July 1763) was Duke of Elbeuf and Prince of Lorraine. He succeeded his older brother Henri de Lorraine (1661–1748) as duke. He died without any surviving issue.

Contents

Biography

Emmanuel Maurice was born the youngest son of Charles de Lorraine, Duke of Elbeuf and his second wife, Elisabeth de La Tour d'Auvergne, daughter of the Duke of Boillon, member of the illustrious House of La Tour d'Auvergne. She was a niece of the vicomte de Turenne.

A member of the House of Guise founded by Claude, Duke of Guise, he was a Prince of Lorraine as a male line descendant of Rene II, Duke of Lorraine.

His sister in law was Charlotte de Rochechouart de Mortemart, a daughter of Louis Victor de Rochechouart de Mortemart and a niece of Madame de Montespan. His half sister Suzanne Henriette was later the Duchess of Mantua.

In 1706, he served under Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor at Naples as lieutenant general of the Calvary. As a result, Louis XIV deserted him.

Living in Naples, he commissioned the Neapolitan architect Ferdinando Sanfelice to construct him a private residence on the outskirts of the city in Portici in 1711. The property was called the villa d’Elbeuf. From 1711 until 1716 he lived at the villa. This villa was seen by Charles, King of Naples and his wife Maria Amalia of Saxony in 1738 and the couple were so impressed that the couple ordered the construction of the Reggia di Portici which still stands today.

In 1719, he discovered the ruins at Herculaneum. The same year he returned to France to regain his possessions.

Styled prince d'Elbeuf, he was not expected to become Duke of Elbeuf as he was the youngest of five sons born to his father and his first two wives. His older half brother's Charles (1660–1690), Henri Frederic (1657–1666) and Louis de Lorraine (1662–1693) died before their father and the duchy was thus inherited by Emmanuel Maurice's other surviving brother Henri.

Henri died without any surviving issue, two of his sons dying within a week of each other in 1705 having been in the War of the Spanish Succession. Emmanuel Maurice became Duke of Elbeuf in May 1748 holding the title till his death.

Emmanuel Maurice married twice but neither union produced issue. He died aged 85 and was succeeded by his second cousin Charles Eugene de Lorraine.

Marriages

Emmanuel Maurice married twice;

  • Marie Therese de Stramboni (d.1745) - married 25 October 1713; no issue; the couple married in Naples;
  • Innocentia Catherine de Rouge du Plessis-Belliere, see House of Rouge (1707–1794) - married 6 June 1747; no issue.
  • References

    Emmanuel Maurice, Duke of Elbeuf Wikipedia


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