Jean Charles de Saint-Nectaire

Summary

Jean-Charles, marquis de Saint-Nectaire (11 November 1685 – 23 January 1771, Didonne, Saintonge) was a French aristocrat, diplomat and Marshal of France.

Arms de Saint-Nectaire

Descended from a noble family who were lords of Brinon, barons of Didonne-sur-Marche, Saint-Germain-sur-Vienne and Brillac as well as holding other lordships in the Auvergne, and Counts of Saint-Victour in the Peerage of France, his father was François de Saint-Nectaire (died 1710), comte de Brinon (cr. 1608) (styled comte de Saint-Nectaire), and his mother was Marie daughter of Charles de Béchillon, baron d'Irlaud.

Life edit

He joined the French Army as a lieutenant, was promoted to captain and then colonel (1705) of the Senneterre Dragoons, before serving in Italy in 1703 and 1704, and then in Flanders and on the Rhine from 1705 to 1713. Appointed brigadier in 1719 and colonel of the Marche Infantry in 1731, he fought in the Italian campaigns of 1734 and 1735 under Marshal François de Franquetot de Coigny, being promoted Maréchal de camp in 1734.

In 1735, King Louis XV was sent as special envoy to the King of Sardinia.

As lieutenant-general, in 1744 he commanded a division of the French Army during the attack on Villefranche during the War of the Austrian Succession. In 1745 he led military operations in the siege of Casal and the following year took part in Marshal de Maillebois's retreat when faced by superior Austrian and Sardinian forces. De Saint-Nectaire was summoned to join the French Forces in Flanders in 1747 and 1748, and on 24 February 1757 he was promoted Marshal of France.

He refurbished the Château de Didonne as a country residence, circa 1730, which is now the Musée du Matériel agricole.[1] He also considerably extended the family estates by buying the marquisate of Pisany in 1738, the baronies of Arvert and Saujon in 1758, the castellany of Le Chay in 1764, the lordship of Chênaumoine and a moiety of the lordship of La Touche.

His son, Henri-Charles (1714–1785), was accorded the courtesy title of comte before succeeding, in 1756, as marquis de Saint-Nectaire. He made many improvements to the family's estates, which later devolved upon the marshal's granddaughter, Marie-Charlotte, marquise d'Armentières.

Marriage and issue edit

On 7 October 1711 he married Marie-Marthe, daughter of Henri, marquis de Saint-Pierre et de Saint-Julien, by his wife Marie-Madeleine Boisseret d'Herblay. Their only child, Henri-Charles, a Colonel in the Infantry, who succeeded as marquis de Saint-Nectaire, married in 1738 Marie-Louise, daughter of Philippe-Emmanuel de Crussol d'Uzès, marquis de Saint-Sulpice, by whom he had two children:

See also edit

  • Saint-Nectare family

References edit

  1. ^ "www.musee-agricole-salviac.com". Archived from the original on 2015-02-07. Retrieved 2015-02-07.

Bibliography edit

  • Charles Gavard, Galeries historiques du Palais de Versailles, vol. 7, Imprimerie royale, 1842
  • Le Chesnaye-Aubert, Dictionnaire généalogique, héraldique, chronologique et historique, contenant L'origine & létat actuel des premières Maisons de France, des Maisons souveraines & principales de l'Europe..., Chez Duchesne, Libraire, 1757, 500 pp.

External links edit

  • "Jean Charles de Saint Nectaire : précisez". Base. 16 October 2018. Retrieved 22 May 2019.