Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Consort | Ceased to be Consort | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ada of Roucy | Hildouin IV de Montdidier, Count of Roucy (Montdidier) | - | Geoffrey | |||||
Adelinde de Montmorency | Bouchard III, Lord of Montmorency (Montmorency) | - | Guy I | |||||
Adélaïde de Soupir | ? | - | Bouchard II | |||||
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Consort | Ceased to be Consort | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Margaret, Countess of Blois | Theobald V, Count of Blois (Blois) | 1170 | after 1200 | 11 July 1244 husband's death | 12 July 1230 | Walter III | ||
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Consort | Ceased to be Consort | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alix of Brittany | John I, Duke of Brittany (Dreux) | 6 June 1243 | 11 December 1254 | 28 June 1279 husband's death | 2 August 1288 | John I | ||
Beatrice of Flanders | Guy, Count of Flanders (Dampierre) | 1270 | 1287 | 19/29 January 1291 husband's accession | 1307 husband's death | after 1307 | Hugh | |
Margaret of Valois | Charles of Valois (Valois) | 1295 | 6 October 1310 | July 1342 | Guy II | |||
Joan, Duchess of Brittany | Guy de Dreux, Count of Penthièvre (Dreux) | 1319 | 4 June 1337 | 12 August 1342 husband's accession | 1360 titles passed to daughter and son-in-law | 10 September 1384 | Charles | |
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Consort | Ceased to be Consort | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yolande of Aragon | John I of Aragon (Barcelona) | 11 August 1384 | 2 December 1400 | 12 November 1404 husband's accession | 29 April 1417 husband's death | 14 November 1442 | Louis II | |
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Countess | Ceased to be Countess | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Isabella, Duchess of Lorraine | Charles II, Duke of Lorraine (Lorraine) | 1400 | 24 October 1420 | 1425 County ceased by the English and given to the House of Luxembourg | 28 February 1453 | René | ||
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Countess | Ceased to be Countess | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jeanne de Béthune, Viscountess of Meaux | Robert VIII de Béthune, Viscount of Meaux (Béthune) | 1397 | 23 November 1418 | 1425 husband's ascension | 5 January 1441 husband's death | end of 1449 | Charles I | |
Jeanne de Bar, Countess of Marle and Soissons | Robert of Bar, Count of Marle and Soissons (Scarponnois) | 1415 | 16 July 1435 | 5 January 1441 husband's ascension | 1444 Taken by the Crown and given back to the Valois-Anjou on the conditions that Louis' sister will marry Charles I as his consort. | 14 May 1462 | Louis I | |
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Countess | Ceased to be Countess | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Isabelle of Luxembourg | Peter of Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol (Luxembourg) | 1458 | May 1444 | 10 April 1472 husband's death | 1472, or after | Charles I | ||
Jeanne de Lorraine | Frederick II of Vaudémont (Vaudémont) | 1458 | 21 January 1474 | 25 January 1480 | Charles II | |||
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Countess | Ceased to be Countess | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antoinette de Bourbon | Francis, Count of Vendôme (Bourbon-La Marche) | 25 December 1493 | 9 June 1513 | 1520 title conferred by the Conference of Paris | 1528 Became Duchess | 22 January 1583 | Claude | |
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Duchess | Ceased to be Duchess | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antoinette de Bourbon | Francis, Count of Vendôme (Bourbon-La Marche) | 25 December 1493 | 9 June 1513 | 1528 Became Duchess | 12 April 1550 husband's death | 22 January 1583 | Claude | |
Anna d'Este | Ercole II d'Este (Este) | 16 November 1531 | 29 April 1548 | 12 April 1550 husband's accession | 24 February 1563 husband's death | 17 May 1607 | Francis | |
Catherine of Cleves, Countess of Eu | Francis I, Duke of Nevers (De la Marck) | 1548 | 4 October 1570 | 23 December 1588 husband's assassination | 11 May 1633 | Henry I | ||
Henriette Catherine, Duchess of Joyeuse | Henri de Joyeuse (Joyeuse) | 8 January 1585 | 6 January 1611 | 30 September 1640 husband's death | 25 February 1656 | Charles | ||
Anna Maria Gonzaga | Charles I Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua (Gonzaga-Nevers) | 1616 | 1639 | 30 September 1640 husband's accession | 1641 divorce | 6 July 1684 | Henry II | |
Honorée de Berghes, Countess of Bossut | Godefroy de Glymes, Comte de Grimberghe (Glymes) | - | 11 November 1641 | 1643 divorce | August 1679 | |||
Élisabeth Marguerite d'Orléans, Duchess of Alençon and Angoulême | Gaston de France, Duke of Orléans (Bourbon) | 26 December 1646 | 15 June 1667 | 30 July 1671 husband's death | 17 March 1696 | Louis Joseph | ||
Picture | Name | Father | Birth | Marriage | Became Duchess | Ceased to be Duchess | Death | Husband |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Louise-Françoise de Bourbon, Légitimée de France | Louis XIV of France (Bourbon) | 1 June 1673 | 25 May 1685 | 1 April 1709 husband's accession | 4 March 1710 husband's death | 16 June 1743 | Louis | |
Marie Anne de Bourbon | François Louis, Prince of Conti (Bourbon-Conti) | 18 April 1689 | 9 August 1713 | 21 March 1720 | Louis Henri | |||
Caroline of Hesse-Rotenburg | Ernest Leopold, Landgrave of Hesse-Rotenburg (Hesse-Rotenburg) | 18 August 1714 | 24 July 1728 | 27 January 1740 husband's death | 14 June 1741 | |||
Charlotte de Rohan | Charles, Prince of Soubise (Rohan) | 7 October 1737 | 3 May 1753 | 4 March 1760 | Louis Joseph | |||
Maria-Caterina di Brignole-Sale | Giuseppe Maria Brignole-Sale, Marquis of Groppoli (Brignole-Sale) | 7 October 1737 | 24 October 1798 | 13 May 1818 husband's death | 18 March 1813 | |||
Bathilde d'Orléans | Louis Philippe I, Duke of Orléans (House of Orléans) | 9 July 1750 | 24 April 1770 | 13 May 1818 husband's accession | 10 January 1822 | Louis Henri Joseph | ||
Afterwards, the title was extinguished and no longer bestowed. It returned to the royal domain. Louis Henry though left his estate to his godson, Prince Henri, Duke of Aumale. He was bestowed with the personal title of Duke of Guise by Louis-Philippe I, King of the French, his grandfather, in 1847.
Ferdinand Philippe, Duke of Orléans was the eldest son of King Louis Philippe I of France and Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily. He was born in exile in his mother's native Sicily while his parents were the Duke and Duchess of Orléans. Ferdinand Philippe was heir to the House of Orléans from birth. Following his father's succession as King of the French in 1830, he became the Prince Royal of France and Duke of Orléans. He died in 1842, never to succeed his father or see the collapse of the July Monarchy and subsequent exile of his family to the United Kingdom.
Prince Louis of Orléans, Duke of Nemours was the second son of King Louis-Philippe I of France, and his wife Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily.
The County of Aumale, later elevated to a duchy, was a medieval fief in Normandy, disputed between France and England during parts of the Hundred Years' War.
Count of Guise and Duke of Guise were titles in the French nobility.
Duke of Valentinois is a title of nobility, originally in the French peerage. It is currently one of the many hereditary titles claimed by the Prince of Monaco despite its extinction in French law in 1949. Though it originally indicated administrative control of the Duchy of Valentinois, based around the city of Valence, the duchy has since become part of France, making the title simply one of courtesy.
Maximilian Joseph Eugene Auguste Napoleon de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg, Prince Romanowsky was the husband of Grand Duchess Maria Nikolayevna of Russia and first cousin of Emperors Napoleon III of the French and Francis Joseph I of Austria. He was a grandson of Napoleon I's first wife, the Empress Josephine, by her prior marriage to Alexandre de Beauharnais.
The Order of Queen Saint Isabel is a Roman Catholic dynastic order of which the Grand Mistress is the Duchess of Braganza.
The Qing dynasty (1644–1912) of China developed a complicated peerage system for royal and noble ranks.
Maria Theresa of Austria-Este was Queen of Sardinia as the wife of Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia. She was born an archduchess of Austria-Este and a princess of Modena as the daughter of Ferdinand Karl, Archduke of Austria-Este, and Maria Beatrice d'Este, Duchess of Massa. Her husband’s reign as King of Sardinia ended in abdication in 1821, when he elected his brother Charles Felix king after a liberal revolution, during which Victor Emmanuel proved unwilling to accept a liberal constitution. She was a part of the then newly-founded House of Austria-Este.
Françoise Marie de Bourbon was the youngest illegitimate daughter of King Louis XIV of France and his maîtresse-en-titre, Françoise-Athénaïs de Rochechouart, Marquise de Montespan. At the age of 14, she married her first cousin Philippe d'Orléans, the future regent of France during the minority of Louis XV. Through two of her eight children, she became the ancestress of several of Europe's Roman Catholic monarchs of the 19th and 20th centuries—notably those of Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Spain, and France.
Anna d'Este was an important princess with considerable influence at the court of France and a central figure in the French Wars of Religion. In her first marriage she was Duchess of Aumale, then of Guise, in her second marriage Duchess of Nemours and Genevois.
The Royal Chapel of Dreux situated in Dreux, France, is the traditional burial place of members of the House of Orléans. It is an important early building in the French adoption of Gothic Revival architecture, despite being topped by a dome. Starting in 1828, Alexandre Brogniart, director of the Sèvres porcelain manufactory, produced fired-enamel paintings on large panes of plate glass for King Louis-Philippe I, an important early French commission in Gothic Revival taste, preceded mainly by some Gothic features in a few jardins paysagers.
This article is of the Countesses of Dreux; the consorts of the French counts of Dreux.
Princess Marguerite Adélaïde Marie of Orléans, French: Marguerite d'Orléans, Polish: Małgorzata Orleańska, was a member of the House of Orléans and a Princess of France by birth. Through her marriage to Prince Władysław Czartoryski, Marguerite was a princess of the House of Czartoryski by marriage.
Prince Charles d'Orléans, Duke of Penthièvre was the eighth child of the Duke and Duchess of Orléans, future Louis Philippe I and la Reine Marie Amélie. He was created Duke of Penthièvre, a title previously held by his great-grandfather.
This is a list of the princess consorts of Achaea, the consorts of the Princes of Achaea.