Adrien de Rougé explained

Adrien Gabriel Victurnien de Rougé (2 July 1782 in Everly  - 16 June 1838 in Guyencourt), was a French statesman, distinguished soldier, and Peer of France member of the House of Rougé.[1]

Adrien was a son of Bonabes, Marquis de Rougé and his wife Natalie Victurnienne. He served under the Comte d'Artois, later King Charles X, in the Army of the Princes, first as a second lieutenant in the Infantry, then in 1800 as a "French: chasseur noble" in the Mortemart regiment. He served then as an officer of the King's Mousquetaires in 1814.

From 1815 to 1823, he was a member of the Chamber of Deputies, representing the French: Departement of the Somme. In 1816, Charles X appointed him to the Peerage with the title of Comte. For a time he commanded one of the four subdivisions of the army stationed in Paris. He became the leader of the Knights of the Faith, a very powerful secret ultra conservative organisation. He refused his allegiance to the government of King Louis Philippe.

Family

By his wife, Caroline de Forbin d'Oppède (1789-1872),[2] married on 18 September 1809, in Arnouville, they had four children:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Courcelles, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien de . Histoire généalogique et héraldique des pairs de France: des grands dignitaires de la couronne, des principales familles nobles du royaume, et des maisons princières de l'Europe, précédée de la généalogie de la maison de France . 1827 . L'auteur . 218 . fr.
  2. Book: Art (U.S.) . National Gallery of . French Paintings of the Fifteenth Through the Eighteenth Century . Art (U.S.) . National Gallery of . Conisbee . Philip . 2009 . National Gallery of Art . 978-0-691-14535-8 . 439 . en.