Charles Alain de Rohan | |
Prince of Guéméné, Duke of Bouillon | |
Spouse: | Louise Aglaé de Conflans d'Armentiere |
Issue: | Berthe, Duchess of Rohan |
Issue-Link: |
|
Full Name: | Charles Alain Gabriel de Rohan |
Noble Family: | Rohan |
Father: | Henri Louis, Prince of Guéméné |
Mother: | Victoire de Rohan |
Birth Date: | 18 January 1764 |
Birth Place: | Versailles, France |
Death Place: | Sychrov Castle, Austrian Empire |
Religion: | Roman Catholicism |
Charles Alain de Rohan (Charles Alain Gabriel; 18 January 1764 - 24 April 1836) was a French nobleman and Prince of Guéméné. He died without any surviving descendants as his daughter died without children.
Born on 18 January 1764[1] at the Palace of Versailles, he was baptised the same day.[1] He was the son of Henri Louis de Rohan and his distant cousin Victoire de Rohan. His mother was governess to the children of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI; she was succeeded by Madame de Polignac. After his parents became disgraced with his fathers debts, the family moved from Versailles and had to sell their famous townhouse, the Parisian Hôtel de Rohan-Guémené.
He married Louise Aglaé de Conflans d'Armentieres at the Église Saint-Sulpice[1] in Paris on 29 May 1781 and had one daughter, Berthe, who would later marry her uncle the Duke of Bouillon. Berthe would have no children and as such, Charles Alain has no known descendants.
His cousins included the Prince of Condé, son of Charlotte de Rohan, sister of Victoire; the Abbess of Remiremont was also his cousin.
He emigrated from France in 1791[2] and resided in Austria[2] where he joined the army and was promoted to Field Marshal.[2] He entered the service of Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor.
At the death of his distant cousin Jacques Léopold de La Tour d'Auvergne the Duke of Bouillon in 1802, Charles Alain was the nearest relative in the family since his grandmother Marie Louise de La Tour d'Auvergne[3] was Jacques Léopold's aunt.
He purchased the Sychrov Castle in Bohemia (today in the Czech Republic) where he died in 1836. The castle was the home of the Rohan family until 1945.