Henri de Guénégaud explained

Henri de Guénégaud
Father:Gabriel de Guénégaud, Seigneur du Plessis-Belleville
Mother:Marie de La Croix, Dame du Plessis-Belleville
Spouse:Isabeau de Choiseul
Birth Date:1610

Henri du Plessis-Guénégaud, Lord of the Plessis-Belleville, Marquis de La Garnache[1] (1610 – 16 March 1676) was a French scholar and a Secretary of State during the reigns of Louis XIII and Louis XIV.

Career

Henri de Guénégaud became Trésorier de l'Épargne (Treasurer of Savings) in 1638, succeeding his father, who died that year.[2]

In 1643, he became Secretary of State of several regions of France, including Paris, the Maison du Roi, and ecclesiastical affairs.[2] He also became Secretary of State of the Navy that same year.

Dubuisson Aubenay, who later wrote a history of the Fronde, became his secretary in 1645.

He supported Anne d'Autriche during the Fronde and was made Garde des Sceaux in 1656, but was disgraced in 1669, when he was succeeded as Secretary of State by Jean-Baptiste Colbert.[2]

Family

He was the elder son of Gabriel Guénégaud, Lord of the Plessis-Belleville (died 1638), and Marie La Croix, Dame du Plessis-Belleville (died 1655).

In 1642 he married Elizabeth (Isabel), daughter of the Maréchal Charles de Choiseul, Marquis de Praslin.[2]

Their children included:

He was the brother of Claude's treasurer, brother-in-law of César d'Albret who married his sister Madeleine.

Residences

Guénégaud was a patron of the architect François Mansart and possibly a friend. In 1642 he gave Mansart the site for Mansart's house in the Rue Payenne, and in 1650 he gave the architect 50,000 livres.[2]

In 1646 Guénégaud purchased the Hôtel de Nevers on the Quai de Nevers (just east of the Tour de Nesle) and commissioned Mansart to transform it into the Hôtel de Guénégaud (1648–1652).[3] He also had Mansart make alterations to the Château de Fresnes.[2]

He and his wife, who were known for their Jansenist sympathies, held a famous salon at their hôtel on the Quai de Nevers. Among their friends were Mademoiselle de Scudéry, Madame de Sévigné, and Simon Arnauld. It was at their salon that Racine first became known in Paris.[2]

In 1670, after his disgrace, Guénégaud exchanged the Hôtel de Guénégaud on the Quai de Nevers for a country house in Bouchet and the Hôtel de Conti on the Quai Malaquais in Paris, both belonging to Cardinal Mazarin's niece Anne-Marie Martinozzi, Princesse de Conti. Thereafter the house on the Quai Malaquais became known as the Hôtel du Plessis-Guénégaud, and the house on the Quai de Nevers, as the Hôtel de Conti.[4]

Offices

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Other titles include: Seigneur de Fresnes, Marquis de Plancy and de Guicherville, Comte de Montbrison, Vicomte de Semoine and Baron de Saint Juste (Braham 1973, p. 186).
  2. Braham 1973, p. 186.
  3. Braham 1973, p. 238.
  4. Braham 1973, p. 239.