Madeleine Angélique de Neufville | |
Duchess of Boufflers Duchess of Luxembourg | |
Spouse: | Joseph Marie de Boufflers, Duke of Boufflers (September 15, 1721) Charles II François Frédéric de Montmorency-Luxembourg (June 29, 1750) |
Full Name: | Madeleine Angélique de Neufville |
Father: | Louis Nicolas de Neufville, 3rd Duke of Villeroy |
Mother: | Marguerite Le Tellier |
Birth Date: | 1 October 1707 |
Birth Place: | Paris, France |
Death Date: | 24 January 1787 (aged 80) |
Death Place: | Paris, France |
Madeleine Angélique de Neufville (1 October 1707 – 24 January 1787), known as duchesse de Boufflers from 1721 and as la maréchale de Luxembourg from 1750, was a French noblewoman, courtier and salonnière.[1] [2]
Madeleine Angélique de Neufville was the daughter of Louis Nicolas de Neufville de Villeroy, 3rd Duke of Villeroy and Marguerite Le Tellier. In 1722, at the age of 15, she married her first husband Joseph Marie de Boufflers, Duke of Boufflers.[1] Their only son, Charles Joseph de Boufflers, married Marie Anne Philippine Thérèse de Montmorency in 1747; their daughter was Amélie de Boufflers.
Between 1734 and 1749 she served as a Dame du Palais to Marie Leszczyńska at Versailles. Villeroy's first husband died in 1747, at which point she purchased the impressive hôtel particulier Hôtel de Besenval. In 1750, she married Charles II François Frédéric de Montmorency-Luxembourg, a Marshal of France and owner of Château de Montmorency.[3] During Villeroy's residence at the chateau she allowed it to become a refuge for Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Following the death of the Marshal-Duke of Luxembourg in 1764, Villeroy opened her Paris house to the great noble, artistic and literary names of the city, using her enormous fortune from her two marriages to become a major patron of the arts.[4] She died in 1787.[1]