Guillaume de Lamoignon de Blancmesnil


Guillaume II de Lamoignon, seigneur de Blancmesnil et de Malesherbes was a French magistrate.

Biography

The second son of the président Chrétien François de Lamoignon, he was named general avocat for the Parlement of Paris on 2 July 1707 and then became président à mortier to the same parlement on 20 December 1723. He was the Premier Président to the Cour des aides from 9 May 1746 to 1749.
He was an excellent lawyer and loved literature and history. He had impeccable morals, and rejected Jansenism.
He was named Chancellor of France on 9 December 1750, replacing Henri François d'Aguesseau, who had quit. The parlementary revolt was thus his paroxysm, and Lamoignon, far from losing authority, as is usually said, with difficulty supported these coups of the noblesse de robe.
As the King had finished tolerating the weak will of his chancellor he demanded Lamoignon's resignation. When Lamoignon refused he was exiled to his château on 3 October 1763.
He was the father of Guillaume-Chrétien de Lamoignon de Malesherbes.

Residences