Victurnien-Jean-Baptiste de Rochechouart de Mortemart
Victurnien Jean-Baptiste Marie de Rochechouart, prince of Tonnay-Charente then 9th duke of Mortemart was a French general and politician. He came from the Mortemart branch of the house of Rochechouart, named after the barony of Mortemart in Haute-Vienne, later raised to a marquisate and finally in December 1650 to a peer-duchy.
Life
Victurnien-Jean-Baptiste was the second son of Jean-Victor de Rochechouart, duke of Mortemart and of Charlotte Nathalie de Manneville. In October 1768 he joined the artillery school in Strasbourg. On 20 March 1774 he was made colonel of the régiment de Lorraine-Infanterie, later rising to brigadier of infantry on 1 January 1784 and maréchal-de-camp on 9 March 1788. After taking part in the second Assembly of Notables and supporting Protestants' claims in the parlement, on 24 March 1789 he was elected a noble deputy for the bailliage of Sens in the Estates General of 1789. There he supported Jacques Necker's plans, but opposed the reforms demanded by the majority of the assembly – he notably protested against the suppression of the rights of péage and minage. He resigned on 20 April 1790 and left France the following year. He fought with the royalist army in the 1792 campaign and then moved to England, where he was welcomed by George III with "kindness" and "distinction". Commanding the régiment de Mortemart, de Mortemart returned to continental Europe in autumn 1794 and the following year joined the force which landed on Guernsey. In 1796 he moved to Portugal, where he served until 1802. His regiment was disbanded at the Peace of Amiens and de Mortemart returned to France "where he lived peacefully". Napoleon I made him a member of the conseil général for the Seine department on 26 March 1812, but he died suddenly in July that year from a vicious fever. De Mortemart was also a man of letters, leaving behind several unedited works "of a superior quality", such as a poem on the theme of Joseph in Egypt and a verse translation of John Milton's Paradise Lost, along with several tales and light poems.
Ancestry, marriage and issue
He married twice:
on 11 June 1772, to Anne-Catherine-Gabrielle d'Harcourt, only daughter of François-Henri, duke of Harcourt, peer of France, lieutenant-général des armées du roi, governor of the province of Normandy, knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit, and of Françoise-Catherine-Scholastique d'Aubusson. They had four children:
*Anne-Victurnienne-Henriette – on 10 January 1789 she married Auguste-Philippe-Louis-Emmanuel, duke of Croÿ, peer of France, prince of the Holy Roman Empire, grandee of Spain first class etc., with whom she had issue;
* Casimir Louis Victurnien, 10th Duke of Mortemart, peer of France – on 26 May 1810, he married Virginie de Sainte-Aldegonde, with whom he had issue;
* Emma Nathalie Victurnienne – on 10 May 1810, she married at the château d'Éverly, to Raymond-François de Beauvilliers, duke of Saint-Aignan, with whom she had issue;
* Antonie Louise Victurnienne – on 2 November 1813, she married Charles de Forbin, marquis of Janson, with whom she had issue.
* Alice Elfrida Victurnienne – in 1823 she married Paul, Duke of Noailles, with whom she had issue.