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Not What You Meant?  There are 14 definitions for Richelieu.  Also try: Duke d'Aiguillon.

Emmanuel-Armand de Richelieu, duc d'Aiguillon

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Emmanuel-Armand de Vignerot du Plessis de Richelieu, duc d'Aiguilon (July 31, 17201782) was a French statesman and a nephew of the Maréchal de Richelieu. He entered the army at the age of seventeen, and at the age of nineteen was made colonel of the regiment of Brie. He served in the campaigns in Italy during the War of the Austrian Succession, was seriously wounded at the siege of Château-Dauphin (1744), was taken prisoner (1746) and was made maréchal de camp in 1748. His marriage in 1740 with Louise Félicité de Brehan, daughter of the Comte de Plélo, coupled with his connection with the Richelieu family, gave him an important place at court. He was a member of the so-called parti devot, the faction opposed to Madame de Pompadour, to the Jansenists and to the parlement, and his hostility to the new ideas drew upon him the anger of the pamphleteers. In 1753 he was appointed commandant (governor) of Brittany and soon became unpopular in that province, which had retained a large number of privileges called "liberties." He first came into collision with the provincial estates on the question of the royal imposts (1758), but was then blamed for his inertia in the preparation of a squadron against England (1759), and finally alienated the parlement of Brittany by violating the privileges of the province (1762). In June 1764 the king, at the instance of d'Aiguillon, quashed a decree of the parlement forbidding the levying of new imposts without the consent of the estates, and refused to receive the remonstrances of the parlement against the duke. On November 11, 1765 La Chalotais, the procureur of the parlement, was arrested, but whether at the instigation of d'Aiguillon is not certain. The conflict between d'Aiguillon and the Bretons lasted two years. In the place of the parlement, which had resigned, d'Aiguillon organized a tribunal of more or less competent judges, who were ridiculed by the pamphleteers and ironically termed the bailliage d'Aiguillon. In 1768 the duke was forced to suppress this tribunal, and returned to court, where he resumed his intrigue with the parti dewt and finally obtained the dismissal of the minister Choiseul (December 24, 1770). When Louis XV, acting on the advice of Madame du Barry, reorganized the government with a view to suppressing the resistance of the parlements, d'Aiguillon was made minister of foreign affairs, Maupeou and the Abbé Terray (17151778) also obtaining places in the ministry. The new ministry, albeit one of reform, was very unpopular, and was styled the "triumvirate." All the failures of the government were attributed to the mistakes of the ministers. Thus d'Aiguillon was blamed for having provoked the coup d'état of Gustavus III, king of Sweden, in 1772, although the instructions of the comte de Vergennes, the French ambassador in Sweden, had been written by the minister, the duc de la Vrillere. D'Aiguillon, however, could do nothing to rehabilitate French diplomacy; he acquiesced in the first division of Poland, renewed the Family Compact, and, although a supporter of the Jesuits, sanctioned the suppression of the society. After the death of Louis XV he quarrelled with Maupeou and with the young queen, Marie Antoinette, who demanded his dismissal from the ministry (1774). He died, forgotten, in 1782. In no circumstances had he shown any special ability. He was more fitted for intrigue than for government, and his attempts to restore the status of French diplomacy met with scant success. He was the father of Armand, duc d'Aiguillon, who succeeded him as duc d'Aiguillon.

References

  • Mémoires du ministere du duc d'Aiguillon (2nd ed., Paris and Lyons, 1792), probably written by J. L. Soulavie

On d'Aiguillon's governorship of Brittany:

  • Henri Carré, La Chalotais et le duc d'Aiguillon (Paris, 1893)
  • Marcel Marion, La Bretagne et le duc d'Aiguillon (Paris, 1898)
  • Barthèlemy Pocquet, Le Duc d'Aiguillon et La Chalotais (Paris, 1901-1902) (These have bibliographies.)

See also

Preceded by
Armand I
Duc d'Aiguillon
1750–1782
Succeeded by
Armand II
Preceded by
Louis François, marquis de Monteynard
Secretary of State for War
27 January, 1774–2 June, 1774
Succeeded by
Louis Nicolas Victor de Félix d'Ollières, comte du Muy

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