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Jean Carl Pierre Marie d'Orléans (born 19 May 1965) is the current head of the House of Orléans.Jean is the senior male descendant by primogeniture in the male-line of Louis-Philippe I, King of the French, and thus according to the Orléanists the legitimate claimant to the defunct throne of France as Jean IV. [2]
Counts of Vendôme. Count of Vendôme and, later, Duke of Vendôme were titles of French nobility.The first-known holder of the comital title was Bouchard Ratepilate. The county passed by marriage to various houses, coming in 1372 to a junior branch of the House of Bourbon.
Jean IV de Brosse 1534–1536; Dukes of Étampes. Jean IV de Brosse 1536–1553; Diane de Poitiers 1553–1562; ... César, duc de Vendôme 1599–1665; Louis, ...
Jean d'Orléans (Jean Pierre Clément Marie; 4 September 1874 – 25 August 1940) was Orléanist pretender to the defunct French throne as Jean III. He used the courtesy title of Duke of Guise . He was the third son and youngest child of Prince Robert, Duke of Chartres (1840–1910), and grandson of Prince Ferdinand Philippe, Duke of Orléans ...
Jean d'Orleans or John of Orléans may refer to: John, Count of Angoulême (1399-1467) Jean de Dunois (1402-1468) Jean d'Orléans-Longueville (1484-1533) Jean d'Orléans, duc de Guise (1874-1940) Jean d'Orléans (1965-), Orléanist claimant; Master of the Parement, French painter in Paris under the reign of Charles V. about 1370 - 1400
Monsieur Gaston, Duke of Orléans (Gaston Jean Baptiste; 24 April 1608 – 2 February 1660), was the third son of King Henry IV of France and his second wife, Marie de' Medici. As a son of the king, he was born a Fils de France. He later acquired the title Duke of Orléans, by which he was generally known during his adulthood.
Louis Joseph de Bourbon was born in Paris, the son of Louis, Duke of Vendôme and Laura Mancini. [1] Orphaned at the age of fifteen, he inherited a vast fortune from his father that had been handed down from his great-grandmother, the duchesse de Mercœur et Penthièvre. Prior to succeeding his father in 1669, he was known as the duc de ...
In 1424, he married Jeanne de Laval (d. 1468), daughter of Guy XIII, Count of Laval and Anne de Laval, at Rennes. [5] Their children were: Catherine de Bourbon (b. 1425) Gabrielle de Bourbon (b. 1426) John VIII, Count of Vendôme (1425–1477) [6] He also had an illegitimate son, fathered with the Englishwoman, Sybil Bostum, during his captivity: