Misplaced Pages

Florimond III Robertet d'Alluye

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Florimond III Robertet d'Alluye" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Florimond III, Baron Alluye (1540? – 1569) was governor of Orléans, and Secretary of State to Francis II of France, and Charles IX of France.

Life

He married, in 1557, Joan of Halluyn of Vienne, god-daughter of Catherine de Medici (she broke her secret marriage to François de Montmorency, to allow him to marry Diane de France). They had a child, Stephen Roberdet of Alluye. This is when the name was changed to Robertet for this branch of the family.

He was appointed Secretary of State in 1559 at the recommendation of the Francis, Duke of Guise, under Francis II. He was and committed to serving the Duke of Guise and Catherine de Medici. To her he wrote in 1560 a letter to express his concern with the budding wars of religion:

Madam, within a year, the fire will be even more up;

His cousin Robertet de Fresne succeeded his father-in Clausse Marchaumont. Thus, the two close relatives were at the same time, along with the offices of secretary of state, in two different departments. In April 1562, he and Robertet de Fresne were sent to Orléans with the Prince of Conde, who after the massacre of Vassy, grabbed Orléans, Blois, Tours, Angers and Le Mans. The prince said that he would not disarm if M. de Guise did not withdraw from the court, if not punished for the act of Vassy. In this same year 1562, he was appointed by the queen mother and the princes of the House of Lorraine to go to the Duke of Savoy to maintain his neutrality, over the ruinous repayment by Turin and Piedmont that France: but the Duke of Guise wanted to please the Duchess of Savoy, and allied. In vain, Marshal Bourdillon and Marshal of Brissac opposed them. In 1563, he was sent to England to take Elizabeth I of England to visit Le Havre. The queen did not refuse to return the town, but wanted nothing less than Calais in exchange. A few months later, the Constable de Montmorency and a French army defeated the Earl of Warwick and the English. Florimond III d'Alluye died as Secretary of State in 1569, two years after his cousin Robertet de Fresne.

Political offices
Preceded byJean du Thiers Minister of Foreign Affairs
22 October 1559 - 1569
Succeeded byPierre Brûlart, seigneur de Genlis
Foreign Ministers of France
Ancien Régime
First Republic
First Empire
First Restoration
Hundred Days
Second Restoration
July Monarchy
Second Republic
Second Empire
Third Republic
Vichy France
Provisional
Government
Fourth Republic
Fifth Republic
Categories: