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  1. Hildegarde of Blois. Issue. Bouchard II of Montmorency. Bouchard de Bray, also Bouchard I of Montmorency (died after 960 and before 966) was a French knight from the Tenth Century. he was the ancestor of the noble House of Montmorency and the noble House of Montlhery.

  2. The family name Montmorency derived from their castle in the pays de France, recorded in Latin as Mons Maurentiacus, in 993. Maurentiacus, the name of the area surrounding the castle, meant "estate of Maurentius", probably a Gallo-Roman landowner. The village that grew up in the vicinity of the castle was also known as Montmorency, and is eponymous of the modern commune of Montmorency, Val-d ...

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  4. Anne de Montmorency was born in 1493 at Chantilly, the son of Guillaume de Montmorency and Anne de Saint-Pol. [1] [2] [3] His parents named him for his godmother, Anne, queen of France. [4] Guillaume held a senior position in the household of the future king François I (at that time, comte d'Angoulême). [5]

  5. T he Montmorency family was one of the three families that struggled for control of the French crown during the Wars of Religion between 1562 and 1598. In time, the Montmorency became allied with the Bourbon family against the Guise, the third of the competing groups.

  6. Jan 26, 2014 · Fred Cherrygarden (Atlas Obscura User) Strange symbols adorn the architecture at 51 rue de Montmorency in Paris. The house was in fact built by the city’s most famous alchemist, who many believe ...

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  7. Bouchard V de Montmorency, born in 1129 and died in 1189 in Jerusalem, Baron de Montmorency, Lord of Écouen, Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, Attichy and Hérouville.

  8. May 2, 2024 · François de Montmorency Laval (born April 30, 1623, Montigny-sur-Avre, Fr.—died May 6, 1708, Quebec) was the first Roman Catholic bishop in Canada, who laid the foundations of church organization in France’s North American possessions.

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