Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jean de Montagu or Jean de Montaigu (c.1349/50, Paris – Paris, 17 October 1409), was a royal secretary and pupil to Charles V, and subsequently an administrator and advisor to Charles VI of France, who became a leading figure in France during the early 15th Century.

  2. Jean de Montagu ou Jean de Montaigu, né vers 1363 (certaines sources conflictuelles disent vers 1350), mort le 17 octobre 1409, était un homme politique et mécène du Moyen Âge. Trésorier de France puis grand maître de France , seigneur de Montagu-en-Laye (vers Poissy , Chambourcy ) et de Marcoussis , il porta les titres de vidame de Laon ...

    • Français
  3. Oct 5, 2023 · Jean de Montagu ou Jean de Montaigu ou Jean II de Montagu, né vers 1349, mort le 17 octobre 1409, était un homme politique et mécène du Moyen Âge. Trésorier de France puis grand maître de France, seigneur de Montagu-en-Laye et de Marcoussis, il porta les titres de vidame de Laon, de seigneur de Saclas et de capitaine de La Bastille1.

  4. People also ask

  5. Oct 17, 2009 · 1409: Jean de Montagu | Executed Today. Posted on 17 October, 2009 by Headsman. Six hundred years ago today, onetime royal favorite Jean de Montagu* was, at the instigation of his powerful noble rival, beheaded in Paris and his body hung up at Montfaucon.

  6. Jean de Montagu was born in 1349, in Paris, Île-de-France, France as the son of Biote De Cassinel. He had at least 1 son and 3 daughters with Jacqueline de la Grange. He died on 17 October 1409, in his hometown, at the age of 60.

  7. Lucien MERLET, BIOGRAPHIE DE JEAN DE MONTAGU, GRAND MAITRE DE FRANCE (1350-1409), Bibliothèque de l'École des chartes, TROISIÈME SÉRIE, Vol. 3 (1852), pp. 256-292.

  8. The House of Montagu ( / ˈmɒntəɡjuː /, MON-tə-ghew ), also known throughout history as Montagud, Montaigu, Montague, Montacute ( Latin: de Monte Acuto, lit. 'from the sharp mountain'; French: Mont Aigu ), is an English noble family founded in Somerset after the Norman Conquest of 1066 by the Norman warrior Drogo de Montagud [1] (so named in the ...

  1. People also search for