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Jean Deupree

Male 1597 - 1674  (77 years)


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  • Name Jean Deupree 
    Born 1597  France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 1674  France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I7165  MyTree
    Last Modified 28 Aug 2014 

    Father Louis Deupree,   b. Abt 1561, Paris, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1622, LaRochelle, France Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 61 years) 
    Family ID F3815  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Margeurite Bessonet,   b. France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Married Abt 1581  France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Alice Deupree,   b. France Find all individuals with events at this location
     2. Susanne Deupree,   b. France Find all individuals with events at this location
     3. Marie Deupree,   b. France Find all individuals with events at this location
    +4. Barthelemy Deupree, I,   b. Abt 1625, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1701, France Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 76 years)
    Last Modified 17 Jul 2017 
    Family ID F3814  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Louis XIII's wife, whom he treats with cold disdain during
      twenty-eight years of marriage, is the Spanish princess Anne, daughter
      of Philip III. She is known as Anne of Austria (Austria being broadly
      used for any of the Habsburg dynasties). Late in her marriage she
      conceives and bears a son, the future Louis XIV.
      The child is only four when Louis XIII dies in 1643. Anne is
      appointed regent and immediately selects as her principal minister a
      brilliant protégé of Cardinal Richelieu. He is the Italian Giulio
      Mazzarini (known as Jules Mazarin to the French), a diplomat and
      cardinal who has become closely involved in the French government -
      originally as a papal delegate to Paris.
      Anne and Mazarin are immediately confronted by demands from
      princes and nobles whose privileges have been reduced by Richelieu
      during the previous reign and who now want them restored. What a
      French cardinal has been able to take away with the full support of an
      adult king, it will prove very much harder for a foreign cardinal to
      withhold during a regency.
      The central theme of Mazarin's government becomes the need to
      maintain order against the demands of a fractious nobility. But for
      the moment France is at war (since 1635) with the Habsburg dynasties
      of Spain and Austria. There are practical tasks to keep the nobles
      busy.
      The war begun by Richelieu is continued with great success by
      Mazarin, thanks largely to a young prince and a nobleman, the prince
      de Condé and and the vicomte de Turenne, who prove to be brilliant
      generals. Condé wins a sensational victory over a Spanish army in 1643
      at Rocroi, on France's border with the Spanish Netherlands. In the
      next five years he and Turenne together harry the imperial armies
      throughout southern Germany.
      1648 brings peace (with Austria, though not yet with Spain) and
      peace brings trouble at home. The discontent of the grandees, and
      their resentment of Mazarin in person, erupts into rebellion and civil
      war - in the sequence of events known as the Fronde.
      The Fronde is the name given to the many interconnecting
      disturbances affecting France for five years from 1648. The word means
      "sling", and the target at which brickbats are metaphorically slung is
      the principal minister, Mazarin. The grievances of the rebels are
      complex, ranging from loss of privileges by the nobility, through loss
      of rights by the traditional institutions of Paris such as the
      parlement, to a more widespread sense of grievance over too much tax
      ruthlessly extracted to pay for the recent war.
      But the underlying theme is a rejection of the absolute and
      centralized rule achieved by Richelieu on behalf of Louis XIII.
      In this respect the Fronde has something in common with another
      great struggle against royal power being carried on across the English
      channel. The Frondeurs in Paris are excited by the success of
      parliament in the English civil war (though the execution of the
      English king in 1649 is seen as a step decidedly too far).
      The English war succeeds in asserting the rights of parliament, and
      in particular the commons. By contrast the Fronde fails completely to
      recover the lost priviliges of the nobility. Instead it leads to even
      greater absolutism in the reign of Louis XIV. But at times it seems a
      close-run thing.
      During the five years of the Fronde there are three periods of
      active civil war interspersed with two of uneasy calm. The relative
      positions of Mazarin, Condé and Turenne at each stage indicate how
      volatile the situation is.
      During the first brief period of war (January to March 1649) the
      parlement in Paris are the rebels. The queen regent and Mazarin flee
      with the young king. Condé besieges Paris on their behalf. Turenne
      sides with the rebels, offering his services to Spain to lead an army
      from the Rhine against France.
      Mazarin is in control again after the capitulation of Paris in
      March 1649. But Condé, saviour of the situation, behaves with
      increasing arrogance - prompting Mazarin to arrest him and other
      princes in January 1650.
      The supporters of the imprisoned princes resort to arms, beginning
      another thirteen months of civil war. Turenne, now acting in Condé's
      interest, again serves with a Spanish army. By February 1651 all
      Mazarin's enemies are united against him. He escapes to Cologne. For
      much of the next six months Condé dominates Anne, the queen regent.
      But his brief spell in power is brought to an end by the calendar. In
      September 1651 Louis XIV comes officially of age, at thirteen. The
      regency is over.
      With the support of the young king, Anne is now stronger than Condé
      - who flees from Paris to organize a new rebellion with Spanish help.
      Mazarin returns to France. This time Turenne sides with the court
      against Condé, his old companion in arms. The two meet in July 1652 in
      the battle of the Faubourg St Antoine, fought in the streets just
      outside the walls of Paris. It is a resounding victory for Turenne.
      By the following spring all is calm. The Fronde has ended. Mazarin
      can continue to lay the foundations for an absolutist reign which the
      rebels have signally failed to prevent. He does so with tact and
      skill. A few of the prominent leaders are exiled. There are no
      executions.
      A measure of Mazarin's success is a remarkable scene twenty years
      later. Both Turenne and Condé have been traitors at some point during
      the Fronde, fighting at the head of Spanish armies. Yet they remain
      welcome, in a subordinate role, in royal France.
      When Louis XIV goes to war against the United Provinces in 1672, he
      rides north in person at the head of a magnificent army. Beside him,
      as his lieutenants, are the two greatest French generals of the era,
      Turenne and Condé, now aged sixty-one and fifty-one respectively. They
      have been visibly brought to heel.