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  1. Anne de Montafié, Countess of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis (21 July 1577 – 17 June 1644), was a French heiress and the wife of Charles de Bourbon, Count of Soissons, a Prince of the Blood, and military commander during the French Wars of Religion.

  2. Anne de Montafié, comtesse de Soissons et de Dreux, née à Paris le 22 juillet 1577, et morte le 17 juin 1644, est la fille cadette de Louis de Montafié, comte de Montafié, seigneur du Piémont et prince de Carignan (terres acquises 300 000 écus par le duc de Savoie Charles Emmanuel I), et de Jeanne de Coesme, dame de Lucé et ...

  3. Anne de Montafié, Countess of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, was a French heiress and the wife of Charles de Bourbon, Count of Soissons, a Prince of the Blood, and military commander during the French Wars of Religion. Following her marriage in 1601, she was styled Countess of Soissons.

  4. Anne de Montafié, Countess of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis (21 July 1577 – 17 June 1644), was a French heiress and the wife of Charles de Bourbon, Count of Soissons, a Prince of the Blood, and military commander during the French Wars of Religion.

  5. Mai 1606 in Paris; † 3. Juni 1692 ebenda), 1610/25 geistlich in der Abtei Fontevraud, 1641 Comtesse de Soissons etc., Pair de France, 1688 Comtesse de Clermont-en-Beauvaisis; ⚭ per Ehevertrag vom 6. Januar und persönlich am 14.

  6. Louis de Bourbon, Comte de Soissons (May 1604 – 6 July 1641) was the son of Charles de Bourbon, Count of Soissons and his wife, Anne de Montafié, Countess of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis. A second cousin of Louis XIII of France he was a prince du Sang, those considered part of the royal family. Part of the faction who opposed Cardinal Richelieu ...

  7. Their principal town was Clermont, now in the Oise department but then within the ancient county of Beauvaisis in the province of Île-de-France. Following the death of the childless Theobald VI of Blois , son of Catherine of Clermont , the daughter of Raoul I, Count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis , King Philip II of France bought the county from his heirs in 1218 and added it to the French crown. [1]