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  1. Charles I de Lorraine, duc d'Elbeuf (Joinville, 18 October 1556 – Moulins, 4 August 1605) was a French noble, military commander and governor during the French Wars of Religion.

  2. Elbeuf was raised to a marquisate in 1528. Claude, in turn, left Elbeuf to his youngest son René . It was elevated to a ducal peerage in 1581 for his son Charles , and the title became extinct in 1825.

  3. Charles I de Lorraine, duc d'Elbeuf was a French noble, military commander and governor during the French Wars of Religion. The son of the most minor cadet house of the children of Claude, Duke of Guise, Elbeuf initially lacked the prominence of his cousins, however his succession to the Rieux inheritance made him important.

  4. 6 de set. de 2020 · The third Duke of Elbeuf, Charles III (1620-1692), himself never rose to great prominence. He spent much of his time living in his provincial governorship of Picardy (to which had been added Artois, Boulonnais, and the other ‘Pays Conquis’, lands acquired from the Spanish in the 1650s).

  5. Charles Ier de Lorraine-Guise, né à Joinville le 18 octobre 1556 et mort à Moulins le 4 août 1605, est marquis d'Elbeuf de 1566 à 1582, puis le premier duc d'Elbeuf de 1582 à 1605, comte d'Harcourt de 1566 à 1582, seigneur puis comte de Rieux, baron d'Ancenis, pair de France.

  6. Charles II, Duke of Elbeuf (5 November 1596 – 5 November 1657), was a French nobleman, the son of Charles I, Duke of Elbeuf, by his wife, Marguerite de Chabot. He succeeded his father in the Elbeuf dukedom ( Elbœuf is an alternate, anglicized spelling) in 1605.

  7. Charles I of England - Wikipedia. Charles I (19 November 1600 – 30 January 1649) [a] was King of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 27 March 1625 until his execution in 1649.