Première dame d'honneur
Première dame d'honneur ('First lady of honour'), or only dame d'honneur ('lady of honour'), was an office at the royal court of France. It existed in nearly all French courts from the 16th-century onward. Though the task of the post shifted, the dame d'honneur was normally the first or the second rank of all ladies-in-waiting. The dame d'honneur was selected from the members of the highest French nobility.
History
The office was created in 1523.[1] The task of the dame d'honneur was to supervise the female courtiers, controlling the budget, ordering necessary purchases, and organizing the annual account and staff list; she supervised the daily routine, and attended ordinary as well as ceremonial court functions, as well as escorting and introducing those seeking audience with the queen.[2] She had the keys to the queen's personal rooms in her possession.[3]
When the dame d'honneur was absent, she was replaced by the dame d'atour, who normally had the responsibility of the queen's wardrobe and jewelry and the dressing of the queen.[4]
In 1619, the office of the Surintendante de la Maison de la Reine, or only surintendante, was created.[5] The surintendante had about the same tasks as the dame d'honneur: receiving the oath of the female personnel before they took office and supervising them and the queens daily routine, as well as organizing the accounts and staff list, but she was placed in rank above the dame d'honneur.[6] Whenever the surintendante was absent, she was replaced by the dame d'honneur.[7] The post of surintendante could be left vacant for long periods, such as between the death of Marie Anne de Bourbon in 1741 and the appointment of Princess Marie Louise of Savoy in 1775.
The term dame d'honneur has also been use as a term for a French lady-in-waiting in general. From 1523, the group of ladies-in-waiting attending the court as companions of the queen had the title dame d'honneur (commonly only 'dame'), hence the title 'Première dame d'honneur' ('First lady of honur') to distinguish between the chief lady in waiting and the remaining (married) ladies-in-waiting.[8] In 1674, however, a reform replaced both the common married dame d'honneur or dames as well as the unmarried filles d'honneur ('maid of honour') or filles with the dame de palais.[9]
The position of dame d'honneur was revived during the First Empire, were the principal lady-in-waiting to the empress had the same title.[10]
During the Second Empire, the dame d'honneur had the same position as before, now formally second rank below a surintendante with the title Grande-Maitresse.[11]
List of Première dame d'honneur to the queen of France
Dame d'honneur to Eleanor of Austria 1532-1547
- 1532-1535: Louise de Montmorency
Dame d'honneur to Catherine de' Medici 1547-1589
- 1547-1560: Françoise de Brézé
- 1560-1561: Jacqueline de Longwy, duchess de Montpensier
- 1561-1578: Philippes de Montespedon, princesse de la Roche-sur-Yon
- 1578-1589: Alphonsine Strozzi, comtesse de Fiesque
Dame d'honneur to Mary Stuart 1559-1560
- 1559-1560: Guillemette de Sarrebruck
Dame d'honneur to Elisabeth of Austria 1570-1574
- 1570-1574: Madeleine de Savoy de Montmorency
Dame d'honneur to Louise of Lorraine 1575-1601
- 1575-1583: Jeanne de Vivonne, dame de Clermont, baronne de Dampierre
- 1583-1585: Louise de Hallwyn de Cipierre (jointly with de Randan)
- 1583-1601: Fulvie Pic de Mirandole, comtesse de Randan (jointly with de Cipierre)
Dame d'honneur to Marie de' Medici 1600-1632
- 1600-1632: Antoinette de Pons, Marquise de Guercheville
Dame d'honneur to Anne of Austria 1615-1666
For the first years in France, before her Spanish entourage was sent back to Spain, Anne had both a French and a Spanish office holder in several posts of her court.
- 1615-1618: Inéz Enrìquez de Sandoval y Rojas, countess de la Torres (jointly with de Montmorency)
- 1615-1624: Laurence de Clermont-Montoison, duchess de Montmorency (jointly with de la Torres)
- 1624-1626: Charlotte de Villiers-Saint-Pol, countess de Lannoy
- 1626-1638: Marie de la Rochefoucauld de Bauffremont, marquise de Senecey (1st term)
- 1638-1643: Catherine de Sainte-Maure, countess de Brassac
- 1643-1666: Marie-Claire de Bauffremont, marquise de Séneçay (2nd term)
Dame d'honneur to Maria Theresa of Spain 1660-1683
- 1660-1664: Susanne de Baudéan de Neuillant de Parabere, duchess de Navailles
- 1664-1671: Julie d'Angennes, duchesse de Montausier
- 1671-1679: Anne Poussard de Fors du Vigean, duchess de Richelieu
- 1679-1683: Anne-Armande de Saint-Gelais de Lansac, duchess de Crequy
Dame d'honneur to Marie Leszczyńska 1725-1768
- 1725-1735: Catherine-Charlotte de Gramont, duchesse de Boufflers
- 1735-1763: Marie Brûlart de la Borde, duchess de Luynes
- 1751-1761: Henriette-Nicole Pignatelli d'Egmont, duchess de Chevreuse (deputy)
- 1763-1768: Anne d'Arpajon, countess de Noailles (first term)
Dame d'honneur to Marie Antoinette 1774-1792
- 1774-1775: Anne d'Arpajon, countess de Noailles (second term)
- 1775-1790: Laure-Auguste de Fitz-James, Princess de Chimay
Dame d'honneur to Joséphine de Beauharnais 1804-1814
- 1804-1809: Adélaïde de La Rochefoucauld
Dame d'honneur to Marie Louise 1810-1814
Dame d'honneur to Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily 1830-1848
- Christine Zoë de Montjoye Dolomieu
Dame d'honneur to Eugénie de Montijo 1853-1870
- 1853-1867: Pauline de Bassano
- 1867-1870: Marie-Anne Walewska
See also
- Mistress of the Robes, British equivalent
- Camarera mayor de Palacio, Spanish equivalent
- Chief Court Mistress, Dutch, German, Scandinavian and Russian equivalent
References
- ↑ Caroline zum Kolk, "The Household of the Queen of France in the Sixteenth Century", dans The Court Historian, volume 14, number 1, june 2009
- ↑ Nadine Akkerman &, Birgit Houben: The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe
- ↑ Nadine Akkerman &, Birgit Houben: The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe
- ↑ Nadine Akkerman &, Birgit Houben: The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe
- ↑ Nadine Akkerman &, Birgit Houben: The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe
- ↑ Nadine Akkerman &, Birgit Houben: The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe
- ↑ Nadine Akkerman &, Birgit Houben: The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe
- ↑ Caroline zum Kolk, "The Household of the Queen of France in the Sixteenth Century", dans The Court Historian, volume 14, number 1, june 2009
- ↑ Jeroen Frans Jozef Duindam: Vienna and Versailles: The Courts of Europe's Dynastic Rivals, 1550-1780.
- ↑ Philip Mansel: The Eagle in Splendour: Inside the Court of Napoleon
- ↑ Seward, Desmond: Eugénie. An empress and her empire. ISBN 0-7509-2979-0 (2004)
- Mathieu Da Vinha & Raphaël Masson: Versailles: Histoire, Dictionnaire et Anthologie