Louis_I_of_Monaco

Louis I, Prince of Monaco

Louis I, Prince of Monaco

Prince of Monaco from 1662 to 1701


Louis I (25 July 1642 in Prince's Palace of Monaco – 3 January 1701 in Rome) was Prince of Monaco from 1662 until 1701.[1]

Quick Facts Prince of Monaco, Reign ...

Louis Grimaldi was the elder son of Prince Hercule of Monaco and Maria Aurelia Spinola.

Louis married Catherine Charlotte de Gramont, daughter of Marshal Antoine III de Gramont, on 30 March 1660 in Pau.

They had six children:

  • Antoine Grimaldi (1661–1731), his successor.
  • Maria Teresa Carlotta Grimaldi (14 June 1662 – 1738), a Visitandine nun at Monaco.
  • Anna Hippolyte Grimaldi (1667 – 23 July 1700), married (1696) Jacques de Crussol, Duc d'Uzès (29 December 1675, Paris – 19 July 1739, Uzès castle).
  • François Honoré Grimaldi (21 December 1669 – 18 February 1748, Paris), Archbishop of Besançon
  • Jeanne Maria Grimaldi, a Visitandine nun at Monaco, later coadjutrice of the Abbey of Royallieu near Compiègne.
  • Aurelia Grimaldi, called mademoiselle de Baux.

In 1662, Louis succeeded his grandfather Honoré II as Prince of Monaco. In 1666 he distinguished himself at the Four Days' Battle between the English and Dutch fleets. On 5 July 1668 he took the oath to King Louis XIV of France in the Parlement on account of being Duke of Valentinois and a Peer of France. He was made a knight of the French royal orders on 31 December 1688.

In 1699, Louis XIV sent Louis to Rome as ambassador extraordinary. There on 19 December he presented the insignia of the Order of the Holy Spirit to James Louis and Alexander Benedict Sobieski, the two sons of King John III of Poland. Louis remained in Rome, where he died 3 January 1701. His remains were transported back to Monaco.


References

  1. "Collections Online | British Museum". www.britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 2023-04-07.
Preceded by Sovereign Prince of Monaco
Duke of Valentinois

1662–1701
Succeeded by

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