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When Brancas reached the age that he had to pay young men to sleep with him, he decided to give up on secular life and retired to a [[monastery]]. The Regent was so distraught at losing his friend that he cried twice during their last supper together. Brancas died in [[1739]], at the age of seventy-six.<ref>The Man Who Would Be King; The Life of Philippe d'Orleans, Regent of France by Christine Pevitt. Published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in Great Britain, 1997. Page 289.</ref> Despite Brancas' rectitude in regard to his position, he formed part of a pleasure-loving circle around the Regent which alienated France's [[conservatism|conservatives]] and undermined conservative support for the [[Régence|Regency]].
When Brancas reached the age that he had to pay young men to sleep with him, he decided to give up on secular life and retired to a [[monastery]]. The Regent was so distraught at losing his friend that he cried twice during their last supper together. Brancas died in [[1739]], at the age of seventy-six.<ref>The Man Who Would Be King; The Life of Philippe d'Orleans, Regent of France by Christine Pevitt. Published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in Great Britain, 1997. Page 289.</ref> Despite Brancas' rectitude in regard to his position, he formed part of a pleasure-loving circle around the Regent which alienated France's [[conservatism|conservatives]] and undermined conservative support for the [[Régence|Regency]].

==See also==
* [[de Brancas]]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 09:36, 16 November 2011

The title duc de Brancas may refer to a number of hereditary office-holders under the Ancien Regime of France. The most famous holder of that title was a member of the social circle of Philippe II, Duke of Orleans, who served as Regent of France from 1715 to 1723. Brancas was known to be amusing, good-natured, and attracted to young men.[1]

Despite his high title, Brancas was not wealthy, but he solidly refused to exploit his relationship with France's regent in return for financial gain. Such a lack of corruption was rare at the time, and put the family in strained circumstances. Brancas' heir, the marquis d'Oise, would have to sign a marriage contract with a three-year old girl from a wealthy background when the Marquis was himself thirty-three in order to support the Brancas family.[2]

When Brancas reached the age that he had to pay young men to sleep with him, he decided to give up on secular life and retired to a monastery. The Regent was so distraught at losing his friend that he cried twice during their last supper together. Brancas died in 1739, at the age of seventy-six.[3] Despite Brancas' rectitude in regard to his position, he formed part of a pleasure-loving circle around the Regent which alienated France's conservatives and undermined conservative support for the Regency.

See also

References

  1. ^ The Man Who Would Be King; The Life of Philippe d'Orleans, Regent of France by Christine Pevitt. Published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in Great Britain, 1997. Pages 175- 176.
  2. ^ The Man Who Would Be King; The Life of Philippe d'Orleans, Regent of France by Christine Pevitt. Published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in Great Britain, 1997. Pages 262- 263.
  3. ^ The Man Who Would Be King; The Life of Philippe d'Orleans, Regent of France by Christine Pevitt. Published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in Great Britain, 1997. Page 289.