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House of Roquefeuil-Blanquefort

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House of Roquefeuil-Blanquefort
Parent houseHouse of Roquefeuil-Anduze
CountryFrance
Founded1393
FounderAntoine I of Roquefeuil
TitlesMarquess of Bousquet (1618)
Comtor of Nant
Viscount of Creyssels
Baron of Roquefeuil-Meyrueis
MottoHonour me resto, resto m'a basto!
Honour remains, it is enough!
Cadet branchesRoquefeuil du Bousquet
Roquefeuil Montpeyroux
Roquefeuil Cahuzac

The Roquefeuil family is a French noble family. The house of Roquefeuil-Blanquefort appeared in 1393 when Jean of Blanquefort married Catherine of Roquefeuil-Anduze. Jean substituted its name and gave birth to the House of Roquefeuil-Blanquefort.[1]

This family gave birth to different branches including Roquefeuil-Monpeyroux, Roquefeuil du Bousquet or Roquefeuil-Cahuzac.

The Roquefeuil-Blanquefort family is a member of the Society of the Cincinnati.

There is no evidence or presumption that the name would, as some would allege,[2][3] have been Germanized into "Rockefeller" or "Rockenfeld".[4]

Origin of the Roquefeuil family

Roquefeuil

The Roquefeuil family appeared in 900 as an offshoot of the house of Barcelona and became one of the most illustrious noble families in the south of France. Their possessions in the Languedoc, France included the barony of Roquefeuil-Meyrueis or the viscounty of Creyssels.[1] Some ruins of the Roquefeuil castle still exits in Saint-Jean du Bruel (formerly Saint-Jean of Roquefeuil).

Roquefeuil-Anduze

In 1129, Bertrand of Anduze married the heiress Adélaïde of Roquefeuil. Their son Raymond maintained the name of Roquefeuil and inherited from his mother creating the House of Roquefeuil-Anduze.[1]

Roquefeuil-Blanquefort

In 1393, Jean of Blanquefort married Catherine of Roquefeuil, eldest daughter of Arnaud III of Roquefeuil and heiress of the family. Jean substituted its name and gave birth to the House of Roquefeuil-Blanquefort.[1]

The French historian La Chesnaye-Desbois found some information regarding Jean of Blanquefort. He could descend from a younger son of Raymond of Roquefeuil who received the seigneury of Blanquefort.[5]

Castle of Bonaguil

Eldest branch

  • Antoine I of Roquefeuil, son of Jean and Catherine. Married with Delphine of Arpajon, he inherited of the baronies of Roquefeuil and Blanquefort [1]
    • Jean II of Roquefeuil and his brother Antoine (author of the Padiès branch) took part in the League of the Public Weal but received Louis XI's pardon in February 1478.
      • Bérenger of Roquefeuil (1448-1530) built Bonaguil, the last and largest castle erected in France. Its construction took place in Saint-Front-sur-Lémance and lasted over 40 years.[1] Bérenger was married in Amboise with Anne of Tournel
        • Charles of Roquefeuil married with Blanche of Montpezat sister of Antoine, Marechal of France
          • Antoine II was married with Claude de Peyre in 1555
            • Antoine III of Roquefeuil became knight of the Order of Saint Michael in 1570 and the barony of Roquefeuil was erected as a marquessate in 1618[6]
              • Antoine-Alexandre of Roquefeuil died without male descendance

Branch of Padiès, Bousquet and Montpeyroux

Castle of Bousquet

This cadet branch was created by Antoine of Roquefeuil, brother of Jean II of Roquefeuil and became the main branch after Antoine-Alexandre of Roquefeuil's death. Settled in Montpeyroux the branch owned the castle du Bousquet and included several officers and sailors.

Branch of Cahuzac

This cadet branch includes:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f de Barrau, Hippolyte (1853). Documents historiques et généalogiques sur les familles du Rouergue (Tome 1 ed.). Rodez: Batery.
  2. ^ Times, By Israel Shenker; Special to The New York (1977-02-12). "Rockefeller Archive Contains a Wealth on Wealth". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-12-18.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "Janet-G-Hoyt - User Trees - Genealogy.com". www.genealogy.com. Retrieved 2019-12-18.
  4. ^ "Discussion:Famille Rockefeller", Wikipédia (in French), 2019-07-15, retrieved 2019-12-18
  5. ^ Aubert de La Chesnaye-Desbois, Dictionnaire généalogique, héraldique, chronologique et historique, Duchesne, 1761, page 644.
  6. ^ Hippolyte de Barrau, Documents historiques et généalogiques sur les familles et les hommes remarquables du Rouergue, tome I, 1853, page 682 à 692.