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Events from the year 1634 in France.

Incumbents[edit]

Events[edit]

January–June[edit]

Battle of Wattwiller depicted by Matthäus Merian
  • March 2 – Battle of Wattwiller: Forces of the Swedish Empire are victorious over those of the Holy Roman Empire and Duchy of Lorraine on the plain of Cernay in Alsace.[4]
  • March 6 – Henriette and Marguerite of Lorraine manage to flee Nancy for Franche-Comté.[3]
  • March 26 – Giorgio Bolognetti is appointed Apostolic Nuncio to France.
  • April 1 – Nicholas Francis of Lorraine and his wife flee to Franche-Comté; of their family only Nicole, Duchess of Lorraine, who is ill, remains in Nancy. She is transferred to Paris where she arrives on May 7. Richelieu charges the count of Brassac to administer Lorraine.[3]
  • April 16 – Sumptuary laws proscribe embroidery of gold or silver.[5]

July–December[edit]

  • July 26 – Siege of La Mothe-en-Bassigny in Lorraine by Armand Nompar de Caumont ends after 141 days when it capitulates to him.[3]
  • July 4 – The trading post of Trois-Rivières is founded in New France (the modern-day Canadian province of Quebec).
  • August (prob.) – Jean Nicolet becomes the first European to set foot in Wisconsin. He is in search of a water-route to the Pacific, when he lands at Green Bay (Lake Michigan).
  • August 12 – Ferry de Haraucourt de Chambley is nominated as bailiff of Nancy.[3]
  • August 18 – Loudun possessions: Father Urbain Grandier is burned at the stake in Loudun having been accused of demonic possession and of having introduced it to the convent of Ursulines here.[6][7]
  • September 5 – The Parliament of Paris declares the second marriage of Gaston, Duke of Orléans, with Marguerite of Lorraine, to be invalid; it condemns Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine for felony and kidnapping of Gaston and reunites the Duchy of Bar with the kingdom.[8]
  • September 11
    • After the Battle of Nördlingen, Richelieu advises the king to continue to support the anti-Habsburg cause.[9]
    • Beginning of the Grands Jours de Poitiers, extraordinary justice sessions instigated by the king.[10]
  • September 16–17 – Edict and declaration of the king at Monceaux ordering establishment of a sovereign council at Nancy (continues to 13 July 1637).[3]
  • October 8 – Gaston, Duke of Orléans, leaves Brussels and returns to Paris. On October 21 at Saint-Germain-en-Laye, he swears before the king "to love the cardinal as much as he had hated him".[11]
  • October 9 – Treaty between the king and the Swedish Empire over Alsace;[12] French garrisons replace the Swedish here.
  • October 13 – Foundation of the hospice des Incurables, the future Laennec hospital of Paris.[13]
  • November 17 – Cardinal Mazarin, named apostolic nuncio extraordinary on August 19, arrives in Paris to negotiate restitution of the estates of the Duke of Lorraine and to reconcile France and the Habsburgs, taking up his duties on November 26.[3]

Undated[edit]

  • François Leclerc du Tremblay (Père Joseph) becomes a member of the Conseil du Roi as Ministre d’État.[14]
  • The Académie française is founded by Cardinal Richelieu.
  • First Théâtre du Marais opens in Paris.
  • Temple du Marais completed in Paris.
  • Robert Giffard de Moncel spearheads Perche migration to New France.
  • Trading post of La Baye is founded in New France.
  • Doubling of the taille (land tax) to finance the Thirty Years' War.[15]

Births[edit]

  • February 14 – Pierre Martin de La Martinière, physician, surgeon and explorer
  • March 18 (bapt.) – Madame de La Fayette, novelist (died 1693)
  • April 6 – Pierre Thomas, scholar and memoirist (died 1698)
  • July 14 – Pasquier Quesnel, Jansenist theologian (died 1719)

Deaths[edit]

  • June 26 – Nikolaus Ager, botanist (born 1568)
  • August 18 – Urbain Grandier, priest, executed (born 1590)
  • October 19 – Agnes of Jesus, nun (born 1602)
  • Approximate date – Marin le Bourgeoys, artist, gunsmith, inventor and luthier (born c. 1550)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Louis, Gérard (1998). La guerre de Dix Ans, 1634-1644. Presses Univ. Franche-Comté. p. 11. ISBN 9782251606514.
  2. ^ Le Bas, Philippe (1840). France – Dictionnaire Encyclopédique. 2. Firmin Didot Frères. p. 199.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Souleyreau, Marie-Catherine Vignal, ed. (2013). Le trésor pillé du Roi – Correspondance du Cardinal de Richelieu - Année 1634. 1. L'Harmattan. ISBN 9782296515932.
  4. ^ Schoepflin, Johann Daniel (1851). L'Alsace illustrée – ou recherches sur l'Alsace pendant la domination des Celtes, des Romains, des Francs, des Allemands et des Français. 4. Mulhouse: Perrin. p. 231.
  5. ^ Baudrillart, Henri (2016). Histoire du luxe privé et public, depuis l'Antiquité jusqu'à nos jours: Tome IV - Le luxe dans les. Ligaran. ISBN 9782335163407.
  6. ^ Carmona, Michel (1988). Les Diables de Loudun – Sorcellerie et politique sous Richelieu. Fayard. ISBN 9782213650869.
  7. ^ Huxley, Aldous (1952). The Devils of Loudun. London: Chatto & Windus. (Fiction).
  8. ^ Hildesheimer, Françoise. Richelieu. Flammarion. ISBN 9782081273917.
  9. ^ Barberini, Francesco; Blet, Pierre, eds. (1965). Correspondance du nonce en France Ranuccio Scotti, 1639-1641. Gregorian & Biblical Book Shop. p. 67. ISBN 9788876524899.
  10. ^ Simonde de Sismondi, Jean Charles Léonard (1841). Histoire des français. 16. Société typographique belge. p. 146.
  11. ^ Simonde de Sismondi, Jean Charles Léonard (1840). Histoire des français. 23. Paris: Treuttel et Würtz. p. 252.
  12. ^ Bernard, Jacques; de La Houssaie, Abraham-Nicolas Amelot (1700). Recueil des traitez. 3. Amsterdam: Henry et la veuve de T. Boom. p. 359.
  13. ^ Administration générale de l'assistance publique à Paris (1884). Inventaire-sommaire des Archives hospitalières antérieures à 1790. 2. Grandremy & Henon. p. 108.
  14. ^ Carmona, Michel (1984). La France de Richelieu. Fayard. ISBN 9782213650111.
  15. ^ Peronnet, Michel; Molinier, Alain; Michel, Henri; Laget, Mireille; Bercé, Yves-Marie (2005). Le XVIIe siècle, 1620–1740: De la Contre-réforme aux Lumières. Hachette Éducation Technique. ISBN 9782011814340.