Jean-Antoine de Mesmes (premier président)

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Tenure1688–1723
SuccessorJean Jacques de Mesmes
Born(1661-11-18)18 November 1661
Jean-Antoine de Mesmes
comte d'Avaux
Detail of portrait painted by Hyacinthe Rigaud and engraved by Pierre Drevet.
Detail from the portrait below
Tenure1688–1723
PredecessorJean-Jacques de Mesmes
SuccessorJean Jacques de Mesmes
Born(1661-11-18)18 November 1661
Died23 August 1723(1723-08-23) (aged 61)
SpouseMarie-Therèse Feydeau
Issue
Detail
Marie-Anne-Antoinette & others
FatherJean-Jacques de Mesmes
MotherMarguerite Bertrand de la Bazinière
OccupationPremier Président

Jean-Antoine de Mesmes, comte d'Avaux (1661–1723) was a premier president of the Parlement of Paris and member of the Académie française. As premier president he presided at the rescinding of the will of Louis XIV and in 1720 at the remonstrance against the regent, Philippe of Orléans, for allowing John Law's disastrous financial scheme and appointing Guillaume Dubois as archbishop of Cambrai.

Jean-Antoine de Mesmes was born on 18 November 1661 as the eldest of the five children of Jean-Jacques de Mesmes and his wife Marguerite Bertrand de la Bazinière. His father and his grandfather had both been comtes d'Avaux and presidents at the Parlement of Paris. His mother was the daughter of Macé Bertrand de la Bazinière (1632–1688), trésorier de l'Épargne.[1]

The subject of this article, Jean-Antoine de Mesmes (died 1723), may be easily confused with other members of his family who had the same first name, notably his grandfather Jean-Antoine de Mesmes, comte d'Avaux (died 1673) and his uncle Jean-Antoine de Mesmes, called d'Avaux (died 1709), the diplomat.[2] Jean-Antoine had two brothers and two sisters, who are listed in his father's article.

Family tree
Jean-Antoine de Mesmes with wife, parents, and other selected relatives.[a]
Jean-
Antoine

1598–1673
President
Anne
Courtin
Marguerite
B de la
Bazinière
Jean-
Jacques

1630–1688
President
Jean-
Antoine

1640–1709
Diplomat
Jean-
Antoine

1661–1723
Marie-
Therèse
Feydeau

1674–1705
Jean-
Jacques

1675–1741
Knt. of Malta
Guy
Nicholas
de Durfort
de Lorges

1683–1758
Marie-
Anne-
Antoinette

1696–1757
Henriette-
Antoinette

m. 1715
Legend
XXXSubject of
the article
XXXComtes
d'Avaux

Paris parlement

In 1679 Jean-Antoine de Mesmes became procureur-général at the Parlement of Paris; conseiller in 1687. In 1688, at this father's death, he inherited his father's place as président à mortier, even though he had never been maître des recherches.[3]

In 1712, d'Avaux was appointed Premier President of the Parlement of Paris[4] when his predecessor Pelletier resigned.[5][6] He moved to the apartment reserved for the premier president in the Palais de la Cité[7] and rented the Hôtel de Mesmes to John Law, who made it the seat of his Banque Générale.[8]

When Louis XIV died in 1715, the future Louis XV, his great-great-grandson, was five years old. According to custom Philippe of Orléans, the closest relative, would govern France as regent. However, Louis XIV made a will in which he appointed a regency council dominated by his favourite but illegitimate son Louis-Auguste, Duke of Maine. The king gave this will to d'Avaux, the premier président for safe-keeping in August 1714. The will was opened after the king's death in September 1715. D'Orléans asked the Parlement of Paris to overrule the will. The parlement agreed and declared d'Orléans regent. In exchange Orléans gave the parlement back its Right of Remonstrance [fr]. Jean-Antoine de Mesmes used this right later to admonish the regent in 1720 for the Law affair[citation needed] and for the appointment of Guillaume Dubois as Archbishop of Cambrai. This action earned the Parlement of Paris an exile to Pontoise.

Noble titles

While his father was alive, Jean-Antoine de Mesmes's title was vicomte de Neufchâtel.[9] He became the fifth comte d'Avaux at his father's death in 1688.[10][11] He was also seigneur de Cramayel [fr], et de Brie-Comte-Robert, marquis de Saint-Etienne, and vicomte de Neufchâtel.[12]

Order of the Holy Spirit

On 22 September 1703 Jean-Antoine de Mesmes became Provost and Master of Ceremonies of the Order of the Holy Spirit.[13] The order of the Holy Spirit is the highest order of chivalry in France, but membership and offices could be inherited and bought. Jean-Antoine de Mesmes bought this office from his paternal uncle and homonym Jean-Antoine de Mesmes (diplomat), the diplomat for 160,000 livres.[14][15]

Academie française

Portrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud engraved by Pierre Drevet. Note his attire as président à mortier: robe and striped ermine epitoge.

Jean-Antoine de Mesmes was elected to the twenty-second seat of the Académie française on 18 January 1710, replacing (and thus eulogizing) Louis de Verjus, comte de Crécy, and was received by François de Callières on 20 March 1710.[16] Pierre-Joseph Alary followed him as the next occupant of the seat. His father had also been a member of the Académie from 1676 to 1688.

Great Nights of Sceaux

Jean-Antoine de Mesmes was a familiar of the court of the duchesse du Maine in her Château de Sceaux. In 1714 he played the king of the night in the second,[17] third,[18] and fifth great night[19] at Sceaux.

The text reads: Monsieur le premier président de Mesmes. He is shown dressed as président à mortier. He wears the cross of the Order of the Holy Spirit on his breast on the cordon bleu. The disk-like object on the table under his right hand is the mortier, a mortarboard-like hat.

Marriage and children

Jean-Antoine de Mesmes married Marie-Therèse Feydeau in 1695. Her dowry was 350,000 francs in cash and 50,000 francs in other effects.[20][21] She was the daughter of Denys Feydeau, seigneur de Brou.

Jean-Antoine and Marie-Therèse had two daughters:[22]

  1. Marie-Anne-Antoinette (1696–1757), married in 1720 Guy Nicolas de Durfort, duc de Lorges [fr] as his 2nd wife;[23]
  2. Henriette-Antoinette, married in 1715 Louis de Gélas de Leberon, marquis de Lautrec, the son of d'Ambres.

As there were no sons they were rich heiresses. His elder daughter's husband was the eldest son and heir of Guy Aldonce de Durfort, duc de Lorges, the father-in-law of Louis de Rouvroy, duc de Saint-Simon. Jean-Antoine de Mesmes is therefore often mentioned in the memoirs of Saint-Simon where he is distinguished from his homonyms by his title of premier president.

Death, succession, and timeline

Notes and references

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