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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Duke of Estouteville (duc d'Estouteville) was a title in the French nobility that is claimed today by the Prince of Monaco. It was created in 1537 by King Francis I of France for Adrienne d'Estouteville (1512-1560) and her husband François de Bourbon-Saint-Pôl (1491-1545), son of François, Count of Vendôme and his wife Marie of Luxembourg, Countess of Vendôme. The title passed to their son François II (1536-1546) then their daughter Marie (1539-1601), who married successively her first cousin Jean de Bourbon, Count of Soissons (1528-1557); François…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Duke of Estouteville (duc d'Estouteville) was a title in the French nobility that is claimed today by the Prince of Monaco. It was created in 1537 by King Francis I of France for Adrienne d'Estouteville (1512-1560) and her husband François de Bourbon-Saint-Pôl (1491-1545), son of François, Count of Vendôme and his wife Marie of Luxembourg, Countess of Vendôme. The title passed to their son François II (1536-1546) then their daughter Marie (1539-1601), who married successively her first cousin Jean de Bourbon, Count of Soissons (1528-1557); François de Cleves, Duke of Nevers (1539-1563); and Léonor d'Orléans, duc de Longueville (1540-1573). The dukedom passed to the descendants of Marie's third marriage, the dukes of Longueville, the last of whom died in 1694. Estouteville was inherited by the last duke's sister, Marie d'Orleans-Longueville, Duchess de Nemours (1625-1707), and after her death by the family of Goyon de Matignon, who were descended from Eléonore, youngest daughter of Léonor de Longueville and Marie d'Estouteville.