House of Béthune


The House of Bethune is a French noble house from the province of Artois in the north of France whose proven filiation dates back to Guillaume de Béthune who made his will in 1213. This family became extinct in 1807 with Maximilien-Alexandre de Béthune, Duke of Sully.
There are other families called de Bethune or Bethune, but their links with the house of Bethune are not proven. One of them, Béthune-Hesdigneul family, has the princely title since 1781, recognized both in France and Belgium.

The original House of Béthune

Lords of Béthune and advocates of Arras

In 1639 André Du Chesne gave a lineage that went back to 1037, but the proven filiation dates back to Guillaume de Béthune called "Le Roux" who made his will in 1213 and died soon after.
  • Robert I, called Faisseux, lord of Béthune, Richebourg and Carency and Advocate of Arras, was the first of the house of Bethune, said to be descended from the Counts of Artois.
  • Robert II, lord of Béthune, elder son of Robert I.
  • Robert III, lord of Béthune, elder son of Robert II.
  • Baudouin, younger son of Robert I, became Lord of Carency and founder of a separate branch.
  • Robert IV, lord of Béthune, son of Robert III
  • Guillaume I, lord of Béthune, son of Robert IV
  • Robert V, lord of Béthune, called Le Roux, was son of Guillaume I and died during the Third Crusade at Acre in Palestine.
  • Robert VI, lord of Béthune, eldest son of Robert V.
  • Guillaume II, lord of Béthune married the heiress of Dendermonde.
  • Daniel, eldest son of Guillaume II.
  • Robert VII, second son of Guillaume II, died in Sardinia while on the Seventh Crusade.

Béthunes, Dukes of Sully

  • Second son of François was Maximilien I, chief minister of King Henry IV of France, who was Baron of Rosny from 1578 and became a Peer of France on creation as 1st Duke of Sully in 1606. In 1602 he bought the Castle of Sully-sur-Loire and in 1605 the Principality of Boisbelle, where he founded the town of Henrichemont.
  • Maximilien II, son of Maximilien I, was Marquess of Rosny, Prince of Henrichemont and Baron of Bontin.
  • Maximilien François, son of Maximilien II, was 2nd Duke of Sully.
  • Maximilien Pierre François, son of Maximilien François, was 3rd Duke of Sully.
  • Maximilien François Pierre, elder son of Maximilien Pierre François, was 4th Duke of Sully.
  • Maximilien Henri. younger son of Maximilien Pierre François, was 5th Duke of Sully.
  • Louis Pierre Maximilien, third cousin of Maximilien Henri, was 6th Duke of Sully.
  • Maximilien Antoine Armand, first cousin once removed of Louis Pierre Maximilien, was 7th Duke of Sully but called Duc de Béthune.
  • Maximilien Alexis, elder son of Maximilien Antoine Armand, was 8th Duke of Sully.
  • Maximilien Gabriel, younger son of Maximilien Antoine Armand, was 9th Duke of Sully
  • Maximilien III, son of Maximilien Gabriel, was 10th and last Duke of Sully.

    Béthune-Orval

  • François, second son of Maximilien, 1st Duke of Sully, was created Duke of Orval and Peer of France by King Louis XIII but the grant was not registered and so could not pass to his heirs.
  • Maximilien Alpin, eldest surviving son of François, was Marquess of Béthune and Count of Orval.
  • Louis Pierre Maximilen, grandson of Maximilien Alpin, became 6th Duke of Sully.

    Béthune-Chârost

  • Philippe, younger brother of Maximilien I, Count of Selles, Chârost and Mors, Marquess of Chabris, was a diplomat and art connoisseur who was made a cardinal.
  • Henri, second son of Philippe, was Bishop of Bayonne and of Maillezais from 1630, then Archbishop of Bordeaux from 1646.
  • Louis, third son of Philippe, became 1st Duke of Chârost.
  • Louis Armand, son of Louis, was 2nd Duke of Chârost.
  • Armand I, son of Louis Armand, was 3rd Duke of Chârost and Baron of Ancenis.
  • Paul François, son of Armand I, was 4th Duke of Chârost and 1st Duke of Ancenis.
  • François Joseph, son of Paul François, was 5th Duke of Chârost and 2nd Duke of Ancenis.
  • Armand II Joseph, son of François Joseph, was 6th and last Duke of Chârost and 3rd and last Duke of Ancenis, as well as the last inheritor to the title of Count of Roucy.

    Béthune-Chabris

  • Hippolyte I, eldest son of Philippe, was Marquess of Chabris and Count of Selles.
  • Henri, second son of Hippolyte I, was Count of Selles.
  • Armand, fourth son of Hippolyte I, was Bishop of Le Puy from 1661.
  • Hippolyte II, sixth son of Hippolyte I, was Bishop of Verdun from 1681.
  • Louis, son of Henri, was Count of Béthune.
  • Louis Armand, son of Louis, was Marquess of Béthune.
  • Armand Louis, son of Louis Armand, was the last Marquess of Béthune.

    Béthune-Selles

  • François Gaston, 5th son of Hippolyte I, Marquess of Chabris and a Lieutenant-General in the French army, married Marie Louise de La Grange, sister of the Queen Consort of Poland. Two daughters of François Gaston married important members of the Polish–Lithuanian aristocracy and have numerous descendants.
  • Louis Marie Victor, son of François Gaston, Count of Béthune, was a Field Marshal in the French army and Grand Chamberlain to Stanislaus Leszczyński, former King of Poland, when he became Duke of Lorraine and Bar in 1737.
  • Joachim Casimir Léon, son of Louis Marie Victor, a Field Marshal in the French army, was the last Count of Béthune.

    Béthunes in Poland and Lithuania

  • Jeanne Marie de Béthune, daughter of François Gaston, married Count Jan Stanislaw Jablonowski and had five children, all of whom married.
  • Marie Christine Cathérine de Béthune, daughter of François Gaston, was married first to Prince Stanisław Kazimierz Radziwiłł, without children, and then to Prince Aleksander Paweł Sapieha, leaving three married children.