Marquis of Coligny


The Marquis of Coligny was a title in the French nobility created for Charles de Coligny in 1617.

History

The Marquis of Coligny-le-Vieux was created in 1617 by Archduke Albert of Austria and his wife Isabella Clara Eugenia, on the land of Coligny, for the benefit of Charles de Coligny, younger son of Gaspard II de Coligny de Châtillon, Admiral of France, Lord of the two Coligny. Upon the extinguishment of the House of Coligny in 1694, the lands of Coligny-le-Vieil passed through inheritance to the families of Langeac, Sandersleben, Faucigny-Lucinge and Pillot who titled themselves "Marquis of Coligny" in their own right.

List of the Marquesses of Coligny

House of Coligny

  • 1617–1629: Charles de Coligny, 1st Marquis of Coligny, 1st Marquis of Andelot, and Marquis of Saint-Bris, younger son of Admiral Gaspard II de Coligny.
  • 1629–1644: Clériadus de Coligny, 2nd Marquis of Coligny, 2nd Marquis of Andelot, cousin of the preceding from whom he bought the marquisate.
  • 1644–1664: Joachim de Coligny, 3rd Marquis of Coligny, 3rd Marquis of Andelot, Baron de Cressia, son of the preceding.
  • 1664–: Barbe de Coligny, 4th Marquise of Coligny, 4th Marquise of Andelot, sister of the preceding, wife of Gilbert V de Langheac.

House of Langheac

House of Württemberg

Anne-Élisabeth's elder sister, Eléonore-Charlotte de Sandersleben, who died before she could inherit, married Louis-Christophe de Faucigny-Lucinge in 1752, whose descendants took the names Faucigny-Lucinge de Coligny et Châtillon. The Faucigny-Lucinge and Pillot family henceforth shared the title of Count and Marquis of Coligny, co-Lords of the lands of Coligny until the Revolution.