Jacques-Armand Dupin de Chenonceaux

See also: Dupin

Jacques-Armand Dupin, known as Dupin de Chenonceaux , born the March 3rd 1727 and dead the May 3rd 1767, is a personality of the 18th French century.

Wire of the farmer general Claude Dupin (1686 - 1769) and of his second wife, Louise-Marie-Madeleine Fountain, Jacques-Armand Dupin was made call “Dupin de Chenonceaux” by reference to the Château of Chenonceau, acquired by his parents in 1733 (the castle was spelled then like the village, i.e. with “X”).

In 1749, it married Marie Alexandrine Sophie de Rochechouart-Pontville. She gave him a son, Claude Sophie Dupin says “Dupin of Rochefort” (born in 1751), died without posterity.

Dupin de Chenonceaux was a bad subject, whose Jean-Jacques Rousseau blamed misconduct in the Confessions . October 26th 1765, after having accumulated enormous gambling debts, it was sent to the island of France where it died of the Yellow fever in 1767.

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