Jean-Baptiste de Montullé
Jean-Baptiste de Montullé or Monthulé, lord of Louvigny, Montorin and other places, is a French magistrate born in 1684 and deceased on July 9th 1750 with Paris.
Wire of Jean-Joseph de Montullé (and Agnes Bouvard de Fourqueux), received itself with the Parliament of Paris on June 6th 1671, grandson of François de Montullé (and Marie Régnier), mayor of Nantes then listener in the Room of the accounts of Brittany, Jean-Baptiste de Montullé was to advise with the Parlement of Paris of March 17th 1706 at May 21st 1727, date on which he became chief of the council of the prince Louis François of Bourbon-Conti; fifth Room of the investigations, it went up to the Grand' Chambre on June 27th 1732. With the death of the duchess of Bourbon, it was named its executor in 1743.
He married the girl junior by Jean Glucq, dyer in scarlet with the Gobelins, in October 1714. Two first wire died in low age street of the Toothing-stone where the family lived then. Become widowed in 1730, it rented in 1732 three houses - finally bought on June 5th 1739 with the heirs to the countess of Wart - in which it did great work. Bibliophile and art lover, it could thus have of a superb picture gallery and an important library street of Cherche Midi. Extremely well seen with the court, it made there be received as of May 1742 his oldest daughter Marie-Charlotte, born on July 24th 1718, which had married on October 5th 1740 the count Hyacinthe-François-Georges de Montecler (1719 - 1764); it was named in November 1743 lady-in-waiting of the duchess of Chartres.
His/her son Jean-Baptist-François de Montullé, also art lover, continued to live, like its elder, a hotel contiguous with his after his marriage in March 1750 with Elisabeth Haudry. His/her daughter junior, Marguerite-Francoise, born on December 15th 1724, married in 1745 the marquis Jean-Baptiste of Albertas (1716 - 1790), adviser with the Parlement of Aix and which became about it then the first president.
At the sides of the first cousin of his wife, Jean Julienne, Jean-Baptiste de Montullé took pleasure to engrave some etchings of their friend and protected the painter Watteau with whom it bought several paintings and drawings.
Having died in 1750 in its hotel of the Street of Seek-Midday, they are his/her three children who collected the heritage of their maternal uncle Jean-Baptiste Glucq (1674 - 1748) and later that of Jean of Julienne (1686 - 1766) that is to say the third each one of the manufacture of dyeing and fine cloths located to the Gobelins rested by their grandfather.
| Random links: | Jean-Louis Martin | Rolls Royce plc | Championship of France of Rugby at XV 1986-87 | Happiness of Rome | Mike Gravel | Weston,_Northamptonshire |