JeandeMonluc, c. 1508 to 12 April 1579, was a French nobleman, clergyman, diplomat and courtier. He was the second son of François de Lasseran de Massencome, a member of the Monluc family; and Françoise d' Estillac.
Jeande Lasseran de Massencome de Monluc, genannt Jean de Monluc (* um 1508; † 13. April 1579 in Toulouse), war ein französischer Adliger, Geistlicher, Diplomat und Höfling.
Blaise deMonluc, also known as Blaise de Lasseran-Massencôme, seigneur de Monluc, (c. 1502 – 24 July 1577) was a Gascon French professional soldier, government official, and nobleman.
Monluc, or Montluc, the name of a French family. It stemmed from the house of Lasseran-Mansencomme, which possessed the estate of Monluc in Agenais, and whose last heiress, Gersende, married a cadet from the House of Montesquiou.
Jeande Bourbon, comte d'Enghien and comte de Soissons (6 July 1528 – 10 August 1557) was a French prince du sang and military commander during the latter Italian Wars of the French king Henri II.
Jeande La Bruyère was a French satiric moralist who is best known for one work, Les Caractères de Théophraste traduits du grec avec Les Caractères ou les moeurs de ce siècle (1688; The Characters, or the Manners of the Age, with The…
Éric Durot « De Calvin, que par cueur tu racontes icy, Tu as un estomac, un Lexicon farcy De mots injurieux qui donnent à connoistre Que mechant escolier tu as eu mechant maistre. » Ronsard.
During the mid-sixteenth-century siege of Boulogne, a French commander determined to disprove the long-held belief that Englishmen were superior soldiers.