Marie de Lalaing, dame de Quievrain et d'Escaussines

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About Marie de Lalaing, dame de Quievrain et d'Escaussines

Marie de Lalaing ° ~1390 + 20/01/1475 ns (Valenciennes) (inh. in Chimay)
lady of Quiévrain and Escaussines (inherits from her sister; her land of Brebière is raised ~1462)

married ~1428 Jean de Croÿ, 1st count of Chimay (creation 1472), lord of Tours-sur-Marne, knight of the Golden Fleece, favorite of Duke Philippe II "Le Bon" ° ~1390 + ~1473

(their marriage was negotiated by the Duke himself: by his Bailiffs; Guillaume de Lalaing, Lord of Bugnicourt; Baudouin de Lannoy known as "Le Bègue", Governor of Lille; Jehan Lavantaige, Master of Arts & Medicine, Provost of Saint-Pierre de Lille (1434) then Bishop of Amiens; Simon de Lalaing; Engelbert d'Enghien; and Jehan de Jeumont)

Pattou, Etienne. “Famille & Seigneurs De Lalaing.” Racines et Histoire :
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Marie de Lalaing, lady of Quiévrain (after her sister), married in 1428 with Jean DE CROY, count of Chimay (by creation of the year 1472), knight of the Golden Fleece, one of the favorites of Philip the Good. Of which posterity. The Countess of Chimay died in Valenciennes on January 20, 1474 (old style); she lies in Chimay with her husband.

The marriage had been negotiated by order of Duke Philippe le Bon; indeed, we read in the account of the grand bailliage of Hainaut, from 1 February 1427 to 3 July 1428, f° 32 : "On the xth day of May [1428], at the command of my lord the duke to him [to the bailli] made by his lrez missibles, en alla lidis bailliux [Guillaume de Lalaing, lord of Bugnicourt; see first branch, XI] to xvj cheuaux in the city of Vallenciennes, where he found monsr le gouverneur de Lille [Bauduin de Lannoy dit le Besghe], maistre Jehan Lauantaige (108) and others, who had the responsibility of speaking to madame de Kieuraing, about the marriage of Jean de Croy and her daughter, demise d'Escaussines. They did not find the lady, and spoke to monsr de Ligne, to messire Guille de Lalaing [see above, IX 3°], to the aforementioned bailliu and to messire Simon, his brother [see second branch, XI], and then concluded to go to the aforementioned lady de Kieuraing, as they did. And they found themselves together with Sir Englebiert d'Enghien [see above, IX 49] and Jehan de Jeumont. Mist lidis bailliux, going, besoingnant and returning ariere to Mons, iiij days enthiers. Monterent si despens : xlviij lbz xviij s. t. "; expense reduced by the people of the accounts to 36 livres.

(108) Maître ès arts et en médecine, en 1434 prévôt de St-Pierre de Lille, puis évêque d'Auiens (Le Glay, Cameracum christianum , Lille, 1849, in-4, p. 118).

Brassart, Felix, Société Académique, editor. Souvenirs De La Flandre Wallonne, Catalogue des Nobels de Nom, de Lalaing, Dix-Septieme, L. Crépin, 1882. un Comite Historique et Archeologique: Memories of Walloon Flanders: pp. 93-94
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MARIE de Lalaing (-after 1467). Jeanne and her sister, having reached the age of majority, divided their territories, naming “leur mère Isabeau de Barbançon”, by charter dated 21 Apr 1428[454]. Dame d’Ecaussines et d’Arquenne. Accounts dated [1 Sep 1427/3 Jul 1428] record negotiations for the marriage of “Jean de Croy” and “madame de Kieuraing...sa fille demise d’Escaussines”[455]. She succeeded her sister as Dame de Quiévrain.

m ([1428]%29 JEAN de Croÿ, son of JEAN [I] Seigneur de Croÿ & his wife Marguerite de Craon (-Valenciennes 1472, bur Chimay). Comte de Chimay 1472.

Cawley, Charles. “NORTHERN FRANCE-CAMBRAI, DOUAI, VALENCIENNES.” Medieval Lands, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 24 Mar. 2022, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/nfracado.htm#_Toc44147371''

https://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00014119&tree=LEO

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