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・ Marie Goegg-Pouchoulin
・ Marie Goodman Hunter
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・ Marie Danse
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Marie de Bourbon, Countess of Soissons
・ Marie de Bourbon, Duchess of Montpensier
・ Marie de Bourbon, Princess of Achaea
・ Marie de Castellane
・ Marie De Cotteblanche
・ Marie de Coucy
・ Marie de Coucy (disambiguation)
・ Marie de France
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・ Marie de Lorraine
・ Marie de Lorraine, Duchess of Guise
・ Marie de Mandat-Grancey


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Marie de Bourbon, Countess of Soissons : ウィキペディア英語版
Marie de Bourbon, Countess of Soissons

Marie de Bourbon (3 May 1606 – 3 June 1692) was the wife of Thomas Francis, Prince of Carignano and thus a Savoyard princess by marriage. At the death of her brother in 1641, she became Countess of Soissons in her own right, passing the title down three generations of the House of Savoy.
==Biography==

Marie de Bourbon was born at the ''Hôtel de Soissons'' in Paris, was the second daughter and youngest child of Charles, Count of Soissons and his wife Anne de Montafié. At the court of Louis XIII, Marie enjoyed the rank of ''princesse du sang''. She was a sister of the Duchess of Longueville. Originally placed in the Abbey of Fontevraud in Anjou, she took the habit on 10 April 1610 aged just four.
On 6 January 1625 Marie was married to Thomas Francis, ninth child of Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy and his wife Catherine Michelle of Austria. It was arranged that Thomas, as son of a reigning monarch, would hold the rank of first among the ''princes étrangers'' at the French court—taking precedence even before the formerly all-powerful House of Guise, whose kinship to the sovereign Duke of Lorraine was more remote. He was appointed Grand Master of France of the king's household, briefly replacing the traitorous Louis II de Bourbon, Prince de Condé. He engaged the services of the distinguished grammarian and courtier Claude Favre de Vaugelas as tutor for his children.
After Thomas, the senior branch of his descendants repatriated to Savoy, alternately marrying French, Italian and German princesses.
After the Bourbons obtained the French crown and the Princes de Condé and their heirs apparent became known (by right of their rank as ''First Prince of the Blood''), respectively, as ''Monsieur le Prince'' and ''Monsieur le Duc'', Charles came to be styled ''Monsieur le Comte'' at court. That honorific was borne also by his son Louis and, subsequently, by the Savoy-Carignano counts of Soissons, who inherited the countship from Charles's daughter, Marie, princesse de Carignano, even though they ranked as ''princes étrangers'' in France rather than as ''princes du sang''.
At the death of her older brother Louis de Bourbon (6 July 1641), Marie was named his heir and became the Countess of Soissons ''suo jure''. She lived in her native France with her husband and resided at the Hôtel de Soissons where she was born. It was Marie who built the small ''Château de Bagnolet'' in Paris; at her death the building was acquired by the ''Ferme générale'' François Le Juge. In 1719 it became the property of Françoise Marie de Bourbon. Marie and her daughter helped to raise the famous Prince Eugene of Savoy, the famous soldier. She died in Paris.

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