Guillaume Bochetel

Guillaume Bochetel, seigneur de Sassy, Brouillamenon, Laforest-Thaumyer (died 1558) was a statesman and diplomat of the French Renaissance during the reigns of François I and Henry II of France.

Biography

He comes from a family of Champagne in Reims. The family had moved to Berry when his great grandfather had married Jean Bochetel, the sister of Jacques Cœur, then great financier of King Charles VII of France. His parents were Bernardin Bochetel and Catherine Babouin, his paternal grandparents Francis and Marie Bochetel Pellorde.

He married Mary Morvilliers, Lady of the Sourdiere, and their children included:[1]

His children had the same tutors as the royal children including Jacques Amyot and Jacques Lefevre d'Etaples.

In 1540 he bought from Jean Courtois Breuilhamenon the lordship of the lands in Berry. Guillaume died in 1558.

Career

He began his career with the office of clerk of aid and gabelles in Berry. On 27 July 1518, King Francis I of France appointed him of notary clerk of the king's chamber, where he distinguished himself by writing in February 1522 an ordinance dealing with the dispersal of territorial soldiers. In December 1529, the king asked him to accompany the Vicomte de Turenne in Spain to negotiate his third marriage to Eleanor of Austria, Charles V's sister, a widow of King Manuel I of Portugal

On 22 August 1530, the king appointed him secretary, of royal finances and entrusted the office of Secretary of royal finances and acts Royal two years later. In May 1535, he left with the Royal Admiral Philippe Chabot to Calais to negotiate with England. In 1537, he was sent by the king in Leucate to negotiate peace with the Emperor Charles V and accompanied the king during his trip to Piedmont in 1538.

On 29 September 1542, he was made Clerk of the Order of Saint Michael. In 1546, he negotiated, concluded and signed the Treaty of Ardres with Henry VIII of England, signed on 7 June.

Works

References

  1. Sylvie Charton-le Clech, Chancellerie et Culture, (1993), 326


Political offices
Preceded by
unknown
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1547–1558
Succeeded by
Jacques Bourdin
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