Jean Le Veneur

Cardinal
Jean Le Veneur
Cardinal-Priest
Church San Bartolomeo all'Isola
Diocese Lisieux (1505-1539)
Other posts Abbot of Grestain (1503-1539)
Abbot of Lonlay (1505-1543)
Abbot of Préaux (1506-1535)
Abbot of Mont-Saint-Michel (1524-1539)
Abbot of N.D. de Lyre (1530-1535)
Abbot of S. Fuscien (1533-1543)
Abbot of Bec (1535-1543?)
Orders
Created Cardinal 7 November 1533
by Pope Clement VII
Personal details
Born ca. 1473
Normandy
Died 7 or 8 August 1543
Marle, Picardy, France
Nationality French
Parents Philippe, baron of Tillières
Marie Blosset

Jean Le Veneur (died August 8, 1543), son of a Norman baron, was a French Abbot, Bishop, Courtier, royal official, and Roman Catholic cardinal.

Biography

He was born[1] into a noble family of Normandy. He was the second son of Philippe, baron of Tillières, Valquier and Homme; his mother was Marie Blosset, the sister of Bishop Stephen Blosset de Carouges of Lisieux (1482-1505).[2] Jean le Veneur's brother Gabriel inherited the baronies.[3] His brother Ambroise became Bishop of Evreux (1511-1532),[4] and his first-cousin on his mother's side, Jacques d'Annebaut, eventually became a Cardinal himself.

Canon, Archdeacon, Abbot

Le Veneur's first post was the titular parish priest at Nôtre-Dame et Saint-Léonard in Honfleur in 1497. At the age of twenty-four, Jean le Veneur became Archdeacon of Auge in the Church of Lisieux,[5] no doubt both under his uncle's patronage. He became Abbot of the Abbey of Grestain in the diocese of Lisieux thanks to the intervention of his uncle and of King Louis XII.[6] He took possession of the monastery on 29 May 1503 by proxy, and on 26 May 1504 in person.[7] He was also a Canon of the Church of Paris.

Bishop

Le Veneur was elected Bishop of Lisieux on October 2, 1505, in succession to his maternal uncle; he remained in this position until August 18, 1539.[8] He also acquired from his uncle the Abbey of Lonlay (Longiledus) in the diocese of Le Mans in 1505, and he seems to have held it during his entire lifetime.[9] He was a Councillor of State by 1507, with a salary of 600 livres.[10]

In 1506 Bishop Le Veneur was named Abbot Commendatory of the Abbey of Préaux. He held the abbey until 1535, when he resigned it in favor of Jacques d' Annebaut.[11]

On 20 June 1510, Bishop Le Veneur was one of the prelates who assisted at the funeral of Cardinal Georges d'Amboise in Rouen.[12]

In 1511 Bishop Le Veneur participated in the schismatic Council of Pisa, under the presidency of Cardinal Bernardino López de Carvajal[13]

Jean le Veneur became the first Abbot Commendatory of the Abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel in 1524, by appointment of King Francis I in accordance with the Concordat between him and Pope Leo X of 1516. The monks of Mont-Saint-Michel attempted to assert their ancient privileges and voted to elect René de Mary. When they sent their news to the Court, the King's mother, Louise of Savoy, wrote in reply demanding that they sent representatives to present their documents showing the grant of their privilege of election, and at the same time inviting them to submit their votes for Jean le Veneur. They submitted their bulls, and received in return a letter from the King, expressing his desire that they choose Jean le Veneur. It took a second royal letter, ordering the monks to elect Le Veneur and no other, for the business to be accomplished.[14] In 1539, Cardinal le Veneur resigned the Abbey into the hands of Pope Paul III, recommending that the Pope appoint as his successor his friend and cousin Jacques d'Annebault.[15] The Bull authorizing the transfer was dated 18 August 1539.[16]

On 10 May 1517, the Bishop of Lisieux was present at the Coronation of Claude of Brittany as Queen of France in the royal Abbey of S. Denis by Cardinal Philippe de Luxembourg. She had been married to King Francis I on 18 May 1514.[17]

On 4 March 1525 Bishop Le Veneur was named Lieutenant-General of the government of Normandie, by the King's brother-in-law Charles, Duc d'Alençon, the Governor of the province.[18] This was a time of national disaster. King Francis had lost the Battle of Pavia on 24 February, and many French nobles had been killed or captured. The King had been carried off as a prisoner to Madrid.

Probably in 1530, Jean Le Veneur followed his brother Ambroise as Abbot Commendatory of Notre-Dame de Lyre in the Diocese of Evreux. He held the abbey until ca. 1535, when he was succeeded by his grand-nephew Gabriel Le Veneur.[19]

Le Veneur also became Count of Tillières. As Grand Almoner of France (from 1526), he was involved in many church and government projects. He also introduced Jacques Cartier to king Francis I in May of 1532,[20] before Cartier's first expedition to Canada. This brought some problems with Portugal, which interpreted Pope Alexander VI's bull of 1493 as excluding anyone but Castile and Portugal from exploration in the New World. In October 1533, during the visit of Pope Clement VII to Marseille for the marriage of Catherine de' Medici to Henri, Jean Le Veneur discussed the matter with the Pope and persuaded him that the bull applied only to those areas already discovered, not to undiscovered territories. This cleared the way for Cartier's project.[21] That expedition set sail on 20 April 1534.

Cardinal Le Veneur

Jean Le Veneur was made a Cardinal on 7 November, 1533,[22] by Pope Clement VII in his fourteenth consistory, held in Marseille, shortly after the marriage of Clement's niece to the son of King Francis I of France. His creation was at the request of King Francis.[23] On 10 November Le Veneur received the Titular church of San Bartolomeo all'Isola.

Also in 1533 Le Veneur was appointed Abbot Commendatory of the Abbey of S. Fuscien aux Boix in the diocese of Amiens, which he held until his death in 1543.[24]

In 1534 the Cardinal also became involved in a political-religious dispute involving a friend of his, François Picart, a Doctor of Theology of the University of Paris and a notable preacher.[25] He was accused before the King by some of the nobility who favored the reformed religion for stirring up the people through his preaching. Cardinal Le Veneur defended Picart, but he was opposed by the Chancellor Cardinal du Prat, by the King's Confessor Guillaume Petit, Bishop of Senlis, and by Guillaume Briconnet, Bishop of Meaux. Picart was sent to prison, interrogated on his views, and exiled. Eventually the Cardinal was able to obtain his return.[26]

During his Cardinalate, he reorganized the statutes of the see of Paris.

On 13 March 1534 King Francis I presented Cardinal Le Veneur to the Abbey of Bec. In March 1535 the King was progressing through Normandy, and was pleased to install the Cardinal in his benefice. On 23 March there was a distribution of money to the poor at the order of the King.[27]

In 1539, seeing that the Collège Mignon was not being properly maintained, having no religious attention and having fewer bursars than the twelve which were required, the Cardinal undertook to reform the institution.[28]

Death and Funeral

In the summer of 1543 Jean Le Veneur was following the Royal Court in the King's expedition into Flanders.[29] He caught a fever, and died on 7 or 8 August 1543, in Marle en Thiérache, Picardy. His cousin and friend Bishop Jacques d'Annebault took charge of his body, which was moved to Elbeuf on 14 August, and to Bec on the 15th, where it was kept until 3 September. His heart was encased in a lead container and buried before the High Altar of the Abbey. His remains were then transported to Lisieux[30] His funeral took place in the Cathedral of Saint Pierre in Lisieux, and was presided over by Louis Guyard, the Bishop of Chartres, with the assistance of the Bishop of Avranches, and with the Bishop of Luçon pronouncing the Funeral Oration; he was buried in the Cathedral of Lisieux.[31] In 1865 the tomb was rediscovered in the Choir of the Cathedral, accompanied by a long inscription.[32] According to another report, he was buried in the church of Saint André d'Appeville.

References

  1. Bréard, p. 139, states that Jean Le Veneur became Archdeacon of Auge at the age of twenty-four, and that six years later he became Abbot of Grestain. He became Abbot in 1503, which implies a birth date some thirty years earlier, ca. 1473.
  2. Gallia christiana: in provincias ecclesiaticas distributa (in Latin). Tomus undecimus (Vol. 11). Paris: ex Typographia regia. 1759. pp. 798–799. Bréard, p. 139.
  3. Louis-Pierre d' Hozier (1738). Armorial général de la France (in French). Registre premier, seconde partie. Paris: Firmin-Didot. p. 624.
  4. Gulik and Eubel, p. 190. A. Chassant; G.-E. Sauvage (1846). Histoire des évêques d'Évreux: avec des notes et des armoiries. Évreux: L. Tavernier et Cie. pp. 135–137. Jean Le Veneur acted as his Vicar-General.
  5. Bréard, p. 139.
  6. Bréard, p. 138.
  7. Gallia christiana 11, p. 845.
  8. Gallia christiana 11, p. 799.
  9. Bartholomaeus Hauréau (ed.), Gallia christiana 14 (Paris: Didot 1856), p. 495.
  10. Richard Seguin, Histoire du pays d'Auge et des évêques comtes de Lisieux (Vire: Adam 1832), p. 164.
  11. Porée, p. 328 and 332.
  12. Seguin, p. 164.
  13. Seguin, p. 164.
  14. Gout, I, pp. 253-254.
  15. Michon, p. 86. Annebault, the brother of Claude d'Annebault, Admiral of France, became a cardinal in 1544. His mother was sister of Le Veneur's mother.
  16. Gout, I, p. 256.
  17. Gallia christiana 10, p. 799.
  18. Moréri, Louis (1759). Etienne-François Drouet, ed. Le grand dictionnaire historique, ou le melange curieux de l'histoire sacrée et profane. (in French). Tome dixième (nouvelle edition ed.). Paris: Les Libraries Associés. p. 518.
  19. Ch. Guéry, Histoire de l' abbaye de Lyre (Evreux: Imprimerie de l'Eure 1917), pp. 212-214.
  20. The King was at Mont Saint-Michel on 8 May, but was in the general area for several weeks: Académie des sciences morales et politiques (France) (1905). Collection des ordonnances des rois de France: Mentions d'actes non datés, Itinéraire, Troisième supplément. Tome huitieme. Paris: Impr. nationale. p. 479.
  21. Charles André Julien, Les voyages de découverte et les premiers établissements (XVe-XVIe siècles) (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1948), pp. 92-99 and 105-117. Baron de la Chapelle, "Jean Le Veneur et le Canada, Nova Francia 6 (1931), 341-343.
  22. Gulik and Eubel, p. 22.
  23. Michon, p. 78.
  24. Gallia christiana 10, p. 1305.
  25. J. K. Farge, A Bibliographical Register of Paris Doctors of Theology 1500-1536 (Toronto 1980), pp. 262-266.
  26. Pierre Frizon (1638). Gallia purpurata (in Latin). Paris: Simon Lemoine. p. 583-584. Frizon gives the name of the Bishop of Senlis as Jacques Petit, OP. Bishop Briconnet died in 1534.
  27. Porée, pp. 328-329.
  28. Frizon, p. 583. Frizon, it must be noted, is not always a reliable source, often echoing the work of Alfonso Chacon. It is Frizon, for instance, who states (p. 584) that the Cardinal died in Rome.
  29. Gabriel-Henri Gaillard (1769). Histoire de François Premier: roi de France, dit le grand roi et le père des lettres (in French). Tome cinquieme. Paris: Saillant & Nyon. pp. 254–296.
  30. Porée, pp. 330-331.
  31. Seguin, p. 167.
  32. Porée, p. 331, n. 3.


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