Surintendante de la Maison de la Reine
Surintendante de la Maison de la Reine ("Superintendent of the Queen's Household"), or only Surintendante, was the senior lady-in-waiting at the royal court of France from 1619 until the French revolution. The Surintendante was selected from the members of the highest French nobility.
Contents
History
The office was created in 1619.[1] The Surintendante and the Governess of the Children of France were the only female office holders in France to give an oath of loyalty to the King himself.[2]
The surintendante had about the same tasks as the dame d'honneur: receiving the oath of the female personnel before they took office and supervising them and the queen's daily routine, as well as organizing the accounts and staff list, but she was placed in rank above the dame d'honneur.[1] Whenever the surintendante was absent, she was replaced by the dame d'honneur.[1] The post of surintendante could be left vacant for long periods, and was abolished between the death of Marie Anne de Bourbon in 1741 and the appointment of Princess Marie Louise of Savoy in 1775.
During the Second Empire, the Grande-Maitresse was the equivalent of the Surintendante, being formally the highest female official at court but in practice with the same tasks as the dame d'honneur.[3]
List of Surintendante de la Maison de la Reine to the queen of France
Surintendante to Anne of Austria 1619-1666
- 1619-1637: Marie de Rohan
- 1657-1666: Anne Marie Martinozzi, Princess of Conti
Surintendante to Maria Theresa of Spain 1660-1683
- 1660-1661: Anne Gonzaga
- 1661-1679: Olympia Mancini, Countess of Soissons
- 1679-1683: Françoise-Athénaïs, marquise de Montespan
Surintendante to Marie Leszczyńska 1725-1768
- 1725-1741: Marie Anne de Bourbon
- 1741-1768: Abolished
Surintendante to Marie Antoinette 1775-1792
- 1775-1792: Princess Marie Louise of Savoy
See also
- Mistress of the Robes, British equivalent
- Camarera mayor de Palacio, Spanish equivalent
- Chief Court Mistress, Dutch, German, Scandinavian and Russian equivalent
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Nadine Akkerman & Birgit Houben, eds. The Politics of Female Households: Ladies-in-waiting across Early Modern Europe. Leiden: Brill, 2013
- ↑ Jeroen Frans Jozef Duindam: Vienna and Versailles: The Courts of Europe's Dynastic Rivals, 1550-1780.
- ↑ Seward, Desmond: Eugénie. An empress and her empire. ISBN 0-7509-2979-0 (2004)