Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)

Saint-Cyr is certainly not Versailles, but there was a close proximity between the Maison royale de Saint-Louis (known simply as Saint-Cyr) and the palace, links that were not merely geographic. Reserved for the daughters of impoverished French nobility, Saint-Cyr was created in 1686 from the conver...

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Main Author: Dominique Picco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles 2006-03-01
Series:Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/2743
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spelling doaj-d93c715d54564ba0933ea5bbf5acfc9b2020-11-25T01:10:18ZengCentre de Recherche du Château de VersaillesBulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles1958-92712006-03-0110.4000/crcv.2743Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)Dominique PiccoSaint-Cyr is certainly not Versailles, but there was a close proximity between the Maison royale de Saint-Louis (known simply as Saint-Cyr) and the palace, links that were not merely geographic. Reserved for the daughters of impoverished French nobility, Saint-Cyr was created in 1686 from the convergence between Madame de Maintenon’s passion for education and the Sun King’s political will to win the fidelity of a social category now known by historians as the ‘noblesse seconde’. During the reign of Louis XIV, support for the school was strong, but it was more subdued during the reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI, though support was always present. Based on Preuves de la noblesse des demoiselles (Evidence of the nobility of the young women), conserved in the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF) and on papers from the Saint-Cyr Archives in the Department of Yvelines, we can locate the place of baptism — comparable to place of birth — of 3,155 students who attended Saint-Cyr until its closing in 1793. Among these, 413 were born in the South of France. To make a portrait of these Southerners, three axes are used: the place, or region, in the south, where the girls came from, the nobility of their families’ lineage and these former students’ destinies, particularly whether or not they returned to their native areas.http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/2743gender historygirls’ educationlineagenobilityRoyal house of Saint-Louisroyal lines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dominique Picco
spellingShingle Dominique Picco
Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)
Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
gender history
girls’ education
lineage
nobility
Royal house of Saint-Louis
royal lines
author_facet Dominique Picco
author_sort Dominique Picco
title Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)
title_short Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)
title_full Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)
title_fullStr Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)
title_full_unstemmed Des Méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de Saint‑Cyr (1686‑1793)
title_sort des méridionales à la cour : l’exemple des demoiselles de saint‑cyr (1686‑1793)
publisher Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
series Bulletin du Centre de Recherche du Château de Versailles
issn 1958-9271
publishDate 2006-03-01
description Saint-Cyr is certainly not Versailles, but there was a close proximity between the Maison royale de Saint-Louis (known simply as Saint-Cyr) and the palace, links that were not merely geographic. Reserved for the daughters of impoverished French nobility, Saint-Cyr was created in 1686 from the convergence between Madame de Maintenon’s passion for education and the Sun King’s political will to win the fidelity of a social category now known by historians as the ‘noblesse seconde’. During the reign of Louis XIV, support for the school was strong, but it was more subdued during the reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI, though support was always present. Based on Preuves de la noblesse des demoiselles (Evidence of the nobility of the young women), conserved in the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF) and on papers from the Saint-Cyr Archives in the Department of Yvelines, we can locate the place of baptism — comparable to place of birth — of 3,155 students who attended Saint-Cyr until its closing in 1793. Among these, 413 were born in the South of France. To make a portrait of these Southerners, three axes are used: the place, or region, in the south, where the girls came from, the nobility of their families’ lineage and these former students’ destinies, particularly whether or not they returned to their native areas.
topic gender history
girls’ education
lineage
nobility
Royal house of Saint-Louis
royal lines
url http://journals.openedition.org/crcv/2743
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