Abbots • 1.Gausbert, - † 15 October 1005 at Bourgueil, also abbé de Saint-Julien de Tours, Maillezais, Bourgueil (990) et Marmoutier (1001). • 2.Ingelbaud, (1010 – 1015) • 3.Evrard • 4.Ascelin, 1050 • 5.Renaud Ier, (1072 – 1074) • 6.Johel • 7.Renaud II, 1080 • 8.Johel, (1094 - †1097) • 9.Eudes de Buris, (1111 – 1112) • 10.Renaud III, 1121 • 11.Guillaume Ier, 1133 • 12.Foulques, 1133 • 13.Ursion, (1143 – 1158) • 14.Geoffroy Ier, (1164 – 1167) • 15.Laurent, (1170 – 1171) • 16.André, 1175 • 17.Richard, 1184 • 18.Thomas, • 19.Robert, (1195 - 1205) • 20.Geoffroi Bérillaut, † 6 août 1210, murdered by Lord Hamelin of La Faigne. • 21.Guérin, (1211 - 1218) • 22.Jean Ier, (1218 – 1219) • 23.Pierre Ier de Brissent, (1220 – 1225) • 24.Hamelin, (1229 – 1248) • 25.Jacques Ier, (1261 - 1267) • 26.Robert II, 1270 • 27.Jacques II, (1282 – 1292) • 28.Gervais, (1296 - † 5 October 1311) • 29.Hugues Gaudin, (7 November 1311 - † 15 August 1324) • 30.Jean II du Coudray, (27 August 1324 – † 12 October 1343), first Prior of Loue. • 31.Geoffroy de Coëtmoisan, (August 1343 – 30 November 1380) appointed in 1352 Bishop of Cornwall, then Bishop of Dol (1357) • 32.Jean III, (1352 – 1359) • 33.Mathieu de Juillé, (1362 – 1374) • 34.Pascal Huguenot, (1386 - † 3 October 1399), doctor of law, former abbot of Lonlay (1370). • 35.Guillaume Patri, (Octobre 1399 - † 15 septembre 1409), former Prior of Solesmes since 1362. • 36.Guy de Baïf, 1409 elected in 1412 abbot of S. Aubin d'Angers, where he died on November 6, 1442. • 37.Jean IV Chevalier, 1417, with a bachelor's degree in decrees. • 38.Alain Le Doyen, 1420 – resigned in 1438, died on February 9 of the following year. • 39.Gérard de Lorière, (1439 - † 19 June 1461) • 40.Guillaume II Le Monnier, (1461 – † 9 December 1465) • 41.Jean V de Tucé, (1465 - 1485), in opposition to a commendatory abbot, Guillaume de Malestroit, who gives up his place in exchange for a pension. • 42.Mathieu de la Motte, (1486 – resigned in 1492) • 43.Guillaume III Herbelin, (1492 - † 1496) • 44.Michel Bureau, (1496 - † 6 June 1518, doctor of theology • 45.Jean Bougler, 1518, Prior of Solesmes from 1505 to his death on April 11, 1556, aged 75
Commendatory abbots • 46. Jean Calluau ou Colluant, 1518 - † 29 June 1522, canon of Saintes, then of Angoulême, also abbot of La Couronne (1515), bishop of Senlis from 1517 to his death. • 46. Martin Fournier de Beaume, 1524 - † 2 July 1527, Archbishop of Tours from 1521 to his death. • 48. Adam Fumée, 1530, resigned in 1546 and switched to Protestantism. • 49. Nicolas Fumée, 1546, resigned in 1575 to assume the bishopric of Beauvais, nephew of the previous one, first canon of Paris, master of the King's chapel (1587), also abbot of Beaulieu-lès-Loches (1584), died in Chartres on 3 March 1593. • 50.
Charles Ier de Bourbon, cardinal de Vendôme, 1575, resigned in 1580, son of Charles de Bourbon and Françoise d'Alençon, also bishop of Nevers, of Saintes, then archbishop of Rouen and bishop of Beauvais, also abbot of Jumièges, Saint-Wandrille, Saint-Germain-des-Près, Corbie, Vendôme, Saint-Lucien, S.Michel-en-l'Herm, La Clarté-Dieu, Beaulieu-lès-Le-Mans, les Châtelliers, S.Etienne de Dijon, Montebourg, etc. uncle of Henri IV and proclaimed king of France under the name of Charles X by the League after the death of Henri III, he died captive in the castle of Fontenay-le-Comte on May 9, 1590. • 51.
Charles II de Bourbon, second cardinal of Vendôme, 1580 - † July 30, 1594, nephew of the previous one, archbishop of Rouen (1582), appointed cardinal by Gregory XIII on December 12, 1583, also abbot of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, S. Lucien de Beauvais, Bourgueil, Jumièges, Corbie... • 52. Michel Dionneau, 1594, resigned in 1602, priest of Le Mans. • 53. Jean ou Michel Legay, November 1602 - 1604, cleric of Paris, adviser to the King. • 54.
Léonore d'Étampes de Valençay, 27 July 1605, Bishop of Chartres (June 3, 1620), then Archbishop of Reims (December 16, 1641), also abbot of S. Martin de Pontoise, Bourgueil (1605–44), Beaulieu-lès-Loches, l'Epine, Vaas, Champagne, L'Epau, la Cour-Dieu and La Pelice, died in Paris on Holy Saturday, April 8, 1651, at the age of 62. • 55. Balthazar Poitevin, 1620 – † 1632, also confidential abbot on behalf of the Count of Soissons de Jumièges, S. Oüen de Rouen and S. Michel-en-l'Herm. • 56. Jean-Baptiste de Croisilles, 1632, deposed filed in 1637 for having married in secret, adviser to the King, also confidential abbot of S. Ouen de Rouen (1632–39), Jumièges (1632–38) and S. Michel-en-L'Herm (1636–37). • 57. Guillaume de Montagne, (1638 – 1640) • 58. Nicolas de Conty-Gramont, grandson of the Prince de Condé killed in Jarnac, also abbot of Bassac (1629) although Calvinist, died in 1648. • 59. Henri-Louis Chasteigner de La Roche-Posay, 1644 - died of apoplexy on July 30, 1651, at Dissay at the age of 74, Bishop of Poitiers (1611), Knight of the
Order of the Holy Spirit, also Abbot of S. Cyran (1616–20), S. Cyprien de Poitiers and Nanteuil-en-Vallée (ca 1595). • 60.
Eugène-Maurice de Savoie, 2 octobre 1651 – resigned in 1657 to marry Olympe Mancini, niece of
Cardinal Mazarin. • 61.Louis-Henri de Bourbon, chevalier de Soissons, 1669 - 1683, died in 1703 at the age of 63. • 62. Philippe de Savoie, also abbot of the Gard, S. Médard de Soissons and Corbie (ca 1669), died on October 5, 1693. • 63. Louis Bouton de Chamilly, December 1694 - † 1705. • 64. François de Caillebot de la Salle, 1705 - Doctor of Theology, Bishop of Tournai (1690-1705), also Abbot of Plaimpied (1680) and Rebais (1672), where he died on December 21, 1736, at the age of 83. • 65. Martin-Maurice de Lossendière, ... – 1728, then abbot of Saint-Maur-sur-Loire until 1754 • 66. Charles-Louis de Froullay de Tessé, 26 November 1728 - † 31 January 1767 in Le Mans at the age of 80, Canon Count of Lyon (1708), Bishop of Le Mans (October 17, 1723), Chaplain to the King, former abbot of Saint-Maur-sur-Loire (1721). • 67.
Bernardin-François Fouquet, 1767 - † 20 April 1785 at the age of 80 in Paris, in his hotel on rue du Bac, distant cousin of the famous Superintendent, doctor of theology of Sorbonne (1732), vicar general of the diocese of Noyon, general agent of the clergy of France for the province of Toulouse (1735), archbishop of Embrun (17 September 1740-resigned on 17 April 1767), former abbot of Caunes-Minervois. • 68. Louis-Sylvestre de La Chatre, 1785 – 1790, first lieutenant of carabinieri before entering the orders in 1774, vicar general of the diocese of Nevers (1786), ordinary chaplain of King
Louis XVIII (1814), bishop of Beauvais (1817-22), canon of Saint-Denis (1822), died in Paris on 5 February 1829 at the age of 75. ==Secular use==