The duchies of the
Ancien régime were more complex than those of the
medieval period. Essentially, the new duchies were not independent principalities and the ducal status was not definitively attached to the fiefs erected into duchies. The
letters patent of creation contain clauses of succession which regulate the future of the duchies. In most cases, the rule chosen is that of succession by males: upon the extinction of the male descendants of the beneficiary of the erection into a duchy, the duchy reverts to its "previous state" lordship, county or other. Further distinction was made between dukes and peers, who sat in parliament;
hereditary dukes, and
patent dukes, whose title was not transmissible. In 1566,
Charles IX issued an order that set forth that hereditary duchies would be reversible to the Crown in the absence of males heirs. Some duchies have changed their name during their history: the
Duchy of Thouars, for example, is often called the Duchy of Trémoïlle. Furthermore, it was not uncommon for certain fiefs to be erected into duchies under another name. Thus, the
Duchy of Montmorency was re-created in 1633 under the name of
Enghien, which remained attached to a lake in the Montmorency region, a lake which gave its name to the town of
Enghien-les-Bains. The title of duke, abolished during the
French Revolution, was reestablished in 1806. Several dukes were created under the Empire and under the governments that followed. Under the
Ancien régime, from the 16th century onwards, the title of
Monsieur le Duc was used to designate the eldest son of the
Prince of Condé. Duke
Henri de Bourbon, who was a minister in 1723, is particularly well known in history under this name.
Duchies created by French sovereigns Of the 218 titles created (141 under the
Ancien régime, 33 under the
First Empire, 33 under the
Restoration, 7 under the
July Monarchy, 4 under the
Second Empire), only about forty remain today, the others becoming extinct.
Duchies created by French sovereigns on foreign territories Duchies created by foreign sovereigns on territories annexed by France Duchies created by foreign sovereigns on French territories Other French dukedoms ==See also==