Jean de Ganay was lord of
Persan and
La Bussière. He was first a lawyer at the
Parlement of Paris in 1478 and then as an advisor to the
Court of Aids in October 1481. He also attended the Parlement of Paris in 1490. Jean de Ganay advised King
Charles VIII to conquer the
Kingdom of Naples, asserting his rights that the last princes of the
House of Anjou had bequeathed it to his family. The King sent de Ganay and
Louis de la Trémoille as ambassadors to
Pope Alexander VI. On the death of King
Ferdinand I of Naples in 1494, Charles VIII claimed the titles of King of Naples and
Jerusalem and entered
Italy. This was the start of the
First Italian War. Despite early successes, the intervention of Pope Alexander VI and
Ferdinand II of Aragon resulted in the defeat of Charles VIII and the end of the War in 1497. In September 1510, de Ganay presided over the Council of Tours which attempted to mediate a peace between Louis XII of France and
Pope Julius II in the wake of the
War of the League of Cambrai. ==Death==