The count obtained a civil divorce in 1906, after he had spent about $10 million of the money given to Anna by her father upon marriage, much of it being used to lavish expensive gifts upon his various mistresses. In 1908, the countess married his cousin,
Hélie de Talleyrand-Périgord, Duke of Sagan, 5th
Duke of Talleyrand, and de Castellane then sought an
annulment from the
Vatican so that he could be free to remarry in the Church. The annulment case was settled in 1924, when the highest Vatican tribunal upheld the validity of the marriage and denied the annulment. Time magazine wrote on 13 April 1925: Probably not since
Henry VIII tried in vain to get an annulment of his marriage with
Catherine of Aragon has a matrimonial case been so long in the courts of the
Roman Catholic Church as that on which nine
Cardinals have just handed down a final decision. The male in this case is the son of one of
France's most historic houses − Le Comte Boni de Castellane. The female is the daughter of a
United States stockbroker, the late Jay Gould − the present Anna, Marquise de Talleyrand Périgord, Duchesse de Sagan. On March 14, 1895, Anna became La Comtesse de Castellane by a marriage solemnized in
Manhattan by the late
Archbishop Corrigan. After three children were born, La Comtesse obtained a civil divorce from Le Comte on grounds of infidelity. In 1908, she married Le Marquis de Talleyrand Périgord, Duc de Sagan. Thereupon, Le Comte asked the Vatican to annul the marriage, apparently that he might be free to marry again, within the Church. • Trial I. The
Roman Rota upheld the marriage in 1911. Le Comte appealed. • Trial II. Anna refused to be represented at this trial. The marriage was declared void. Anna appealed. • Trial III. The marriage was declared valid. Le Comte appealed from the Rota to
Pope Benedict XV. • Trial IV. The case was laid before a Commission of the
Apostolic Signatura − the supreme tribunal of the Church. Six cardinals composed the commission. They held the marriage valid. Le Comte appealed to
Pope Pius XI. • Trial V. The Commission declared the marriage invalid. Anna appealed to the Pope who, to settle it once and forever, assigned three extra cardinals to the commission. • Trial VI was before Cardinals De Lai (Italian), Pomphilj (Italian), Van Rossum (Dutch), Sbaretti (Italian), Silj (Italian), Bisleti (Italian), Sincere (Italian), Lega (Italian), Mori (Italian). The marriage was held valid. Formal proclamation will soon be issued. The Marquis de Castellane died in Paris on 20 October 1932, a week after suffering a
paralytic stroke. His funeral, which his former wife did not attend, was held in Paris at the Church of Saint-Philippe-du-Roule and he was buried at
St. Patrice. ==Descendants==