Valentin-Ladislas, Count Esterházy of
Galantha and of
Grodeck, was born in the commune of
Le Vigan, Gard on 22 October 1740. He was the son of Valentin-Joseph Esterházy, a member of the illustrious Hungarian noble house
Esterházy, and Philippine de Nougarède de la Garde. His grandfather, Comte Antoine Esterházy, had been one of the principal lieutenants of
Francis II Rákóczi, a Hungarian prince who led a
war of independence against the
Habsburg Empire. Antoine Esterházy followed Rákóczi into exile on the Black Sea, where he died. His son Valentin-Joseph, however, moved to France to take command of a
company in a regiment of fellow Hungarian exiles formed by the son of another of Rákóczi's lieutenants, the Comte de Bercheny. In 1735, Valentin-Joseph in turn formed his own regiment of
hussards known as the
régiment Hussards-Esterhazy. He married Philippine de Nougarède, who came from an old military family in Vigan, and whom he met during a stay there while travelling to
Beaucaire. Valentin-Joseph died in 1743 in
Alsace, after being wounded in the
Battle of Dettingen. His family was left in poverty. His widow went to Versailles to seek aid, but was only able to reclaim half of her husbands' 3,000 franc pension. In 1749, she moved the family to Paris, hoping to find support from her husband's old friends and allies. The Comte de Bercheny agreed to adopt Valentin, provide for his education, and give him a place in his regiment.
Marriage & children In 1784, Esterházy married Marie-Françoise-Ursule de Hallweil, the daughter of a count and
Lieutenant-General of the Armies of the King. The couple had four children: • Gaspard-Philippe-Valentin d'Esterházy de Galantha et de Grodeck (1786-1838) • Ladislas-Henri-Valentin d'Esterházy de Galantha (b. 1797) • Marie-Françoise-Léonide d'Esterházy de Galantha (b. 1787) • Marie-Anne-Everilde-Ursule d'Esterházy de Galantha (b. 10 February 1791)
Relationship with Marie Antoinette Esterházy first met Marie Antoinette in 1770, when he was charged with bringing a portrait of her betrothed, the future Louis XVI, to the then-Archduchess in Vienna. Four years later, Esterházy requested a letter of recommendation to Marie Antoinette from her mother Queen
Maria Theresa. Maria Theresa refused, but did authorize the Austrian ambassador to France to recommend Esterházy to Marie Antoinette, who, remembering him as the man who delivered her husband's portrait in 1770, received him 'with great pleasure'. According to
Ernest Daudet, Marie Antoinette "openly protected him, defended him against his rivals, recommended him to the King, whom she got to love him, obtained for him, in a circumstance where he was in debt, 600
louis, a pension upon his marriage, some grand posts; she aided, in a word, as much as she could, in his fortune, good deeds which he received with recognition and paid for with a devotion which the unhappiness of his sovereigns, far from slackening it, caused to excite." However, Maria Theresa never quite forgave Esterházy for his grandfather's part in the Hungarian insurrection against Habsburg rule. She was shocked by the intimacy of Esterházy and Marie Antoinette's letters to each other, writing on one occasion that "the correspondence with that runt d'Esterhazy is very humiliating." In 1778, when he was chosen to deliver the news to Maria Theresa that her daughter had gone into labor with her first child, the Austrian queen wrote that "Esterhazy is in no way suitable for being sent here with such great news. His family is not illustrious, and he is always regarded as a refugee." In April 1779, the Queen went to the
Petit Trianon to recover from the measles, and Esterházy was one of four gentlemen whom Louis XVI authorized to attend her there. This caused much gossip at Versailles, giving rise to "the malicious insinuations" of sexual immorality which would plague Marie Antoinette for the rest of her life. In 1784, upon the occasion of his marriage, Marie Antoinette granted Esterházy an annual pension of 12,000
livres. In 1791, when the Queen was a "captive" at the
Tuileries Palace, Esterházy passed letters and gifts from her to their mutual friend
Count Axel von Fersen. ==Career==