Artists , a
favourite who probably began as valet de chambre to
Maria de Medici, by Daniel Dumonstier, also a valet de chambre. Mainly painters, unless otherwise stated. •
Jacques de Baerze, woodcarver to Philip the Good. •
David Beck (1621–1656), portraitist, valet de chambre to
Christina of Sweden •
Henri Bellechose • Hue de Boulogne, one of many painter-valets in the
Burgundian accounts of Duke
Philip the Bold. •
Jean Bondol, artist from
Bruges, recruited by the French court, now best known as an illuminator (see picture), and for the design of the Apocalypse tapestries at
Angers. •
Jean Bourdichon, most famous as an illuminator. •
Melchior Broederlam •
François Clouet, French portraitist, like his father •
Jean Clouet •
Jean de Court, painter and valet to
Mary, Queen of Scots •
Daniel Dumonstier (1574-1645 or 46), French portraitist and collector. •
Barthélemy d'Eyck, to
René of Anjou •
Hubert van Eyck •
Jan van Eyck •
Bartolomeo Ghetti, Italian who worked for
Francis I of France •
Gerard Horenbout, illuminator •
Paul de Limbourg –
Illuminator •
Gerard Loyet •
Jean Malouel •
Philippe de Mazerolles, Frenchman appointed as Burgundian court illuminator, possibly identical with the
Master of Anthony of Burgundy •
Jean Nocret •
Jean Perréal, also a sculptor and architect. •
Raphael was a papal valet •
Claus Sluter, sculptor, also succeeded his master
Jean de Marville •
Bartholomeus Spranger for
Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor •
Robinet Testard – Illuminator •
Georges Trubert, illuminator for
René of Anjou. •
Willem van Vleuten goldsmith to Philip the Good. •
Johannes Tapissier •
Jacobus Vide Literary men and actors •
George Bryan Elizabethan actor with the
Lord Chamberlain's Men, who seems to have become a regular Groom of the Chamber on his retirement from the stage - or perhaps that was just a way of giving him a pension. •
Geoffrey Chaucer, poet and courtier, became a page to
the king's daughter-in-law in his early teens, and married one of the Queen's ladies-in-waiting; he progressed to higher offices at court. •
Charles Rivière Dufresny, dramatist •
Stephen Hawes, poet and
Groom of the Chamber in 1502, under
Henry VII. •
Thomas Heywood, playwright and producer. With several of his actors became Groom of the Queen's Chamber for
Elizabeth I of England • The
King's Men, the
playing company under
James I and
Charles I of England, were "grooms extraordinary of the chamber". •
Clément Marot, poet, and his father Jean (below). Like Thomas Sternhold (see below) he published an influential vernacular verse translation of the
Psalms. •
Jean Marot poet, and secretary (
escripvain) to
Anne of Brittany. •
Molière, who began his career following his father (also a valet de chambre), as a tapissier valet, looking after the royal
tapestries and furniture, before going into acting and becoming court dramatist. •
Bonaventure des Périers, author and secretary to
Marguerite de Navarre •
William Shakespeare, as a key member of the
Lord Chamberlain's Men and later the King's Men, had this status as part of the English habit of making the whole of court theatrical companies Grooms of the Chamber. He occasionally participated in great ceremonial occasions, wearing livery at James I's
royal entry to London in 1604. •
Thomas Sternhold, translator of the Metrical
Psalms, and
Groom of the Robes to
Henry VIII and
Edward VI.
Other specialists •
Marin le Bourgeoys (c. 1550–1634) French gunsmith, inventor (or perfector) of the
flintlock mechanism firing action. and his companion Romain become the first to die in an aviation accident at
Wimereux, on the 15 June 1785. •
Jean-Baptiste Baillon III, (d. 1772), French clockmaker •
Court Jews, usually either physicians or financiers, were often appointed, especially in the German lands. •
Nicholas Fleury,
embroiderer to
Henry IV of France •
Jean-Roland Malet, economist •
Balthazar Martinot (1636-1714) French clockmaker. •
Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier scientist,
balloonist and curator; the first person to make an untethered balloon flight (in the presence of the king), and two years later the first person to die in an aviation accident. • Andries van Vesel, apothecary to the
Holy Roman Emperors, and father of the great anatomist
Vesalius • Jehan du Vivier, French royal
goldsmith, paid in 1390 for a
reliquary.
Courtiers, soldiers and politicians In fact the majority of valets fell under this category in the earlier period. All these appear to have had functional, rather than purely honorary, positions. •
Sir John Donne (1420s-1503, Welsh
Yorkist soldier, diplomat and courtier, made Usher of the Chamber in 1461, on
Edward IV's accession, then
Esquire of the Body 1465–69 •
Friedrich von Canitz (1654–99), Prussian diplomat who entered court as a
Kammerjunker. His poems were published posthumously. •
Adolph Freiherr Knigge (1752–96), statesman, author, and leading
Freemason. •
Anne de Montmorency, at the start of his very distinguished career • Sir
Henry Neville was made Groom of the Privy Chamber 1546, five years after being knighted, then Gentleman of the Privy Chamber in 1550, and
Member of Parliament for
Berkshire five times, from 1553- 1584. A typical moderately successful courtier's career. •
Sir Henry Norreys, a
Groom of the Stool (an especially intimate role) under
Henry VIII, was executed for an alleged affair with Queen
Anne Boleyn, along with
William Brereton, a Groom of the Privy Chamber. • Jean de
Saint Yon • , (1457-1529) French courtier and poet •
Veit Ludwig von Seckendorff (1626–92), scholar and statesman, a protege of
Ernest I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha who made him
hofjunker after university. He wrote an influential work on the administration of small principalities. •
Ludwig von Siegen, aristocratic soldier and amateur artist, who invented the
mezzotint. In the small court of the
Landgrave of
Hesse-Kassel, then a minor, his title of
kammerjunker seems to have equated in fact to
Chamberlain and head of the palace guards. •
Étienne de Vesc •
Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (1714-1767), Russian diplomat and statesman, made
kammerjunker at the age of 14, his career took off after he helped
Elizabeth of Russia in her
coup d'etat of 1741. •
Christian Frederik von Schalburg (1906-1942),
Danish officer who was born in
tzarist Russia and fell on the
Eastern Front, used the title
kammerjunker from 1936 where he served in the
Royal Danish Life Guards. ==See also==