(Redirected from Louis de la Trémoille)
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'Louis II de la Trémoille' or 'La Trimouille' (
September 29 1460 –
1525), was a late medieval/early renaissance
French general. He served under three kings:
Charles VIII,
Louis XII, and
Francis I.
Titles
During the course of his career, he earned the
titles Vicomte de Thouars, Prince de
Talmond, Comte de Guînes et de Bénon, Baron de Sully, de Craon, de Montagu, de Mauléon et de l'Ile-Bouchard, Seigneur des Iles de Ré, de Rochefort et de Marans, and Premier Chambellan du Roi.
Biography
He was born in
Thouars to a prominent noble family of
Poitou.

Louis II de La Trémoille in an ancient engraving.
He commanded an army that attempted to secure
Brittany for the French crown after the death in
1488 of
Francis II, Duke of Brittany, ending the so-called "Mad War" (''La Guerre Folle'') through his victory at
Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier on
July 27,
1488.
He took part to several battle in the Italian Wars, notably the inconclusive
Battle of Fornovo (
1495) and the victorious
Battle of Agnadello (
1509). He suffered a severe defeat at the
Battle of Novara, in which his 10,000-strong army was ambushed by 13,000 Swiss mercenaries.
He later went on to secure a French victory at the
Battle of Marignano (
1515), but he perished at the
Battle of Pavia (
1525), where he died of a wound inflicted by an
arquebus. His death occurred during the climax of the battle when the French were surprised by 1500 Spanish arquebusiers. La Trémoille and other high-ranking Frenchmen fought their way towards their king,
Francis I, in order to protect him. La Trémoille fell from his horse, shot through the heart.
Memory
Rue de La Trémoille, in the
VIIIe arrondissement of
Paris, is named after him.
See also
★
La Trémoille family.
External links
★
Laurent Vissiere, "Louis II de la Trémoille ou la découverte de l'Italie (1480-1525)"
★
Heraldique Europeene