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词条 Guillaume Dubois
释义

  1. Life and government

     Early years  Career 

  2. References

{{Infobox Christian leader
| type = Cardinal
| honorific-prefix = His Eminence
| name = Guillaume Dubois
| honorific-suffix = OSB
| title = Archbishop of Cambrai
| image = Guillaume Dubois by Hyacinthe Rigaud.jpg
| caption = Cardinal Guillaume Dubois by Hyacinthe Rigaud (1700s)
| church = Catholic
| archdiocese = Cambrai
| province = Lille
| metropolis = Lille
| appointed = Armand de Rohan
| term = 9 June 1720 – 1723
| predecessor = Joseph-Emmanuel de La Trémoille
| successor = Charles de Saint-Albin
| ordination = 1669
| ordained_by =
| consecration = 1720
| consecrated_by = Armand de Rohan
| cardinal = 16 July 1721
| created_cardinal_by = Pope Innocent XIII
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1656|9|6|df=y}}
| birth_place = Brive-la-Gaillarde, Limousin, France
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1723|8|10|1656|9|6|df=y}}
| death_place = Varsailles, France
| buried = Saint-Roch, Paris
| nationality = French
| religion = Roman Catholicism
| profession = Clergyman, politician
| education = Christian Doctrine Fathers
| module = {{Infobox officeholder|embed=yes
| office = Member of the Académie française
| term_start = 20 September 1722
| term_end = 10 August 1723
| predecessor = André Dacier
| successor = Charles-Jean-François Hénault
| office1 = Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
| monarch1 = Louis XV
Philippe II of Orléans (as Regent)
| term_start1 = 24 September 1718
| term_end1 = 10 August 1723
| predecessor1 = Nicolas Chalon du Blé
| successor1 = Charles Jean-Baptiste Fleuriau
| office2 = Chief Minister of the French Monarch
| monarch2 = Louis XV
Philippe II of Orléans (as Regent)
| term_start2 = 2 September 1715
| term_end2 = 10 August 1723
| predecessor2 = Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1661–1683)
| successor2 = Louis Henri of Bourbon
}}
}}

Guillaume Dubois (6 September 1656 – 10 August 1723) was a French cardinal and statesman.

Life and government

Early years

Dubois, the third of the four great Cardinal-Ministers (Richelieu, Mazarin, Dubois, and Fleury), was born in Brive-la-Gaillarde, in Limousin. He was, according to his enemies, the son of an apothecary, his father being in fact a doctor of medicine of respectable family, who kept a small drug store as part of the necessary outfit of a country practitioner. He was educated at the school of the Brothers of the Christian Doctrine at Brive, where he received the tonsure at the age of thirteen. In 1672, having finished his philosophy course, he was given a scholarship at the college of St. Michel in Paris by the lieutenant-general of the Limousin. The head of the college, the abbé Antoine Faure, who was from the same part of the country as himself, befriended the lad, and continued to do so for many years after he had finished his course, finding him pupils and ultimately obtaining for him the post of tutor to the young duke of Chartres, afterwards the regent Duke of Orléans.[1]

Career

Dubois gained the favour of Louis XIV by bringing about the marriage of his pupil with Françoise-Marie de Bourbon, Mlle de Blois, a natural but legitimized daughter of the king and Mme de Montespan;[2] and for this service he was rewarded with the gift of the abbey of St. Just in Picardy. He was present with his pupil at the Battle of Steenkerque, and "faced fire," says Marshal Luxembourg, "like a grenadier." Sent to join the French embassy in London, he made himself so active that he was recalled by the request of the ambassador, who feared his intrigues. This, however, tended to raise his credit with the king. When the Duc D'Orléans became regent (1715) Dubois, who had for some years acted as his secretary, was made councillor of state, and the chief power passed gradually into his hands.[3]

Dubois' policy was steadily directed towards maintaining the peace of Utrecht, and this made him the main opponent of the schemes of Cardinal Alberoni for the aggrandizement of Spain. To counteract Alberoni's intrigues, he suggested an alliance with Britain and in the face of great difficulties succeeded in negotiating the Triple Alliance (1717). In 1719 he sent armies into Spain as part of the Quadruple Alliance which forced Philip V to dismiss Alberoni. Otherwise his policy remained that of peace. Dubois' success strengthened him against the bitter opposition of a large section of the court. Dubois was instrumental during the Cellamare Conspiracy of 1718.[4]

He prayed the regent to give him the archbishopric of Cambrai, the richest in France. This demand was supported by George I and the regent yielded. Dubois aimed for the Cardinal's hat because such an ecclesiastical title would give him the utmost prominence and precedence in the Conseil d'en haut, giving him the ability to remove his political adversaries with impunity. The regent was initially reluctant: though not himself a religious man, he could hardly regard Dubois as a suitable archbishop, at a time when the ambitious Claudine Guérin de Tencin was universally believed to be his mistress.[5]

In one day all the usual orders were conferred upon him, and even the great preacher Massillon consented to take part in the ceremonies. His next aim was the cardinalate, and, after long and most profitable negotiations on the part of Pope Clement XI, the red hat was given to him by Innocent XIII (1721), whose election was largely due to the bribes of Dubois. It is estimated that this cardinalate cost France about eight million francs. In the following year he was named first minister of France (August). He was soon after received at the Académie française; and he was named President of the Assembly of Clergy.

When Louis XV attained his majority in 1723 Dubois remained chief minister. He had accumulated an immense private fortune (though nothing compared to the avaricious acquisition of wealth of Concini, Richelieu, Mazarin, Fouquet, and Colbert) possessing in addition to his see the revenues of seven abbeys. He was, however, a prey to the most terrible pains of body and agony of mind. His health was ruined by his debaucheries, and a surgical operation became necessary. This was almost immediately followed by his death, at Versailles, on 10 August 1723.

Dubois' portrait was thus drawn by his long-time rival, the Duc de St Simon (who kept a painting of him in his lavatory),[6]

He was a little, pitiful, wizened, herringgutted man, in a flaxen wig, with a weasel's face, brightened by some intellect. All the vices - perfidy, avarice, debauchery, ambition, flattery - fought within him for the mastery. He was so consummate a liar that, when taken in the fact, he could brazenly deny it. Even his wit and knowledge of the world were spoiled, and his affected gaiety was touched with sadness, by the odour of falsehood which escaped through every pore of his body.

This famous picture is certainly biased. Dubois was unscrupulous, but so were his contemporaries, and whatever vices he had, he forged a European peace that, with the exception of small, restrained military expeditions against the Austrian Habsburgs, would last for a quarter of a century.

In 1789 appeared Vie privée du Cardinal Dubois, attributed to one of his secretaries, Mongez; and in 1815 his {{lang|fr|Mémoires secrets et correspondance inédite}}, edited by L de Sevelinges. See also A Chéruel, Saint-Simon et l'abbé Dubois; L Wiesener, Le Régent, l'abbé Dubois et les Anglais (1891); and memoirs of the time.

He is played by Jean Rochefort in the movie by Bertrand Tavernier, Que la fête commence...

References

1. ^Historical Memoirs of the Duc de Saint-Simon Edited by Lucy Norton Hamish Hamilton London 1968 Vol. 1 p. 13
2. ^Saint-Simon Vol.1 p.14
3. ^Saint-Simon Vol. 3 p.104
4. ^Saint-Simon Vol.3 pp.218 ff
5. ^Saint-Simon Vol.3 p.259
6. ^Saint-Simon Vol.2 pp.434-5
  • {{EB1911|wstitle=Dubois, Guillaume|volume=8|pages=623–624}}
{{FrenchChiefMinisters}}{{Foreign Ministers of France}}{{Académie française Seat 28}}{{Subject bar |portal1= Biography |portal2= Catholicism |portal3= France}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Dubois, Guillaume}}

13 : 1656 births|1723 deaths|People from Brive-la-Gaillarde|French cardinals|18th-century Roman Catholic bishops|Members of the Académie française|Members of the French Academy of Sciences|Archbishops of Cambrai|18th-century French people|17th-century French people|People of the Regency of Philippe d'Orléans|People of the Ancien Régime|French Foreign Ministers

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