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= The Count of Champlitte = The title Count of Champlitte was created by letters patent on September 5th 1574 by Philip II, King of Spain, for Francois de Vergy, son of Guillaume de Vergy the Seigneur de Champlitte, and his wife Marie de Bourgogne the granddaughter of Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy.

The Vergy family were a distinguished and ancient noble house in Franche-Comté and Burgundy who numbered among their ancestors both Robert 1st, King of France, and Rudolph 1st, King of Germany. They were the first historically attested owners of the Turin Shroud (1353) .Francois de Vergy had been a page of honour to the Emperor, Charles V, and was Lt General and Governor of the County of Burgundy. In 1584 he was made a Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece, one of the most prestigious orders in Europe, limited to 50 members and reserved for royalty and senior aristocrats only.

Most titles in use in France are courtesy titles, used by the descendants of the primary titleholder. The actual holder of a title will call himself ‘first name’, Count of Champlitte and other members of the family will use the style Count ‘first name’ of Champlitte. This can make the number of titles in use seem numerous but there is only one substantive titleholder at any one time, and for the Count of Champlitte these were:
 * 1) Francois de Vergy (1530-1591)
 * 2) Cleriadus de Vergy (d. 1630)
 * 3) Francois de Cusance (1590 – 1633)
 * 4) Cleriadus de Cusance (1619 – 1635)
 * 5) Marie Henriette de Cusance (1624 – 1701)
 * 6) Francois de Clermont d’Amboise (1632 – 1684)
 * 7) Jean Baptiste de Toulongeon (1677 – 1703)
 * 8) Jean Francois de Toulongeon (1702 – 1784)
 * 9) Jean René de Toulongeon (1739 – 1794)

Francois de Vergy had two sons, the elder of whom, Claude, died in 1588. His second son, Cleriadus, succeeded his father to the title. He was also Lt General and Governor of the County of Burgundy and in 1615 was made a Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece. He had no children and the title and estate was inherited by his nephew Claude Francois de Cusance, son of Beatrice de Vergy and Vaudelin-Simon de Cusance, the Baron of Belvoir and a Knight of the Golden Spur, later known as the Count of Champlitte.

Claude Francois de Cusance was a distinguished soldier and, as a Colonel of the Empire he commanded 3,000 Burgundians in the service of the King of Spain. He had two sons and four daughters. The eldest daughter, Beatrice, married Charles IV, the Duke of Lorraine, and their descendants include the Dukes of Rohan, Joyeuse and Montbazon. The second daughter, Madeleine, married the Count van den Berg, whose descendants through the Hohenzollern dynasty include the Emperor of Austria and the Kings of Bavaria, Belgium, Bohemia, Croatia, Hungary, Montenegro, Italy, Portugal, Romania, Spain and The Two Scillies. The third daughter was a nun who founded the convent at Gray, and the last daughter married the Duke of Arenburg and Aarschot, the Governor of Hainaut. The eldest son died in 1619 aged six, and so the title of the Count of Champlitte passed in 1633 to the second son, Cleriadus de Cusance.

Cleriadus died aged 16 in 1635 in what has been described as ‘mysterious circumstances’. The estate of Champlitte was briefly held by his sister, Marie Henriette, Countess of Champlitte and Duchess of Arenburg, but with no male heirs in this line of the de Cusance family the title went to Francois de Clermont d’Amboise. He was the grandson of Anne de Vergy, younger daughter of Francois de Vergy. His daughter Marie Francoise de Clermont d’Amboise married Jean Baptiste de Toulongeon, who became the seventh Count of Champlitte, followed by his son, Jean Francois and his son after him, Jean René who died in 1794 with no male heirs.

The Counts of Toulongeon were a distinguished noble house in Burgundy, with a long military tradition that continued with the revolutionary army, with three of them serving as Generals. A cousin, the Marquis de Toulongeon, was one of Napoleon’s key aide de camps. The Chateau de Champlitte, which had burnt down in 1751, was rebuilt by the family in the renaissance / neoclassical style and was one of the finest houses in the region. It passed to Count Anne-Alexander de Toulongeon upon the death of his brother Jean René, and upon his death in 1823 was sold to the town and used as the Marie. In 1907 it was classified as a historic monument and is in use today as a museum.

Ancien régime titles were abolished by Napoleon at the time of the Declaration of Rights in 1790, immediately after the first French Revolution. Titles were revived in 1805, abolished again in 1848, and then restored by Napoleon III in 1852. France became a republic in 1870, and no new titles have been created since that time, but they were not abolished – they are still recognised and regulated by the state.

Titles became simply a mark of nobility, with no rights or privileges. As they were no longer attached to land their use followed the original rules of transmission of nobility. Nobility can only be gained by birth, and titles pass to all descendants in the male line. The transmission of nobility is not lost by illegitimacy and ancien régime titles have been used by illegitimate lines.

The title Count of Champlitte fell into abeyance in 1790, when titles were first abolished by Napoleon, and has not been used since. Following their restoration, ancien régime titles have been claimed and used by subsequent generations who can show lineage to a direct male ancestor of noble birth. The Association de la Noblesse Française lists some 2300 families whose members would have been nobles under the rules of the Old Regime.

The only remaining male line of descent that could lay claim to the title and revive its use is through Ermenfroy de Cusance (1591-1623), younger son of Vaudelin-Simon de Cusance and Beatrice de Vergy. Some local histories report that Ermenfroy, the Baron of St-Julien and Seigneur of Cusance, had no children, but this is not correct. He had a son who was baptised at the church in Gonsan, Doubs, where the register records: ‘Pedrus, filius Rosae de Fullez donatus qui de St Julien et de Cusance etc, baptizatus 19th May 1619.’

Ermenfroy de Cusance was a Captain of Horse in the service of Spain in the Savoy and Flanders. He died in 1623, aged 32. The descendants of Ermenfroy, through Pierre de Cusance, left France for the New World and settled in Jamaica, originally a Spanish colony, subsequently taken by the British in 1655. They were successful planters who over five generations built up substantial sugar works in St Thomas in the East. Their descendants left Jamaica for England.

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