Saintignon

(Learn how and when to remove this message)
Saintignon coat of arms

The Saintignon family is a surviving family of the French nobility, a Lotharingian noble family from Verdun, who rose to prominence and solidified their place in the royal courts under the Ancien Régime.

An extinct branch was titled Baron of the Holy Empire in 1746. He owned a regiment in his name in the Austrian army, the Saintignon-dragons, from 1759 to 1779.

During the Industrial Revolution, the family of Saintignon invested in steel factories in Lorraine (under the name De Saintignon and Co.).

History

According to tradition, Jehan Saincte came from the Verdun family of De la Porte, and is supposed to have defended Castle Viumbay successfully against Jacques de Revigny in 1293. Heavily injured, he cried out "d’Ugnon, d’Ugnon", and this cry became his name .[1] Ancherin Sainctignon (died before 1439), alderman of Verdun, married to Jeanne Pierxel, whose son also named Ancherin, esquire, alderman of Verdun, married to Jeanne de Chauldeney, in 1498. It is this date of 1498 that Regis Valette retains in his catalog of the French nobility in the twenty-first century, as the date of the nobility of the family of Saintignon. Claude-Martin Saugrain wrote in 1726, the Saintignons were the most respected family of Verdun due to their age and numerous charitable gifts.

Notable members

Santignon coat of arms, circa 1950
at castle Wolsfeld
Graf Joseph
von Saint-Ignon
(1720-1779)
AbottJoseph
de Saintignon
(1716-1795)
Fernand de Saintignon
(1846-1921)

Coat of arms

The Coat of arms of the House De Saintignon consist of 3 castle towers in a triangular formation. Many of the estates and chateau's that belong and/or belonged to the De Saintignon's bear some variation of the coat of arms (often altered based on region, owner preference, or socio-political trends of the time). The Lotharingian communes of Hartzviller, Puxe, Vandelainville and the Rhineland-Palatinate municipality of Wolsfeld still show parts of the coats of arms of their former masters, the Saintignon family, on their local coats of arms.

References to sources

  1. ^ L_de_M 1838, p. 435.
  2. ^ a b c öSA 2011, p. s.
  3. ^ Wurzbach 1874, p. 81.
  4. ^ Wurzbach 1874, p. 79-80.
  5. ^ Chatton 1897, p. 4.
  6. ^ Jérôme 1899.
  7. ^ Lespand 1938, p. 36.
  8. ^ Nival, Mathieu. "François de Saintignon". Geneanet.org. Mathieu Nival. Retrieved 13 November 2018.

Sources

Wikimedia Commons has media related to House de Saintignon.