Marie-Charles-César de Faÿ, comte de la Tour-Maubourg was a French soldier and politician during the French Revolution and the First French Empire. His father was Claude Florimond de Faÿ ; his mother was Vacheron Bermont Marie Françoise.
De Faÿ returned to France in 1798 and became a member of the Corps législatif, after which he became a member of the Senate in 1804, under the First French Empire. In 1808 he became military governor of Cherbourg, which he helped to become a major port. He was excluded from the House of Peers from the Hundred Days until 1819. Concerned with the management of its inheritance, he took part in financing the industrial activities of Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours, scion of the American business family.
After the Restoration
In 1814, de Faÿ was named at the time of the Bourbon Restoration and preserved his position during the Hundred Days. He was Government commissioner for certain departments in the West of France. During the fall of Napoleon he was excluded from government until 1819. He was reinstated to the Senate, then made Knight of the Order of Saint Louis. Napoleon had made him commander of the Legion of Honor. César de Faÿ de La Tour-Maubourg married Henriette de Tenella Pinault, heir of a member of the Parliament of Douai. They had many descendants He died in 1831 in Paris.
Marie-Charles, comte de La Tour-Maubourg married Charlotte, daughter of Charles Pinault de Thénelles,. They had six children:
Just Pons Florimond marquis de La Tour-Maubourg; married Caroline de La Perron de Saint Martino on 11 October 1815;
Adèle ; married 19 September 1801 to François de Baigneux de Courcival;
Rodolphe, vicomte de La Tour-Maubourg, 1845 pair de France;
Marie-Stéphanie ; married in 1810 Antoine comte Andréossy ;
Eléonore ;
Armand-Charles, vicomte de La Tour-Maubourg, 1841 pair de France; married Octavie Daru.
Just Pons Florimond de Faÿ de la Tour Maubourg was Auditor with the Conseil d'État under the Empire and ambassador from France to Dresden, Constantinople and Rome. From March 1809 until 1811 he was Chargé d'Affaires to Constantinople but was recalled upon the peace between England and Turkey. He was made officer of the Legion of Honor in 1830. In 1831, at the consistory that elected Pope Gregory XVI, the marquis had the honour of informing the assembled cardinals that Louis-Philippe would waive his right of veto with assurance that only a wise and virtuous pontiff could be elected by such a wise and virtuous assembly. Rodolphe was an officer in the campaigns of the Empire, major general, officer of the Legion of Honor. Armand - Septime, bachelor of law, was Master of the Requests to the Council of State. Under the Monarchy of July, he was Ambassador in Naples and Spain, then Rome, where he succeeded his older brother. He was commander of the Legion of Honor. A portrait of his wife painted by Théodore Chassériau was recently acquired by the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
Grandchildren
Notable members of the following generation include César Florimond de la Tour Maubourg , son of Just Florimond and Caroline de La Perron de Saint Martino. A cavalry officer in 3rd Regiment of Chasseurs-à-Cheval. He was administrator of the Grand Central Railroad, :fr:Compagnie du chemin de fer du Grand Central appointed to Haute-Loire and, throughout the Second Empire, honorary chamberlain of Napoleon III and captain of the Imperial Hunt. In 1849 he married Anne Mortier of Trévise, granddaughter of marshal Mortier duke of Trévise and Lady of the Table of Empress Eugenie, who appears in the extreme righthand side of Winterhalter'sFranz Xaver Winterhalter famous painting. Some of her notebooks were published by General Thimble-Brissac in Review of the Napoleonean Memory. Their son was killed during the Franco-Prussian War, while their daughter died shortly after her marriage, without issue. They were left the Château de Frouard. After the death of her husband, the marchioness withdrew to her various residences at Maubourg, Paris, Cannes and Glareins. The last descendants of the Faÿ family de la Tour-Maubourg are buried in a mausoleum in the commune of Saint-Maurice-de-Lignon, built from the plans of Lyons architect Carra.