Le Claire

Lorraine

LeClaire family of Lorraine

Lorraine is the medieval cradle of the LeClaire family. From the fourteenth to the seventeenth century the family is documented there as échevins, seigneurs, treasurers, gentlemen of the ducal household and, from 1464, hereditary nobles. See the canonical House of LeClaire entity page for the full authority hub.

Evidence: Published Genealogy

The Duchy of Lorraine as setting

The Duchy of Lorraine — a sovereign principality between France and the Empire — provided the civic and courtly institutions in which the family rose: municipal magistracies at Nancy and Pulligny, the Chamber of Accounts, the household of the Duke, and the seigneurial order of the Vôge and Vermois.

Key figures

Mengin (Moingins) Le Clerc (b. c. 1310); Jehan Leclerc de Pulligny (ennobled 1464); Claude Leclerc de Pulligny (c. 1485 – 1562); Claude II Leclerc de Pulligny (1532 – 1598); Jean Le Clerc, Knight of Saint Mark; Alexandre and Laurent Le Clerc de Pulligny.

Recorded spellings of the surname

The House of LeClaire is documented under seven spellings

Medieval and early-modern records of this family show a continuous thread of the same surname under a variety of orthographies. Every spelling below refers to the same documented lineage of the House of LeClaire.

Explore further