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Renaissance

Laurent Le Clerc de Pulligny

1595 – 1691

Pulligny / Nancy, Lorraine

Master Goldsmith · Tour de France (Paris, 1610; Lyon, 1630)

  • Wealth & dowry
  • Estate & seigneury

Younger son of Claude II Leclerc de Pulligny and brother of the painter Jean and the diplomat Alexandre — a master goldsmith of Paris and Lyon who rebuilt the family's prosperity through professional skill, and the most likely ancestor of the continuing branch of the House.

Laurent Le Clerc de Pulligny was born in 1595, a younger son of Claude II Leclerc de Pulligny and brother of the celebrated painter Jean Le Clerc and the diplomat Alexandre Le Clerc. Unlike his brothers, whose careers centred on Venice and the ducal court, Laurent became a master goldsmith and appears to have established the branch through which many later descendants continued.

Born shortly after the confiscation of family property following his father's conversion to Protestantism, Laurent grew up during one of the most difficult periods in the family's history. Contemporary accounts state that he was apprenticed to a goldsmith at around ten years of age and undertook the traditional Tour de France, working in Paris by 1610 and later in Lyon by 1630.

His life demonstrates the adaptability of the Le Clerc family. Whilst earlier generations had been seigneurs, financiers and officers of the Dukes of Lorraine, Laurent rebuilt status and prosperity through professional skill and craftsmanship. The Guy de Rambaud research specifically notes that many later artists and craftsmen descended from Laurent, suggesting that he became one of the principal surviving branches of the family.

He lived an exceptionally long life of almost a century, dying in 1691 — long enough to see the restoration of the family's hereditary nobility (1623) carried by his brothers Jean and Alexandre, and to see a new generation of craftsmen and artists of the Le Clerc name established in the great cities of France.

Biographical Record

Parents+

Son of Claude II Leclerc de Pulligny (1532–1598).

Children+

Ancestor of the continuing branch from which the eighteenth-century Leclaire line descends. Through an unrecorded son (c. 1630 – 1700), his grandson Nicolas Le Clerc (c. 1665 – after 1705) and great-grandson Pierre-Nicolas Le Clerc (1692–1762), the descent runs to Pierre Leclaire and ultimately to Louis Jean Baptiste Leclaire — direct ancestor of the modern House. Pierre-François Le Claire (c. 1690) is preserved as a parallel branch from the same Laurent stock.

Historical Profile+

Timeline: 1595 — Birth of Laurent Le Clerc de Pulligny. c.1605 — Apprenticed to a goldsmith. 1610 — Working in Paris. 1630 — Working in Lyon. 1691 — Death after an exceptionally long life spanning almost a century.

Laurent's career sits within the great age of French goldsmithing, when the workshops of Paris and Lyon produced the silverware, plate and devotional objects that defined the material culture of seventeenth-century France. To pass through both centres as a working master was the mark of a craftsman of the first rank.

Family Significance+

Where his elder brothers restored the family's nobility through service to Venice and to the Lorraine court, Laurent restored its prosperity through skill. The Guy de Rambaud research identifies him as the most likely ancestor of the continuing branch of the Le Clerc family — the strand from which many later artists and craftsmen, and ultimately the modern Le Claire and LeClaire descendants, trace their line.

Legacy+

Laurent's life illustrates the resilience of the House across the Reformation crisis: a noble family stripped of office and lands in one generation, and rebuilding its standing in the next through craftsmanship of the highest order. He may well be the single most important ancestor of the surviving Le Clerc line.

Sources & Evidence+
  • Guy de Rambaud — genealogical research on the Le Clerc de Pulligny and continuing craftsman branches.
  • Guild records, Paris and Lyon — masters' rolls of the early seventeenth century.

Story Mode

Their chapter in the dynasty

Laurent Le Clerc de Pulligny belongs to the Wars of Religion. Born around 1595 in Pulligny / Nancy, Lorraine, Master Goldsmith.

Timeline: 1595 — Birth of Laurent Le Clerc de Pulligny. c.1605 — Apprenticed to a goldsmith. 1610 — Working in Paris. 1630 — Working in Lyon. 1691 — Death after an exceptionally long life spanning almost a century.

Their children carried the name into the next generation.

In France, Henry IV ruled. Lorraine answered to Charles III the Great. Across the wider world, french wars of religion was reshaping events.

Laurent's life illustrates the resilience of the House across the Reformation crisis: a noble family stripped of office and lands in one generation, and rebuilding its standing in the next through craftsmanship of the highest order. He may well be the single most important ancestor of the surviving Le Clerc line.

The World They Lived In

Laurent's lifetime · 15951691

Who governed their world

  • King of FranceHenry IV
  • Duke of LorraineCharles III the Great
  • Holy Roman EmperorRudolf II

Contemporary figures

  • William ShakespearePlaywright · 15641616
  • Johannes KeplerAstronomer · 15711630
  • Pierre CorneilleDramatist · 16061684
  • Blaise PascalMathematician · 16231662
  • Antonie van LeeuwenhoekMicroscopist · 16321723
  • J. S. BachComposer · 16851750

Major events during their life

  1. French Wars of Religion1562–1598 · France
  2. Thirty Years' War1618–1648 · Germany

    Devastates the Holy Roman Empire and Lorraine.

  3. Restoration of arms — Le Clerc de Pulligny1623 · Lorraine

    Heraldic confirmation under Duke Henry II.

  4. French occupation of Lorraine begins1635 · Lorraine
  5. Peace of Westphalia1648 · Europe
  6. Revocation of the Edict of Nantes1685 · France

Dynasty Explorer

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Legacy Flow

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How Did I Get Here?

Path from Laurent to Brandon