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Catherine
DESHAYES
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Fortune teller, poisoner and an alleged
sorceress
Number of victims: Numerous
Date of murder: 1660's - 1679
Date of arrest:
March 12, 1679
Date of birth: c. 1640
Victim profile: Men, women and children
Method of murder: Poisoning
Location: Paris, France
Status:
Convicted
of witchcraft was burned in public on the Place de Grève in Paris
on February 22, 1680
Catherine Deshayes,
sometimes known as Catherine Monvoisin, or simply La
Voisin was a French serial killer. She was born around 1640,
and executed as a witch on 16 February 1680, in Paris; together
with several others. She played an important role in the so-called
Affair of the Poisons. She lived from charging high fees to make
horosocopes. She celebrated black masses, practiced abortions,
sold love potions and poisons. She is said to have sacrificed
infants.
Catherine Monvoisin,
or Montvoisin, née Deshayes, known as "La Voisin"
(c. 1640 – February 22, 1680), was a French fortune teller,
poisoner and an alleged sorceress, one of the chief personages in
the affaire des poisons, during the reign of Louis XIV.
Background
Catherine Deshayes was married to Antoine
Monvoisin, a jeweller with a shop at Pont-Marie in Paris. After
her husband was ruined, La Voisin started her career by practising
chiromancy and face-reading to support her family. She practiced
medicine, especially midwifery, and performed abortions.
As for her practice in fortune telling, she was
to say that she developed the talent God had given her. She was to
have been taught the art of fortune telling at the age of nine,
and after her husband became ruined, she decided to profit by it.
She studied the modern methods of physiology and reading the
client's future by reading their faces and hands. She also spend a
lot of money to provide an atmosphere which could make the clients
more inclined to believe in the prophecies. For example, she
acquired a special robe of crimson red velvet embroidered with
eagles in gold for a price of 1500 livres to perform in.
In 1665/66, her fortune telling was questioned
by the priests of Saint Vincent de Paul's order, the Congregation
of the Mission, but La Voisin defended herself successfully before
the professors at the Sorbonne.
Activity
During her work as a fortune teller, she
noticed the similarities between her customers wishes about their
future: almost all wanted to have some one fall in love with them,
that some one would die so that they might inherit, or that their
spouses would die, so that they might marry some one else.
Initially, she told her clients that their will would be true if
it was also the will of God. Then, she started to recommend to her
clients some action that would make their dreams come true. These
actions were initially to visit the church of some particular
saint; eventually, she started to sell amulets and recommend
magical practices of various kinds. The bones of toads, teeth of
moles, Spanish flies, iron filings, human blood and mummy,
or the dust of human remains, were among the alleged ingredients
of the love powders concocted by La Voisin.
Finally, she started to sell aphrodisiacs to
those who wished for people to fall in love with them, and poison
to those who wished for some one to die. Her knowledge of poisons
was not apparently so thorough as that of less well-known
sorcerers, or it would be difficult to account for Louise de La
Vallière's immunity. The art of poisoning had become a regular
science at the time, having been perfected, in part, by Giulia
Tofana, a professional female poisoner in Italy, only a few
decades before La Voisin.
She arranged black masses, where the clients
could pray to the Devil to make their wishes come true. During at
least some of these masses, a woman performed as an altar, upon
which a bowl was placed: a baby was held above the bowl, and the
blood from it was poured in to the bowl. She had a large network
of colleagues and assistants, among them Adam Lesage, who
performed allegedly magical tasks; the priests Étienne Guibourg
and abbé Mariotte, who officiated at the black masses; and
poisoners like Catherine Trianon.
La Voisin had many clients among the
aristocracy and made a fortune from her business. Among her noted
clients were countess de Soissons, duchess de Bouillon; Comtesse
de Gramont ("la belle Hamilton"), François-Henri de Montmorency,
duc de Luxembourg, princesse Marie Louise Charlotte de Tingry,
marchioness Benigne d'Alluye, countess Claude Marie du Roure,
count de Clermont-Lodéve, countess Jacqueline de Polignac, duchess
Antoinette de Vivonne, Marquis Louis de Cessac, Marquis Antoine de
Feuquieres and Marechal de la Ferthe.
La Voisin resided at Villeneuve-sur-Gravois,
where she received her clients. She tended to her clients all day,
and entertained at parties with violin music in her gardens at
night, attended by Parisian upper class society. The house also
included a furnace for the bodies of dead babies, who were then
buried in the garden. She regularly attended at the services at
the church of the Jansenist abbé de Sant-Amour, principal at the
Paris University, and godmother of her daughter was the noblewoman
de la Roche-Guyon. She supported a family of six, including her
mother, and among her lovers were the executioner Andre Guillaume,
Latour, vicomte de Cousserans, count de Labatie, the alchemist
Blessis, the architect Fauchet and the magician Adam Lesage. At
one point, Adam Lesage tried to induce her to kill her husband,
but she regretted the plan and aborted the process. La Voisin was
interested in science and alchemy and financed several private
projects and enterprises, some of them made by con artists who
tried to fool money out of her. Privately, she suffered from
alcoholism, was apparently abused by Latour, and engaged in severe
conflicts with her rival, poisoner Marie Bosse.
Connection to Madame de Montespan
The most important client of La Voisin Madame
de Montespan, official royal mistress to King Louis XIV of France.
Their contact were often performed through the companion of
Montespan, Claude de Vin des Œillets. In 1667, Montespan hired La
Voisin to arrange a black mass. This mass was celebrated in a
house in Rue de la Tannerie. Adam Lesage and abbé Mariotte
officiated, while Montespan prayed to win the love of the king.
The same year, Montespan became the official mistress of the king,
and after this, she employed La Voisin whenever a problem occurred
in her relationship with the king.
In 1673, when the king's interest in Montespan
seemed to deteriorate, Montespan again employed La Voisin, who
provided a series of black masses officiated by Etienne Guibourg.
On a least one occasion, Montespan herself acted as the human
altar during the mass. La Voisin also provided Montespan with
aphrodisiac, with which Montespan drugged the King. During the
king's affair with Soubise, Montespan used aphrodisiac provided by
Voisin's colleague Francoise Filastre and made by Louis Galet in
Normandy.
In 1677, Montespan made clear that if the king
should abandon her, she would have him killed. When the King
entered in to a relationship with Angélique de Fontanges in 1679,
Montespan called for La Voisin and asked her to have both the king
and Fontages killed. La Voisin hesitated, but was eventually
convinced to agree. At the house of her colleague, Catherine
Trianon, La Voisin constructed a plan to kill the king together
with the poisoners Trianon, Bertrand and Romani, the last being
also the fiancé of her daughter. Trianon was unwilling to
participate and tried to make her change her mind by constructing
an ill-fated fortune for her, but Voisin refused to change her
mind. The group decided to murder the king by poisoning a
petition, to be delivered to his own hands.
The 5 March 1679, La Voisin visited the royal
court in Saint-Germain to deliver the petition. At that day,
however, there were too many petitioners and the king did not take
them in his hands, which made her return without having delivered
it. Upon her return to her home in Paris, she was castigated by a
group of monks. She handed the petition to her daughter and asked
her to burn it, which she also did. The next day, she made plans
to visit Catherine Trianon after mass, to plan the next murder
attempt upon Louis XIV.
Investigation and execution
The death of the king's sister-in-law, the
Duchesse d'Orléans, had been falsely attributed to poison, and the
crimes of Madame de Brinvilliers (executed in 1676) and her
accomplices were still fresh in the public mind. In parallel, a
riot took place where people accused witches of abducting children
for the black masses, and priests reported that a growing number
of people were confessing to poisoning in their confessions.
In 1677, the fortune teller Magdelaine de La
Grange was arrested for poisoning, and claimed that she had
information about crimes of high importance. The arrest of the
successful fortune teller and poisoner Marie Bosse and Marie
Vigoreux in January 1679, made the police aware that there existed
a network of fortune tellers in Paris who dealt with the
distribution of poison.
The 12 March 1679, La Voisin was arrested
outside Notre-Dame de Bonne-Nouvelle after having heard mass, just
before her appointed meeting at Catherine Trianon. In April 1679,
a commission appointed to inquire into the subject and to
prosecute the offenders met for the first time. Its proceedings,
including some suppressed in the official records, are preserved
in the notes of one of the official court reporters, Gabriel
Nicolas de la Reynie.
At the arrest of La Voisin, her maid Margot
stated that the arrest would mean the end of a number of people of
all positions of society. The arrest of La Voisin was followed by
the arrest of her daughter Marguerite Monvoisin, Guibourg, Lesage,
Bertrand, Romain and the rest of her network of her associates. La
Voisin was imprisoned at Vincennes, were she was subjected to
questioning. On 27 December 1679, Louis XIV issued an order that
the whole network should be exterminated by all methods regardless
of the rank, gender or age of those involved.
La Voisin confessed to the crimes she was
accused of and described the development of her career. She was
never subjected to torture: a formal order was issued giving
permission to the use of torture, but it was made clear that the
order was not to be put in effect, and consequently it was never
made use of. The reason it suggested to be the fear that she might
give away the names of influential people if she was questioned
under torture. La Voisin never mentioned the names of any of her
clients during the interviews. She once mentioned to the guards,
that the question she feared most was that they should ask her
about her visits at the royal court. It is likely that she was
referring to Montespan as her client and her attempt of murdering
the king, and that she feared that such a confession should result
in her execution for regicide. Her list of clients, the arranging
of the black masses, her connection to Montespan and the murder
attempt on the king was not to be revealed until after her death,
when it was stated by her daughter and confirmed by the
uncontaminated testimonies of the other accused.
La Voisin was convicted of witchcraft and was
burned in public on the Place de Grève in Paris the 22 February
1680. In July, her daughter Marguerite Monvoisin revealed her
connection to Montespan, which was confirmed by the statements of
the other accused. This caused the monarch to eventually close the
investigation, seal the testimonies and place the remaining
accused outside of the public justice system by imprisoning them
under a lettre de cachet.
Wikipedia.org
Catherine Monvoisin,
known as “La Voisin” (d. 1680), French sorceress, whose maiden
name was Catherine Deshayes, was one of the chief personages in
the famous affairedes poisons, which disgraced the
reign of Louis XIV.
Her husband, Monvoisin, was an unsuccessful
jeweller, and she practised chiromancy and face-reading to
retrieve their fortunes. She gradually added the practice of
witchcraft, in which she had the help of a renegade priest,
Étienne Guibourg, whose part was the celebration of the “black
mass,” an abominable parody in which the host was compounded of
the blood of a little child mixed with horrible ingredients. She
practised medicine, especially midwifery, procured abortion and
provided love powders and poisons. Her chief accomplice was one of
her lovers, the magician Lesage, whose real name was Adam Cœuret.
The great ladies of Paris flocked to La Voisin, who accumulated
enormous wealth. Among her clients were Olympe Mancini, comtesse
de Soissons, who sought the death of the king's mistress, Louise
de la Vallière; Mme de Montespan, Mme de Gramont (la belle
Hamilton) and others. The bones of toads, the teeth of moles,
cantharides, iron filings, human blood and human dust were among
the ingredients of the love powders concocted by La Voisin. Her
knowledge of poisons was not apparently so thorough as that of
less well-known sorcerers, or it would be difficult to account for
La Vallière's immunity. The art of poisoning had become a regular
science. The death of Henrietta, duchess of Orleans, was
attributed, falsely it is true, to poison, and the crimes of Marie
Madeleine de Brinvilliers (executed in 1676) and her accomplices
were still fresh in the public mind.
In April 1679 a commission appointed to inquire
into the subject and to prosecute the offenders met for the first
time. Its proceedings, including some suppressed in the official
records, are preserved in the notes of one of the official
rapporteurs, Gabriel Nicolas de la Reynie. The revelation of
the treacherous intention of Mme de Montespan to poison Louis XIV.
and of other crimes, planned by personages who could not be
attacked without scandal which touched the throne, caused Louis
XIV. to close the chambre ardente, as the court was called,
on the 1st of October 1680. It was reopened on the 19th of May
1681 and sat until the 21st of July 1682. Many of the culprits
escaped through private influence. Among these were Marie Anne
Mancini, duchesse de Bouillon, who had sought to get rid of her
husband in order to marry the duke of Vendôme, though Louis XIV.
banished her to Nérac. Mme de Montespan was not openly disgraced,
because the preservation of Louis's own dignity was essential, and
some hundred prisoners, among them the infamous Guibourg and
Lesage, escaped the scaffold through the suppression of evidence
insisted on by Louis XIV. and Louvois. Some of these were
imprisoned in various fortresses, with instructions from Louvois
to the respective commandants to flog them if they sought to
impart what they knew. Some innocent persons were imprisoned for
life because they had knowledge of the facts.
La Voisin herself was executed at an early
stage of the proceedings, on the 20th of February 1680, after a
perfunctory application of torture. The authorities had every
reason to avoid further revelations. Thirty-five other prisoners
were executed; five were sent to the galleys and twenty-three were
banished. Their crimes had furnished one of the most extraordinary
trials known to history.
Encyclopaedia Britannica
The Affair of the Poisons
(L'affaire des poisons) was a major murder scandal in
France which took place in 1677–1682, during the reign of King
Louis XIV. During it, a number of prominent members of the
aristocracy were implicated and sentenced on charges of poisoning
and witchcraft. The scandal reached into the inner circle of the
King. It led to the execution of 36 people.
Context and origin
The origin of the case
began in 1675 after the trial of Madame de Brinvilliers, who had
conspired with her lover, army captain Godin de Sainte-Croix,
to poison her father Antonine Dreux d'Aubray in 1666 and two of
her brothers, Antoine d'Aubray and François d'Aubray, in 1670, in
order to inherit their estates. There were also rumors that she
had poisoned poor people during her visits in hospitals. She fled,
but was arrested in Liège. She was forced to confess, sentenced to
death and on 17 July was tortured with the water cure (forced to
drink sixteen pints of water), beheaded and burned at the stake.
Her accomplice Sainte-Croix had died of natural causes in 1672.
The sensational trial drew attention to a
number of other mysterious deaths, starting a number of rumours.
Prominent people, including Louis XIV, became alarmed that they
also might be poisoned. The King forced some of his servants to
become his food tasters.
Implications and investigation
The affair proper opened in February 1677 after the arrest of
Magdelaine de La Grange on charges of forgery and murder. La
Grange appealed to François Michel le Tellier, Marquis of Louvois,
claiming that she had information about other crimes of high
importance. Louvois reported to the King, who told Gabriel Nicolas
de la Reynie, who, among other things, was the chief of the Paris
police, to root out the poisoners. La Reynie sought to calm the
King. The subsequent investigation of potential poisoners was to
lead to accusations of witchcraft, murder and more.
Authorities rounded up a number of fortune
tellers and alchemists that were suspected of selling not only
divinations, séances and aphrodisiacs, but also "inheritance
powders" (a euphemism for poison). Some of them under torture
confessed and gave the authorities lists of their clients, who had
allegedly bought poison to either get rid of their spouses or
rivals in the royal court.
The most famous case was of the midwife
Catherine Deshayes Monvoisin or La Voisin, who was arrested
in 1679 after she was pointed out by the poisoner Marie Bosse. La
Voisin implicated a number of important individuals in the French
court. These included Olympia Mancini, the Comtesse de Soissons,
her sister Marie Anne Mancini Duchesse de Bouillon, François Henri
de Montmorency, Duke of Luxembourg and, most importantly, the
King's mistress, Athénaïs de Montespan.
Questioned while she was kept intoxicated, La
Voisin claimed that de Montespan had bought aphrodisiacs and
performed Black Masses with her in order to gain and keep the
King's favor over rival lovers. She had worked with a priest named
Étienne Guibourg. There was no evidence beyond her confessions,
but bad reputations followed these people afterwards. Eleanor
Herman, on page 113 in her book Sex With Kings, records
"Given" claimed the remains of 2,500 infants were found in La
Voisin's garden. But Anne Somerset disputes this in her book
The Affair of the Poisons and states there is no mention of
the garden being searched for human remains.
Also involved in the scandal was Eustache
Dauger de Cavoye, the eldest living scion of a prominent noble
family. De Cavoye was disinherited by his family when, in an act
of debauchery he chose to celebrate Good Friday with a Black Mass.
Upon his disinheritance, he opened a lucrative trade in
"inheritance powders" and aphrodisiacs. He mysteriously
disappeared after the abrupt ending to Louis' official
investigation in 1678. Because of this and his name, he was once
suspected of being the Man in the Iron Mask. However, this theory
has fallen out of favor because it is known that he was imprisoned
by his family in 1679 in the Prison Saint-Lazare.
The end of the trial
La Voisin was sentenced to death for witchcraft and poisoning, and
burned at the stake on 22 February 1680. Marshal
Montmorency-Bouteville was briefly jailed in 1680, but was later
released and became a captain of the guard. Minister Jean-Baptiste
Colbert helped to hush things up.
De La Reynie re-established the special court,
the Chambre Ardente ("burning court") to judge cases of
poisoning and witchcraft. It investigated a number of cases,
including many connected to nobles and courtiers in the King's
court. Over the years, the court sentenced 34 people to death for
poisoning or witchcraft. Two died under torture and several
courtiers were exiled. The court was abolished in 1682, because
the King could not risk publicity of such scandal. To this, Police
Chief Reynie said, "the enormity of their crimes proved their
safeguard."
Aftermath
Perhaps the
most important effect of the scandal and subsequent persecutions
was the expulsion from France of the Comtesse de Soissons. Her son
remained in France, only to find that his mother's high-profile
disgrace prevented him from realising his personal ambitions, as
he was effectively barred from pursuing a military career. He
would eventually leave France, nurturing a profound grudge against
Louis XIV, and enter the service of France's sworn enemies the
Habsburgs. Prince Eugene of Savoy, or Prinz Eugen, would, in time,
come to be known as one of the greatest generals of the age and
one of the factors behind the failure of Louis' bid for hegemony
in Europe.
Condemned in the Poison Affair
The Poison Affair implicated 442 suspects: 367 orders of arrests
were issued, of which 218 were carried out. Of the condemned, 36
were executed; five were sentenced to the galleys; and 23 to
exile. This excludes those who died in custody by torture or
suicide. Additionally, many accused were never brought to trial,
but placed outside of the justice system and imprisoned for life
by a lettre de cachet.
Of the people who were condemned to perpetual
imprisonment by lettre de cachet, six women were imprisoned at
Château de Villefranche; 18 men at Château de Salces; 12 women at
Belle-Île-en-Mer; ten men at Château de Besançon; 14 women at St
Andre de Salins; and five women at Fort de Bains.
Professionals
This
lists people involved in the Poison Affair by being professionally
involved in criminal activity. Their punishment is mentioned after
their name and role.
Roger, Siegneur de Bachimont, alchemist,
associate of Louis de Vanens; perpetual imprisonment by lettre
de cachet at St Andre de Salins.
Marie de Bachimont, alchemist, associate of
Louis de Vanens and spouse of Roger de Bachimont; perpetual
imprisonment by lettre de cachet at St Andre de Salins.
Mathurin Barenton, poisoner; executed in
September 1681.
La Belliére, fortune teller; perpetual
imprisonment by lettre de cachet
François Belot, associate of La Voisin;
executed in June 1679.
Martine Bergerot, fortune teller.
Betrand, poisoner, associate of La Voisin;
perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet at Château de Salces.
Denis Poculot, Sieur de Blessis, alchemist,
lover of La Voisin; condemned to the galleys.
Marie Bosse, fortune teller and poisoner;
burned at the stake 8 May 1679.
Marie Bouffet, abortionist, associate of
Marguerite Joly; hanged in December 1681.
Pierre Cadelan (d. September 1684), associate
of Vanens; perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet.
Jeanne Chanfrain, lover of Guibourg.
Magdelaine Chapelain (1658- June 1724),
fortune teller and associate of Filastre; perpetual imprisonment
by lettre de cachet at Belle-Île-en-Mer; the last condemned to
die (of those whose date of death is known).
Anne Cheron, fruit seller and provider of
objects for magic rituals; executed in June 1679.
Jacques Cotton, officiate at the black
masses, associate of La Voisin; executed by burning in 1680.
P. Dalmas, associate of La Chaboissiere; sent
to a workhouse.
Giles Davot, officiate at the black masses,
associate of La Voisin; executed in 1681.
Etienne Debray, associate of Deschault;
executed in September 1681.
Marguerite Delaporte, poisoner, associate of
La Voisin; perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet at
Belle-Île-en-Mer.
Jacques Deschault, shepherd and magician;
executed in 1681.
Louison Desloges, associate of Marguerite
Joly; hanged in December 1681.
La Dodée, poisoner, committed suicide in
prison.
Louise Duscoulcye, lover of Dalmas, poisoner
Françoise Filastre, poisoner; executed in
1680.
Louis Galet, poisoner; perpetual imprisonment
by lettre de cachet at Château de Besançon.
Mme Guesdon (1640 – August 1717), poisoner;
perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet.
Étienne Guibourg, officiate at the black
masses, associate of La Voisin; perpetual imprisonment by lettre
de cachet at Château de Besançon.
Marguerite Joly, fortune teller and poisoner;
executed by burning in December 1681.
Latour, stonemason and associate of la
Voisin; perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet at Château de
Salces.
Catherine Lepère, abortionist; executed in
June 1679.
Adam Lesage, magician and officiate at black
masses, associate of La Voisin; perpetual imprisonment by lettre
de cachet at Château de Besançon.
Catherine Leroy, associate of La Voisin and
la Chaboissiere; perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet at
Belle-Île-en-Mer.
Jeanne Leroux, associate of la Voisin;
executed in April 1680.
Margot, servant of la Voisin; perpetual
imprisonment by lettre de cachet at St Andre de Salins.
François Mariotte, abbe, associate of la
Voisin and Lesage; died in prison in 1682.
Anne Meline, posioner, associate of
Marguerite Joly; hanged in December 1681.
François Boucher, Vitomte de Montmayor,
astrologer of Luxembourg; perpetual imprisonment by lettre de
cachet at Château de Salces.
Marguerite Monvoisin, daughter of La Voisin;
perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet at Belle-Île-en-Mer.
Christophe Moreau, shepherd, magician and
poisoner; executed in September 1681.
Romani, poisoner, associate of La Voisin;
perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet at Château de
Besançon.
La Pelletière, fortune teller, provider of
children for Black Masses, associate of La Voisin; perpetual
imprisonment by lettre de cachet at Belle-Île-en-Mer.
Maitre Pierre, poisoner; perpetual
imprisonment by lettre de cachet.
Anne Poligny, poisoner; executed in July
1681.
La Poignard, participated in arranging Black
Masses; perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet.
La Poulain, associate of La Voisin; perpetual
imprisonment by lettre de cachet at Belle-Île-en-Mer.
Catherine Trianon, posioner, associate of La
Voisin; committed suicide in prison in early 1681.
La Salomond, poisoner; perpetual imprisonment
by lettre de cachet.
Denise Sandosme, poisoner; executed by
hanging in July 1681.
Louis de Vanens (d. December 1691),
alchemist; perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet at St
Andre de Salins.
Vautier, poisoner and associate of la Voisin;
perpetual imprisonment by lettre de cachet.
Marie Vigoreaux, associate of La Bosse; died
under torture in May 1679.
La Voisin, fortune teller and poisoner;
burned at the stake 22 February 1680
Clients
This lists
people involved in the Poison Affair by being clients of the
professionals above. Their punishment is mentioned after their
name and role.
Benigne, Marquise de Alluye, client of la
Voisin; left country to avoid trial and was later allowed to
return.
Pierre Bonnard, secretary of duc de
Luxembourg, client of Lesage; condemned to the galleys in May
1680.
Marie Brissart, client of La Voisin and
Lesage; fined and exiled.
Marie de Broglio, Marquise de Canilhac,
client of la Voisin; never bought to trial.
Anne Carada, client of Deschault and Debray;
executed 25 June 1681.
La Chaboissiere, Jean Bartholominat, valet of
Louis de Vanens; the last executed in the Affair of the Poisons
16 July 1682.
Louis de Guilhem de Castelnau, marguis de
Cessac, client of Lesage; left country to avoid trial. Returned
in 1691.
Mme Cottard, client of Lesage; admonished and
fined.
Mme Desmaretz, client of Lesage; fined.
Françoise de Dreux, client of La Voisin;
exiled from the capital, but the exile was never enforced.
Madeleine de la Ferte, Marechale (d. 1720),
client of la Voisin; discharged.
Antoine de Pas, Marquis de Feuquieres (d.
1711), client of la Voisin; never brought to trial.
Madame Ferry, client of La Voisin; executed
in May 1679.
Marguerite Leféron, client of La Voisin;
exiled from the capital and fined.
Mme Lescalopier, client of Poligny and
Sandosme; left country to avoid trial.
Jean Maillard, client of Moreau; executed in
February 1682.
Olympe Mancini, Comtesse de Soissons, client
of La Voisin; exiled.
Marie Anne Mancini, Duchesse de Bouillon,
client of La Voisin; banishment to the provinces.
François Henri de Montmorency-Bouteville, duc
de Luxembourg, client of La Voisin; freed.
Marquise de Montespan, client of La Voisin;
never trialed.
Madame Philbert, earlier Brunet (wife of
Philippe Rebille Philbert), client of La Voisin; executed by
hanging.
Jaqqueline du Roure, vicomtesse de Polignac
(d. 1720), client of la Voisin and Lesage; left country to avoid
trial. Returned 1686 but banished from the capital.
Marguerite de Poulaillon, client of Marie
Bosse; imprisoned in a convent.
Claude Marie du Roure, client of la Voisin
and Lesage; discharged in March 1680, but despite of this
banished from the capital.
Marie Louise Charlotte, Princesse de Tingry,
client of Voisin; discharged.
Marie Vertemart, client of la Voisin;
sentenced to a workhouse.
Antoinette, Duchess de Vivonne, client of La
Voisin and Filastre; never brought to trial.