De Mercy

De Mercy is a French locational surname, derived from places called Mercy in France.[1]

Origins

The De Mercy family rose to increasing power during the Middle Ages in the region of what is now southern Belgium, Lorraine and Luxembourg. By the fifteenth century Jean de Mercy was lord of Clémarais (1422); in 1477, Roger de Mercy ("the Valiant") was appointed Captain and Provost of Longwy by René II, Duke of Lorraine.

The family progressively expanded their domain, incorporating parts of Aix-sur-Cloie, Battincourt and Piémont. A castle named Claimaraix is mentioned in a document dated 3 March 1612, as a possession of Anne de Landres, widow of Jean de Mercy. By the sixteenth century they owned substantial land near Esch, including the castle at Mittenthal and the important mill at Bergem.

People

gollark: I mean, you can harvest internet IP protocol addresses by getting people to click on a link or something, but they aren't very useful.
gollark: No, I mean in general trying to educate people in sanity and how people can sometimes lie about things.
gollark: Which is probably, while mostly futile, less so than trying to actually attack the people behind it.
gollark: I mean, except try and educate people regarding this stuff.
gollark: Probably very little!

References

  1. Dictionary of American Family Names. "Mercy Family History", Oxford University Press, 2013. Retrieved on 21 January 2016.
  • Mercy-Argenteau (comte de), François Joseph Charles Marie (1917). Memoirs of the Comte de Mercy Argenteau, Napoleon's chamberlain and his minister plenipotentiary to the king of Bavaria. G. P. Putnam's sons. p. 219.


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