Jean-Jacques Lavigne

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His Lordship Jean-Jacques Lavigne
Jean-Jacques Lavigne, October 2011.
Society Name: Jean-Jacques Lavigne, Jehan Jacques or Jean Jacques
Title: His Lordship Lavigne
Born: circa 1496
Place of birth: Valenciennes, County Hainaut, Holy Roman Empire
SCA Residence: The Barony of Terra Pomaria (Salem, Oregon)
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SCA History

Jean-Jacques Lavigne

From childhood Jean-Jacques was always fascinated with medieval, and particularly renaissance, history. He first learned of the SCA from Rafe Neuton; His first event was a brief day trip to the Long and Short of It Tournament and first camping event was An Tir-West War 2001. After his first society camping experience he was very active in the society from 2001 through 2006, but tapered in participation from 2007 into 2011. He briefly returned in 2014 and 2016 before everyday life kept him busy elsewhere.

Jean-Jacques was twice a Protege to two different mistresses of the Pelican - first Mistress Astrid of Flanders for a period of time before he asked to be released so he could be the protege of Viscountess Nadezhda Volynskaiia after having served as her personal herald when she reigned as Princess of the Summits. A couple years after the oath was made, in July 2009 Nadezhda released Jean-Jacques and the rest of her proteges needing to clear her commitments.

Jean-Jacques had also tried twice to serve as a Courtier of the Baroness of Terra Pomaria first under the reign of Baroness Elspeth of Wyre Forest and secondly under Baroness Marianna ferch Orla. Why he did not complete the trials under Elspeth has slipped Jean-Jacques memories, but he was unable to complete the trials under Marianna due to a winter storm that made travel to the trials not doable.

Offices

Interests

  • Authenticity in presentation.
  • Chivalry and courtesy.
  • 16th Century Games and Pass times
  • 16th Century Encampments
  • 16th Century Gardening
  • 16th Century Dancing
  • 16th Century Music - playing the lute
  • 16th Century Costuming, both Henrican Tudor and Elizabethan.
  • 16th Century Class lifestyle
  • General 16th Century History

In Persona

His Lordship Jean-Jacques Lavigne presenting his encampment at the Riverfront Demonstration in his native Terra Pomaria, April 2011.
Jean-Jacques at Summits Fall Coronet 2007.

The protagonist of the name "Jean-Jacques" or "Jean-Jacques Lavigne" was born and baptized a Roman Catholic at Saint Nicolas-de-Valenciennes parish on circa 1496 to Robert Poutré, Lord Lavigne and Eva (Günther), the latter a widow of Guillaume Jacques who conceived and bore Jehan out of wedlock after the passing of her husband. Jean-Jacques was later legitimized by his father, so that he kept his surname at birth as well as adopting his father's surname Lavigne. Jean-Jacques also has one full younger sister, also illegitimate, Madeleine-Anne Lavigne, later also legitimized, born circa 1500.

Jean and Anne were raised by their courtesan mother in the slums of Valenciennes - their mother coming from a successful tailoring family originally from Mittelbrun, Rhine-Pfalz. Eva's father Anton was an only son who inherited his father's business dealings, but having a fondness for liquor, wasted away the family fortune. His wife, Mary, was the daughter of an English wheeler - Richard Abbott, and wife Agnes (nee Pearce), who Anton had met while merchanting in England. Eva grew up struggling so that she learned her way to survive as she could. After two childless failed marriages leaving her a widwo, the first to a soldier who never returned from war and the latter to a merchant who set out to peddle his wares and died in a shipwreck, Eva being of great beauty, caught the eye of Robert, Lord Lavigne. However, given Lord Lavigne's status in society he could not marry below his position so that he vowed to never taken a lady of equal rank's hand in marriage out of his never-dying love for Eva.

Jean-Jacques, thanks to dealings of his father, was provided a thorough monastic education at an early age where he learned to read and write and the art of diplomacy. From his education, Jean gained access working in the courts of England, France and the Holy Roman Empire as a cleric and herald, and was legitimized as Robert Poutré's son and legal heir. In his mid-life years he assisted his father in the running of his estate lands.

Jean-Jacques sister had several illegitimate sons, so it is believed there were two additional individuals of the same family named Jean-Jacques that lived through the late 15th, entire 16th and very early 17th Centuries. Through surviving documentation its difficult to ascertain relationships between the two, however, it is believed there were an uncle and nephew: one born circa 1496 to circa 1550 and the other born circa 1526 to circa 1610. Both were members of the gentry class family of Poutré that resided in and around Valenciennes in the County of Hainaut in Habsburg Southern Netherlands. All known members of this family named Jean-Jacques were politically-driven being the model of a Northern European Renaissance man practicing renaissance dance, passtimes, partaking in music playing of the time as they engaged in the courts of England, France and the Holy Roman Empire. Simply they were courtiers, diplomats and officers of the greatest courts in Europe at the time.