House of Sabran

Coat of Arms of the House of Sabran

The House of Sabran was an illustrious Provençal family whose bloodline was extinguished in 1847[1] in the person of Elzéar-Louis of Sabran, general, who was made a hereditary peer of France in 1815, comte-pair (count-peer) in 1817, and duc-pair (duke-peer) in 1825. Among its members are two Catholic saints, three bishops, and five generals.

Because his marriage with Victorine-Antoinette de Pontevès was childless, he named as his heirs the two nephews of his wife: Edouard and Léonide de Pontevès-Bargème, in whose favor a royal ordinance of 1828 and 1829 letters-patent authorised the transmission of the title of Duke of Sabran. Through an 1832 adoption, the name de Sabran has since been carried by the de Pontevès family.[1]

  1. ^ a b Henri Jougla de Morenas "Grand Armorial de France" tome 6, page 110-111.