LOUISE DE LA VALLIERE

Louise De La Valliere was a woman of French nobility that is celebrated for her intimate relations with Louis XIV. She was born in Tours in August 6, 1644 and died in Paris, June 6, 1710. Her mother and father were of the French aristocracy. After the death of her father, a French nobleman and superior officer, her mother married the Baron de St. Remy, who was attached to the household of the Duchess of Orleans, a very prominent woman in French society. Because of this relation, Louise was introduced at court and appointed maid of honor to Henrietta of England, sister-in-law of Louis XIV. Because of her personal loveliness and fine character Louise soon won the heart of several distinguished men. However, Louise discouraged their devotion because she had fallen in love with the king. All who became aquatinted with the young Louise were impressed by her modesty, gentleness, and truthfulness, as well as with her personal charms and varied accomplishments; and the most eminent French writers, as Racine, La Fontaine, and Madame de Sevigne, bestowed the highest praises upon her virtues and graces. Her love for Louis XIV was as enthusiastic as it was disinterested. Deep down she knew that becoming the king’s mistress went against her conscience. But, after having for some time resisted his advances, she became his mistress in 1661. Louise was never comfortable with this arrangement and on several occasions felt impelled by conscientious scruples to desert her lover. When she left the king, she took refuge in a convent, but the king succeeded in bringing her back from that very convent two times. In 1674, however, she left him definitely, and took the veil in the Carmelite convent of the Faubourg St. Jacques under the name of Sister Louise. She received the visits of the queen, the Duchess of Orleans, and other warm admirers, and, engaged in works of piety and charity, spent the rest of her life in the seclusion of that convent. She bore four children to the king, two of whom were legitimatized, Mlle. de Blois, who married the Prince of Conti, and the Count of Vermandois. Louise wrote a book entitled “Reflections on the Mercy of God, by a Penitent Woman” in 1680. A collection of her letters was also published in 1767. Here life has been a very suggestive literary theme.

LOUISE DE LA VALLIERE

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Louise de la Valliere reincarnated as Sherrie Lea Laird

According to self past-life regression by Adrian Finkelstein, M.D., in August 1998, and the past-life regression done by him on Sherrie Lea Laird in May and November of 2005, to be confirmed unbeknwst to Kevin Ryerson, on June and July, 2006 by Ahtun-Re, an ancient and notoriously accurate Egyptian spirit, channeled by him, Sherrie Lea Laird, renown Canadian singer, is the reincarnation of Marilyn Monroe and Louise de la Valliere; also, it was established through the same above means, that Adrian Finkelstein, M.D. is the reincarnation of Antoine Daquin, the Principal Physician to King Louis XIV (1671-1693,) and physician to the King's first mistress, Louise de la Valliere (1667-1669.)

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Greetings! Reading your sites: I didn't get it. Did Daquin meet La Valliere in 1667, or in 1662? Thanks. " (IT WAS IN 1667. A.F.)Antoine Daquin was for 23 years [1671-1693], the Principal Physician to King Louis XIV, and for three years [1667-1669..." www.marilynmonroereincarnated.net "she was involved in a court intrigue, as she knew secrets of State, from Nicolas Fouquet, Minister of Finance, who fell in love with her. Eventually, a so-called plot to overthrow the King by Fouquet was foiled by Jean Baptist Colbert, the prime Minister. Apparently, it happened like when Marilyn Monroe was romantically involved with the President of the United States and allegedly knew from him secrets of State. The result, Louise was abandoned by the King. Louis XIV took then another mistress, Madam de Montespan that helped her former Mentor, by now past rival, Louise de la Valliere, in referring me to the King, as a very accomplished physician, upon the death of his old physician, Doctor Valot. That is the way I became the King’s Principal Physician, position which I held for 22 years, the longest of any of his physicians. However, Louise’s support for me stemmed from the fact to be further explained by Ahtun-Re. After the King rejected her, Louise fell into despair, and took the vow to be a nun. She was very much mentally disturbed by the court intrigue, in which she was innocent, and especially being abandoned by the King. In the Convent she remembered me, as I treated successfully her family. Thus, she called upon me to save her. And I did). Q: What was my relationship with Louise de la Valliere? A: She was very ill. She had hysteria, almost like schizophrenia. You devised there a unique pioneering breakthrough psychiatric treatment that you continue nowadays. As she got well, she was so impressed by you and this is when she arranged for you to become the main physician of the King. (It is interesting to note that about six and a half years prior to Ahtun-Re's confirmation, I regressed myself into multiple past lives under self-hypnosis, to discover some of my earthly soul-mates. A year later, I wrote and copyrighted an unpublished manuscript on soul-mates based on those regressions: A Search For Love Through Many Lives. COINCIDENCE? The regressions took place around the time Sherrie connected with me the first time, in 1998. Chapter 24 in that manuscript is titled: “Life in France as Male Healer.” Under self-hypnotic past life regression, I then learned I was a noble physician in year 1667. I was 47 at the time. As my focus was on soul-mates and not my professional, or political affiliations at the time, what I got was the soul-mate story. I was at a Convent, were I was attending to many of my patients. There I met Louise, a young (23 years old) and beautiful unhappy nun with brown light curls and deep blue eyes. She was very ill as already mentioned and at her request I healed her.)" www.marilyn-monroe.ca

est-ce que le marquis de

est-ce que le marquis de puyguilhem était proche de la duchesse de la vallière?

claire

?

Je pense que Marquis de Puyguilhem etait pas proche de la duchess de la Valliere , au contraire.