Blanche de Rosemai, ill. Manon Iessel
                  Nouvelle Bibliothèque de Suzette, 1955
                  
                  Active 
                  1916-1948
                   Armie, 
                  Mlle Marie Tassin, born in Cherbourg, rue des Bastions 9, is 
                  the daughter of Henri Charles Armand (b. Alger 1853-d. Paris 
                  1921) Saint-Cyrien, Commandeur Légion Honneur Général 
                  commandant 9th Brigade Infanterie (1921), and Henriette Lucie 
                  Hélène de Cabrol de Mouté (b.1858-d.1938). 
                  They married in Jouy-en-Josas (Yvelines) on the 3rd of January 
                  1887. 
                  Her eldest brother, André Philippe Charles Alfred, was 
                  born in Lille in October 1887. In 1911, aged 24, he was clerc 
                  de notaire (i.e. assistant to a solicitor) in Bar-Le-Duc. 
                  
                  As early as 1921 he became known as Baron Tassin de Friedenau. 
                  
                  On her father's side, Mlle Tassin belongs to a Protestant family 
                  of high ranking civil servants and army officers. Her paternal 
                  grandfather, Charles-Aimé graduated in Law from the University 
                  of Paris, in 1857, defending a thesis in Latin (Jus Romanum) 
                  and French (Droit Français) on Roman and French Law. 
                  He went on to become Directeur général des 
                  affaires civiles et financières, in Algeria, the 
                  second most important person in the Country. Armie's uncle was 
                  Géneral Charles Millet (1843-1914), who married Isabelle, 
                  Armand's younger sister. Millet had a marginal role in the Dreyfus 
                  affair when, in 1897, in his capacity as Director of Infantry 
                  he had a meeting with Major Esterhazy (Dreyfus' accuser) of 
                  whom he wrote:
                  
                  «du coté de la conduite régulière 
                  en apparence que tenait, il s'abandonnait secrètement 
                  à toutes les violences que lui dictaient des passions 
                  aussi effrénées que coupables»
                  
                  proposing to bring proceedings against Esterhazy for indiscipline 
                  and general dishonourable debauched behavior.
                  The family had its roots in Orléans and is divided into 
                  numerous branches. Since the beginning of times a Tassin has 
                  always been in the service of a King in one capacity or another. 
                  One Tassin de Breuil was the taylor of Jean le Bon (best remembered 
                  as the king who was vanquished at the Battle of Poitiers and 
                  taken captive to England). 
                  Through her mother, Armie was well connected to the landed gentry 
                  and the business aristocracy of the Second Empire. Henriette's 
                  father was Alfred Joseph Baron de Cabrol de Mouté Chevalier 
                  de la Légion d'Honneur, Attaché à l'Ambassade 
                  de France London (1854); Attaché au cabinet du Ministre 
                  des Affaires Etrangères (1857); Mayor de Jouy-en-Josas 
                  (1868-May 1879). In 1880 he bought the Domaine de Vilvert at 
                  Jouy on which he built what became known as Le Château 
                  de Vilvert. The domaine remained the property of the Cabrols 
                  until 1949. 
                  Armie's maternal grandmother, Louise Mallet was, on one side 
                  the grandaughter of Christophe Philippe Oberkampf, inventor 
                  and manufacturers of printed cotton (la toile de Jouy), on the 
                  other, the grandaughter of Guillaume Mallet of the Banque Mallet 
                  (founded 1713) who in 1800 became Regent of La Banque de France.
                  Armie's parents lived in Amiéns, Caen (1905), Bar-le-Duc 
                  (1911) and then in Rouen (1911 onwards). They employed three 
                  live-in servants: a cook, a lady's maid and a footman. They 
                  holidayed in San Sebastian where Armie learned castillan. 
                  General Tassin was put in the Reserve in 1915 and died in 1921 
                  in Neuilly s/Seine following a routine operation. Mme Tassin 
                  died in Rouen on the 21st of June 1938 and was buried in Paris 
                  cimetière Montparnasse. The funeral service took place 
                  in the protestant Temple Saint-Eloi. As it is the custom in 
                  France she was known as la Générale Tassin after 
                  her husband military grade.
                  
                  The Tassins were royalistes and légitimistes, 
                  partisans of the Bourbons as legitime kings of France (as opposed 
                  to the Orléans). Par manque of a French king in 
                  residence they had taken up the cause of the legistimist pretenders 
                  to the throne of France, the Spanish Bourbons, who during part 
                  of Armie lifetime were embodied in the person of Alphonse XIII, 
                  king of Spain. 
                  Her fascination with the King started when just seventeen, as 
                  plain Marie Tassin she was a runner-up in a competition of piropos 
                  (compliments) for the newlywed Alphonse and Ena de Battenberg 
                  in May 1906, organized by Je sais tout which were presented 
                  bound in volume to the couple.
                  In the following years, Armie in her own right, her mother and 
                  her brother contributed to the many charity activities of the 
                  Spanish royal family.
                  ABC reported in 1914 Marie Tassin's donation of one peseta for 
                  Pedagogium the foundation for poor Spanish children patronized 
                  by the Infanta Doña Paz; in 1927 the Tassins donations 
                  for the funding of the University of Madrid, patronized by Queen 
                  Victoria wife of Alphonse "Mlle. Marie Tassin de Tassin, 
                  300 francos; madame la genérale Tassin , cien francos; 
                  M. le barón de Tassin de Fudonau (sic), 200 francos".
                  
                  By the Twenties Armie had become the acknowledged agiographer 
                  of King Alphonse XIII and the Spanish royal family whom she 
                  met numerous times.
                  Around this time, Marie acquired, maybe for services to the 
                  Spanish royal family, the appellative de Tassin, whilst her 
                  brother became baron de Friedenau.
                  Since 1905 Armie had been going to Paris to pay her respects 
                  to Alphonse at the Gare du Nord every time he left or arrived 
                  in Paris. 
                  On one occasion, while waiting for the king, Armie was mistaken 
                  for an anarchist, arrested and jailed. As ever faithful, she 
                  was there, on the 21 of March 1931 "Pero aquí 
                  está la señorita Maria Luisa Tassin erguida y 
                  protocolaria y como ensimismada, como ausente, creyendo a caso 
                  vivir una página de los Chuanes o de la Vendée" 
                  reported ABC. Three weeks later the King fled Spain at the advent 
                  of the Second Spanish Republic.
                  Alphonse XIII went to live in Rome and then in Paris where Armie 
                  became part of his court in exile. On the death of the incumbent, 
                  Alfonso Carlos de Bourbon, Duke of San Jaime in 1936, he was 
                  acknowledged by the French "légitimistes" 
                  as King of France and Navarre.
                  
                  After the death of Alphonse in 1941 Tassin continued to support 
                  the royal cause through his heir, Don Jaime de Bourbón, 
                  Duke of Segovia and Anjou. She was still part of his followers 
                  in Paris as late as 1955. 
                  In 1957, nearly seventy, M.lle de Tassin became president of 
                  the short lived Association Générale des Légitimistes 
                  de France. After much bickering the Association dissolved: 
                  for some legitimistes, Don Jaime was not a winning card: he 
                  was deaf-mute therefore unsuitalbe to some of the responsabilities 
                  of a chef d'état, secondly he was divorced and 
                  remarried in a civil ceremony to a commoner, a singer.
                  Tassin never married. She lived the life of a rentière 
                  on the income of her mother's fortune and the occasional 
                  inheritance from her wealthy family.
                  Beside writing she was, like her grandmother Mallet, very active 
                  in charity work.
                  Philippe Montillet quotes her in his book Les Princes ainés 
                  de la Maison de Bourbon 1883-1941. She died in Paris XIII, 
                  in November 1958, having spent her entire life in the pursuit 
                  of the impossible dream of restoring the French Monarchy. 
                
                Author 
                  of:
                  Un descendant de Louis XIV, Sa Majesté le Roi Alphonse 
                  XIII, Rouen, imp. Gabriel Dervois, 1926
                  Reina María Cristina, madre de un gran rey by 
                  Marie Tassin de Tassin (Armie), 1935 
                  Deux grandes figures d'exilés: Alphonse XIII et le 
                  Cardinal Ségura, Librairie du Régionalisme, 
                  Rouen, Maugard, 1939
                  and poetry: 
                  Treize Chansons d'une Autre Age, Airs et Paroles d'Armie, 
                  Lecerf, Rouen, 1928
                  Poèmes de guerre, 1914-15-16, Dervois, Rouen, 
                  1916