Jean Grivel

Jean Grivel, lord of Perrigny (1560—1624) was a jurist from Franche-Comté (now in France), which was then part of the Spanish monarchy.

[2] He studied law at the University of Dole and married Jeanne Tricornet.

[3] He took part in resisting the 1595 French invasion of Franche-Comté, and his journal of the conflict was published in 1865.

He died in Brussels on 14 October 1624 and was buried in the Church of St Géry.

[1] He was survived by three sons: Claude, who followed in his footsteps as a judge; Albert, who became prior of St Désiré in Lons-le-Saunier; and Ferdinand, who served as a cavalry commander in the Eighty Years War.

Privy Councillors in the funeral cortege of Archduke Albert (1622); Grivel second from right