He was lord of Viarmes, Livry, Presles, Torigny, and (briefly) Tournan.
[2] In May 1293, he purchased the lordship of Tournan (seigneur de Tournan) from Jean II de Garlande; he ceded it in October of the same year to Charles, count of Valois.
[5] In 1302, he gave King Philip IV special hunting privileges in the forests of Livry.
[6] During the Franco-Flemish War, he led a contingent of 6 knights and 26 squires in the 1297 campaign and fought again in 1302 after the French defeat at Courtrai.
[2] While serving as grand chamberlain for Philip IV, he participated in the negotiations over the 1303 Treaty of Paris finally ending the 1294–1303 Gascon War[7] following the Battle of the Golden Spurs, allowing France to prosecute the rest of the Franco-Flemish War with greater success.