Rene Francois Joseph De Warren
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Rene Francois Joseph de Warren (1879–1926) was the
self proclaimed Self-proclaimed describes a legal title that is recognized by the declaring person but not necessarily by any recognized legal authority. It can be the status of a noble title or the status of a nation. The term is used informally for anyone declari ...
Duke of Warren-Surrey.


Family and claim to title "Duke of Warren-Surrey"

Warren was eldest of three sons of Anselme Stanislas Firmin Léon de Warren (born 1851) and Marie Huyn de Vernéville, who also had four daughters. Anselme de Warren, an officer in the 2nd Hussars, was the second son; his elder brother, Lucien (born 1844), was heir to their father Edward's title of Comte de Warren, and was noted in 1902 (his father having died in 1898) to be "the present Comte de Warren". He married twice, and had several sons living at the time Rene de Warren claimed to be "Duke of Warren-Surrey"; they would have been senior to Rene in line for any titles, "Duke of Warren-Surrey", at any rate, not appearing in any published treatment of the family. Rene de Warren's great-grandfather was
Jean Baptiste François Joseph de Warren Jean Baptiste François Joseph de Warren or John Warren (21 September 1769 – 9 February 1830) was an army captain and later Lieutenant Colonel with Her Majesty's 33rd Regiment of Foot, East India Company in India, surveyor and amateur astronom ...
, a surveyor in India who rediscovered the Kolar Gold Fields.


Legal altercations

Despite having himself acknowledged that his right to the title was not firmly established (this acknowledgement notwithstanding the fact that the Warren family were recorded as Counts, there being no record of an elevation in status to Duke, and that Rene would have been preceded by several senior male cousins in inheritance of any title)- having, in March 1914, stated "I am about to vindicate myself" and observed that "when all is proved" he would be considered a very attractive matrimonial prospect- in April that year he sued the society reporter
Frederick Cunliffe-Owen Frederick Philip Lewis Cunliffe-Owen, CBE (30 January 1855 - 30 June 1926) was an English-born writer and newspaper columnist. Early life He was a son of exhibition organizer and museum director Sir Philip Cunliffe-Owen (1828–1894) and his ...
, who questioned his title, in a libel suit for $25,000.


References

{{reflist Defamation 1879 births 1926 deaths 19th-century English nobility 20th-century English nobility Hoaxers