Pierre (I) dâÂÂOrgemont ( â 23 June 1389) was a French politician of the Hundred Years' War era.
Born , he seems to have been the son of Jean dâÂÂOrgemont, a middle-class man from Lagny who owned buildings on rue Saint-Antoine in Paris, or the son of the Pierre dâÂÂOrgemont who appears in the wills of Louis X and Philippe le Long.
Pierre dâÂÂOrgemont studied law and began his career as a mere lawyer in 1340 in the Parlement de Paris where he was made master clerk in May 1347 then first president in 1355. He proved loyal to the French crown during John II of France's captivity in France after capture at the battle of Poitiers, notably during the revolt of the Estates General in 1357 led by ÃÂtienne Marcel. This gained d'Orgemont recognition from the dauphin, the future Charles V of France. On 20 November 1373 he became the only ever chancellor of France to be elected by a college of electors. This college had been summoned together by Charles V:
Such a procedure was never revived by Charles' successors.
At Christmas 1373, Pierre d'Orgemont was made a knight. He remained chancellor until his retirement in 1380, following the death of Charles, who made him executor of his willâÂÂhe then became maître des requêtes to the parlement de Paris. He also contributed to editing the Grandes Chroniques de France from 1350 to 1380. In 1384, he was made chancellor of the Dauphiné by Charles VI of France. On 26 May 1386, he bought the lordship of Chantilly from the last Bouteillier de Senlis. He soon began to build an impressive moated château, completed after his death by his son Amaury.