1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Nicolay
NICOLAY, the name of a French family of Vivarais which came rapidly into legal prominence at the end of the 15th century. Jean Nicolay (d. 1527), son of a bailli of Bourg Saint-Andéol, became councillor at the parlement of Toulouse and afterwards at the Grand Council, chancellor of the kingdom of Naples, Maître des Requêtes, and, finally, first president of the Chambre des Comptes of Paris (1506). This last post was filled continuously up to the Revolution by his descendants. Antoine Chrétien de Nicolay (1712–1777) became marshal of France in 1775. His brother, Aymar Chrétien François Michel (1721–1769), bishop of Verdun, was first almoner of Marie Josephe of Saxony, wife of the dauphin Louis (d. 1765), and her influential counsellor.
See A. de Boislisle, Pièces justificatives pour servir à l’histoire des premiers présidents de la Chambre des Comptes (1873), and Histoire de la maison de Nicolay (1875).