Marguerite de Valois
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For other women of the same name, see Marguerite de Valois (disambiguation)
Margaret of Valois [1] [2] (May 14, 1553 – May 27, 1615), "Queen Margot" (La reine Margot) was Queen of France and Navarre.
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[edit] Early life
Born Marguerite de Valois at the Royal Château in Saint-Germain-en-Laye and nicknamed Margot by her brothers, she was the daughter of Henri II and Catherine de Medicis. Three of her brothers became kings of France: François II, Charles IX and Henri III. Her sister, Elisabeth de Valois, became the third wife of King Philip II of Spain.
[edit] Arranged marriage
Although Marguerite loved Henri, Duc de Guise, her ambitious mother would never allow the House of Guise any chance of controlling France. Instead, she offered to marry Marguerite to Philip II's son Don Carlos but that did not work out. Serious negotiations for Marguerite's marriage to Dom Sebastian of Portugal were also considered but abandoned.
Marguerite was made to marry Henri de Bourbon (later Henri de Navarre and eventually Henri IV), the son of the Protestant Jeanne d'Albret, Queen of Navarre, a marriage that was designed to reunite family ties and create harmony between the Catholics and Huguenots. Although Henri's mother, Jeanne d'Albret, Queen of Navarre, opposed the marriage, many of her nobles supported it, and the marriage was arranged. Jeanne d'Albret died before the marriage was concluded.
On August 18, 1572, the 19 year old Marguerite married Henri de Bourbon, who had become King of Navarre on the death of his mother. The groom, a Huguenot, remained outside the church for much of the wedding. It was reported that during the ceremony, the bride and groom stared straight ahead, never looking at each other. When the Cardinal asked Marguerite if she willingly took Henri to be her husband, she did not answer; so King Charles IX placed a hand on his sister's head, compelling her to nod in agreement. Henri IV kept mistresses throughout their marriage, most notably Gabrielle d'Estrées from 1591 to 1599, who bore him three children.
Just six days after the wedding, on St Bartholomew's Day, a massacre of Huguenots (thought by many to have been orchestrated by Catherine de Medicis, though the record is unclear) was conducted by French Catholics, with such brutality that even Russia's Ivan the Terrible condemned it.
[edit] After the Massacre
After more than three years of confinement at court, Henri (who had saved his life by converting to Catholicism) escaped Paris in 1576, leaving his wife behind. Under the control of her brother, King Henri III, Queen Marguerite became a virtual prisoner in her own home. Finally granted permission to return to her husband in Navarre, for the next three and a half years Queen Marguerite and her husband lived a scandalous life in Pau. Both openly kept other lovers, and they quarrelled frequently.
[edit] Coup at Agen
After an illness in 1582, Queen Marguerite returned to her brother's court in France. But Henri III was soon scandalized by her reputation and forced her to leave the court. After long negotiations, she was allowed to return to her husband's court in Navarre, but she received an icy reception. Determined to overcome her difficulties, Queen Marguerite masterminded a coup d'état and seized power over Agen, one of her appenages.
After several months of fortifying the city, the citizens of Agen revolted and Queen Marguerite fled to the castle of Carlat. In 1586, she was imprisoned by her brother Henri III in the castle of Usson, in Auvergne, where she spent eighteen years. In 1592 negotiations began to dissolve her marriage to Henri IV. It would take seven years, but they were concluded in 1599 with an agreement that allowed her to maintain the title of queen. Her ex-husband would become one of France's most beloved monarchs.
During this time Queen Marguerite wrote her memoirs, which were published in 1658, years after her death. These writings consisted of a succession of stories relating to the reigns of brothers Charles IX, Henri III and her former husband, Henri IV that scandalized the population. The beautiful and strong-minded Marguerite was promiscuous throughout her life, and took many extra-marital lovers during her marriage, and many during her lifetime after divorcing. Most notably were Joseph Boniface de La Môle, Jacques de Harlay, Seigneur de Chanvallon and Bussy d'Amboise.
In the end, her beauty fading, Queen Marguerite lived in near poverty hounded by creditors to the point of selling all of her jewels. Reconciled to her former husband and his second wife, Marie de' Medici, Queen Marguerite returned to Paris and established herself as a mentor of the arts and benefactor of the poor. She often helped plan events at court and nurtured Henri IV and Marie's children. Marguerite died in Paris on May 27, 1615, and is buried in the Chapel of the Valois. Thousands mourned the death of this beloved Queen and the last of the Valois dynasty.
[edit] Marguerite de Valois in fiction
Alexandre Dumas's novel Queen Margot ("La Reine Margot" in French) is a fictionalized account of the events surrounding Marguerite's marriage to Henri of Navarre. The novel was famously adapted into a 1994 French film, La Reine Margot. The role of Marguerite was played by the popular French actress Isabelle Adjani. The main action of Shakespeare's early comedy Love's Labour's Lost (1594–5) is based on an attempt at reconciliation, made in 1578, between Marguerite and Henri.
Preceded by: Louise de Lorraine-Vaudémont |
Queen of France August 2, 1589– 1599 |
Succeeded by: Marie de' Medici |
[edit] External links
- Full text of Memoirs Of Marguerite de Valois from Project Gutenberg