Elizabeth Blount
First Mistress of Henry VIII

Elizabeth was born somewhere between 1498 and 1502 to Sir John Blount and Catherine Pershall of Kinlet, Bridgnorth. Not much is known of her childhood, except her reputation that she received from her beauty. Elizabeth nickname was Bessie

As a young girl, Elizabeth was welcomed to court as a lady-in-waiting to her majesty Queen Catherine. It was probably then that she caught the King's eye. In either 1514 0r 1515, Elizabeth became the King's mistress. Their relationship lasted for 8 years.


Mistress to the King of England


She lasted longer as the King's mistress then any other mistress. She was acknowledged as the Royal Mistress.

At the end of 1518, Elizabeth found herself with the King's child. This was the first time that a mistress of Henry had found herself with child. In June 1519, Elizabeth gave birth to a son named after his father: Henry.

Elizabeth had done what the Queen could not do; give the King a son.

Little Henry was given the surname of FitzRoy to signify that he was a Royal bastard. Later on he was made Duke of Richmond and Somerset and Earl of Nottingham. It was even suggested that the King was planning to make him is heir if the Queen did not give him a son.


After Henry's birth, the affair ended. It proved that the King was capable of fathering healthy sons. Elizabeth Blount prompted a popular saying, "Bless 'ee, Bessie Blount", often heard during and after this period.


The affair with Mary Boleyn began shortly afterwards. Elizabeth withdrew from court taking her infant son with her.



Later Life


In 1522 she was married to Gilbert Tailboys. She isn't recorded as a figure in the Tudor court after she left. With her husband she had three children: Elizabeth (1520 - 1563), George (1522 - 1539) and Robert (1523 - 1541).

In 1530, she was left a widow when her husband died leaving her very comfortable. Her son, Henry, died in July 1536 of tuberculosis.
After the death of her husband, Elizabeth Blount was wooed in 1532 by Lord Leonard Gray. However she  married Edward Fiennes, a younger man whose Lincolnshire lands adjoined hers.
Elizabeth's
funeral brass 
They were married between 1533 and 1535. This union produced three daughters: Bridget (1536 - ?), Katherine (1538 – 1621) and Margaret (1539 - 1603).
For a short time, she was a lady-in-waiting to Queen Anne (of Cleves), but left because she contracted some health problems at the time of the marriage's annulment. Blount returned to her husband's estates, where she died from consumption.

In conclusion, Bessie was the first woman to give the King a son and  possibly an heir to his throne. This woman helped prove that the King was capable of fathering healthy and living children. If things have had been different and her Henry hadn't died she could of possibly been the King's mother. But, the Royal family would be very different and English history would be altered.


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Joanna of Castile
Joanna la Loca


We all now about Catherine of Aragon who was loved by the English and was discovered by Henry VIII thus creating the Church of England. But what about her older sister Joanna.

Joanna is known to history as Joanna la Loca (Joanna the mad). Her story is a real tragedy and through my research of her I felt pity for her. She was mistreated just like her sister was hundreds of miles away. This is her sad story.

Warning! You may need tissues on standby!

Infanta of Spain

Joanna was born in Toledo, Castille (modern day Spain) on the 6th of November 1479 to Queen Isabella I of Castille and King Ferdinand II of Aragon. Both of her parents were rulers in their own right; Isabella ruled Castille with Ferdinand as her consort and Ferdinand ruled Aragon with Isabella as his consort.  

She was given a proper education due to any royal princess in Christendom at the time, tutored by the best: a dominican priest called Andrés de Miranda, a respectable educator by the name of Beatriz Galindo and her own mother. Her main studies that she did exceptionally well in were religious studies, court etiquette, dance &music and equestrian skills. Joanna spoke six languages: Castilian, Leonese, Galican-Portuguese, Catalan, French and Latin. Amazing. I can only speak English and French and she could six different languages.

Joanna was raised as a Infanta of Spain, but was never expected to inherit either of her parents' kingdoms. Her brother, John, was heir and then any children he. If John died without issue his sister, Isabella, would take his place and then her children. So there were a lot of people before she could ever ascend to the throne.

Marriage

In August 1496, at the age of sixteen, Joanna was sent to Flanders (modern day Belgium, France, Luxembourg and Germany and Holland) to marry Duke Philip of Burgundy. The marriage was to secure an alliance between the two families and strengthen themselves against the French.

When the two finally met on the 20th of October in Lier you could say it was love at first sight as Philip asked a priest to marry them there and then. No formal ceremony. Just a moment of complete passion. The truth wasn't that he fell instantly in love with her, it was that he wanted to take his bride to bed as soon as possible. Romantic? From my point of view yes for wanting to marry after first sight, but no because of motive of just wanting to have her in the marital bed.

The marriage was fruitful as Joanna gave birth to six children: Eleanor (1498 - 1558), Charles (1500 - 1558), Isabella (1501 - 1526), Ferdinand (1503 - 1564), Mary (1504 - 1558) and Catherine (1507 - 1578).

Like most Dukes of the time Philip would be classed now as a "jerk" as he slept with other women. He tried to usurp her birth rights from her. It was said that Joanna slowly became insane therefore being known as Joanna la Loca. She even cut the hair off Philip's mistress.

By the time of Queen Isabella's death in 1504, the couple lived apart.

Princess of Asturias

On the 4th of October 1497 John died. John's wife, margeret (Philip's sister), gave birth to a stillborn daughter on December the 8th. Their sister Isabella died on August the 22nd of 1498. Isabella's only child, Miguel, died on the 19th of July 1500. This made Joanna sole heir to the kingdoms of Castile and Aragon.

She was named as Princess of Asturias in 1502. The lords of the land swore a oath to Joanna as the heir and future Queen. She travelled to Cortes in Castile with Phillip and the Burgundy court. Soon Philip left leaving a pregnant Joanna alone. She gave birth to a son, Ferdinand, in Madrid the following year.

Reign as Queen Joanna of Castile

In November 1504, Queen Isabella leaving her 25 year old daughter Queen of her realm.

Ferdinand lost any rights he had as the King, but was given the right to govern in Joanna's abscene or if she refused to rule and to rule until Charles came of age or if she was not able to rule. Ferdinand wanted to have the throne even if it meant stabbing his own daughter in the back. Her husband much better. He wanted the throne for himself and push his wife away. Boo. Hiss. They are a real pair of pantomime baddies. 


Ferdinand persuaded the cortes that Joanna's "illness is such that the said Queen Doña Joanna our Lady cannot govern".  Ferdinand was appointed as Joanna's guardian. Philip was having no of this. He wanted to be King. He had coins made with "Philip and Joanna, King and Queen of Castile, Leon and Archdukes of Austria". It seemed to be war between these two rulers.

But soon Ferdinand was out of the picture. He married Germaine de Foix, the neice of Louis XII of France. He hoped that she would produce a son and heir for Aragon.

In 1505, Joanna and Philip left Flanders for Castile. Their ships were caught in a storm which were wrecked on the shores of England. What luck. The country which her younger sister was in. They became the guests of the Tudors and stayed at Windsor Castle.


By the time they got to Castile there was civil war in which Ferdinand was trying to take power. His invasion was crushed. Joanna met her father in June 1506 at Villafáfila where Ferdinand handed over the rights of government and retired to Aragon. Ferdinand and Philip met in secret to dethrone Joanna by claiming her to be mad thus unable to rule. 

Ferdinand after his secret meeting with his son-in-law tried to put his actions right by securing her rights as Regent Queen. No agreement was agreed by the two and Ferdinand fled back to his own realm of Aragon.

Philip's Death

The Cortes swore allegiance to Joanna and Philip as Queen and King & Charles as their heir. 

On the 25th September 1506 Philip died of typhoid fever in Burgos, Castile. Joanna was pregant at the time with Catherine. 

By December, she was trying to exercise her power to rule alone, but the country started to fall into ciaos. Her six year old son, Charles, was raised by his aunt in Flanders, while her father stayed in Aragon watching his daughter's realm to fall to pieces. What a nice father.

Plague and famine spread across Castile killing half of the population. It was like an apocalypse. Two of the horsemen of the apocalypse were present: famine and death.

Ferdinand's Rule

When Ferdinand came back to Castile in July 1507, the plague went. This gave the impression that he was the kingdom saviour as he had driven the plague out.

Ferdinand was named regent in 1510. Joanna was sent to a Santa Clara a convent in Tordesillas on the basis that she was mad. Apparently she took Philip's dead body and sleep beside him. A little bit creepy.

Ferdinand ruled until his death in 1516. The crown of Castile, Leon and Aragon were passed to Joanna and Charles with Ferdinand's bastard son Alonso de Aragon acting as regent on behalf of Charles.

Charles' Rule

In 1517, Charles with his sister Eleanor met their mother at Tordesillas where he secured the right to rule as co-King. Even though she agreed, he still kept her in confinement at the convent. The Cortes didn't like Charles very much and called him Su Alteza (your highnes) and reserved majestad (majesty) for Joanna. 

Charles rule of Aragon and Castile plus its territories unified the country creating Spain in 1519. He then became Holy Roman Emperor the same year. He made Spain the most powerful country in the world by building on the achievements and wealth of his grandparents: Isabella and Ferdinand.


Revolt of the Comuneros

In 1520, the Revolt of the Comuneros broke as a response to Charles' rule. The rebels demanded that Castile be governed like in the days of the Reyes Católicos and the Comuneros turned to Joanna. 

Joanna had given written approval to the rebellion, it would have been legalized and would have triumphed. In an attempt to prevent this, a group of royal councilors went to Tordesillas, asking Joanna to sign a document denouncing the Comuneros. Before she could sign the Comuneros stormed the city and requested her support. 

Although she was sympathetic to the Comuneros, she was persuaded by Ochoa de Landa and her confessor Fray John of Avila that if she supported the revolt it would damage the country and her son's kingship. She refused to sign the document granting her support to the Comuneros. At the Battle of Villalar Charles crushed the revolt.

Confinement

Charles was unhappy with his mother after she given her support to the rebels that he had her imprisioned in the convent. Remind you of another Queen. Yes, it reminds me of Eleanor of Aquitaine who was imprisoned.

Joanna health got worst. She did go a bit mad. She was convinced that the nuns wanted to kill her. It became difficult for her to eat, sleep, bathe and clothe herself.

Charles wrote to the convent:  "It seems to me that the best and most suitable thing for you to do is to make sure that no person speaks with Her Majesty, for no good could come from it"



Her youngest daughter Catherine, stayed with her from 1507 - 1516. Eleanor then created a household within the convent to be near her mother.

Joanna died on the 12th April 155 at the age of 75 at the convent. She had survived her mother, father, her husband, six siblings, her brother-in-law Henry VIII and her daughter Isabella. She is entombed in the Royal Chapel of Granada (la Capilla Real) in Spain alongside her parents Isabella I and Ferdinand II, her husband Philip I and her nephew Miguel da Paz, Prince of Asturias. A statue of her stands in Tordesillas and the convent in which she was confined for fifty years can be visited.



Now here comes to a important question. Was Joanna mad? I think at the beginning no. She was just madly in love with her husband. But after everything: betrayed by her husband, father and even her own son she went into a deep depression. Anyone would of gone mad if they were imprisoned in a convent for 35 years.

Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joanna_of_Castile



Mary Boleyn
“The Other Boleyn Girl”

I guess that a lot of you have the 2008 adaptation of Phillipa Gregory’s The Other Boleyn Girl starring Scarlett Johansson, Natalie Portman and Eric Bana: a tale of two divided by their love for a king, which shool Europe and changed the course of England forever.


We all know about Anne Boleyn. A woman whose marriage changed England forever. But what about her sister, Mary Boleyn.

Mary was born in Norfolk. A part of the country where its green, peaceful and by the coast. Well, its the county that I am living in. She was born at Blickling Hall in either 1499 or 1500 as the eldest child to Thomas Boleyn and Elizabeth Howard.

Mary grew up with her younger siblings at the family's home (Hever Castle) in Kent. They spent most of their childhood abroad as Thomas was the English ambassador in Europe from 1512. Mary and Anne would of been taught the art of court life along with languages. 

In 1514, Mary went over to France as part of Princess Mary's (King Henry's younger sister) wedding party. 

Mary returned to England in 1519. She had a wanton reputation as it was rumoured she was King Francis' mistress for a period of them. Francis called her "his English mare" and "una grandissima ribalda, infame sopra tutte" ("a great slag, infamous above all"). Despite all of this, her father got her a place as one of Queen Catherine's ladies-in-waiting. 

After her return the family married her to William Carey, a gentleman of the privy chamber of the king, on February 4th 1520. It is known that she became the King's mistress in 1521.
"The great Prostitute"
Wait one moment. What? She was the king's mistress? No. That has to be wrong. He married her sister. You can't sleep with one sister and marry the other. I'm pretty sure it's a sin after his Catherine had consummated her marriage with Arthur he was up to his eyes in sin. But he is the King after all. Better let him do what he wants or he might chop off our heads. That's what he did to Anne. But I'm getting ahead of myself.

In France, the maitresse en titre was a recognised public figure, wielding influence and patronage, but the affair was never made public and Mary didn't enjoy her wealth like so many women before her did. She was just a fling. A toy for the King to play with. To release his sexual desires with. And she knew it. She was just a pawn.

Her first child fathered by the King was a girl christened Catherine was born in 1524 and was followed by a son named Henry in 1526. At this time the King grew tired of Mary and moved his eyes to Mary's younger sister, Anne who had returned home from the house of Queen Claude of France. 

Anne had returned to England at the end of 1521, for her marriage to one of her Irish cousins, but it had fallen through and her own unauthorised romance with Henry Percy had been blighted by Cardinal Wolsey, so that by the time the King's eye started to wander she was still unspoken for.



Anne was as ambitious as her father, and more strong-willed and intelligent than her sister, but not so good-looking, Anne had no intention of becoming another royal mistress. 


Carey died from a outbreak of sweating sickness in the summer of 1528. After her husband's death Mary remained at court throughout Anne's determined, skilful, six-year-long campaign for power. Mary played the supportive sisterly role, and perhaps drawing on her own experience to give advice on how best to please the king, without allowing him to proceed to the 'ultimate conjunction'.
There was occasional references to Mary in Henry's private letters to Anne, and in November 1530 Anne was within sight of her goal. 

Henry wanted a divorce from Catherine, but it was against the Catholic church. In 1527, while attempting to obtain a papal annulment for his marriage, Henry also requested a dispensation to marry Anne, as he had sleet her sister. What a betrayal. He really wasn't a nice man towards women. To quote Brittany Spears he was "nothing but a womaniser". Sorry, I know cheesy.

In 1531, the family achieved it's goal. Absolute power. The king finally separated from Catherine, and in October 1532, he won the battle for his divorce and Henry broke England away from the power of Rome. He and Anne paid a state visit to France. Mary was among the 30 ladies who accompanied them.

Mary watched her pregnant sister marry, be crowned Queen and give birth. Poor Mary. You have to feel sorry for her. Her father was created Earl of Wiltshire, brother George was Viscount Rochford - but there was nothing for Mary and, surprisingly, no attempt was made to find her another husband.

She took matter into her own hands in 1434 when she married William Stafford who was a man of low birth. She married for love in secret. Once her family discovered her marriage she was cut off completely and banished from court.  She admitted that she might have chosen 'a greater man of birth and a higher', but never one that would love her so most, or a more honest man. And she went on, 'I had rather beg my bread with him than to be the greatest queen in Christendom. And I believe verily ... he would not forsake me to be a king.' 

OMG! How could her family do that to her? She forsake her soul to become the King's mistress, committed adultery, and gave the Boleyn power in England.    

She was banished to Rochford in Essex where she lived with William. This was good as when the accusations were made against Anne and George, she was able to escape their fate: beheading. During this time, there is no record of her visiting any member of her family. 


After Anne’s execution, their mother retired from the royal court, dying in seclusion in 1538. Her father, died in 1539. Following the deaths of her parents, Mary became the sole heir to the Boleyn inheritance. She lived out the rest of her days in obscurity and relative comfort with her second husband. 



Mary had two children with William: Anne Stafford (date of birth and death are unknown) and Edward Stafford (1535–1545). 


Her children were to prosper in the reign of their cousin, Elizabeth I, who showed special favour towards her mother's kin. Catherine Carey married Sir Francis Knollys, a distinguished pillar of the Elizabethan establishment, and became one of the queen's closest friends. Henry Carey was raised to the peerage as Baron Hunsdon and followed a military career, playing a leading part in suppressing the Northern Rising of 1569, and was rewarded with a personal note of thanks from his sovereign lady, signed 'Your loving kinswoman, Elizabeth R'. 


The Boleyn/Carey/Tudor connection continued on to the end of the century. Catherine's daughter Lettice married Robert Dudley and after their marriage was thrown into the tower. It was Mary's grandson, Robert Carey, who was with the queen at Richmond Palace in March 1603 when she died and recorded a moving account of her last illness and death. It was Robert, too, who rode from Richmond to Edinburgh, accomplishing the journey in a record three days, to tell James of Scotland that he was king of England at last.


Mary died on the 19th July 1543.

In conclusion, Mary had a life full of drama: mistresses to two king's, a main player in rise of Anne Boleyn as Queen, saw the change in England, married for love, banished from court, witnessed the death of her younger siblings and then the death of her parents. Her life should really be one of those reality shows that are on the telly. Watch out The Only Way is Essex and Made in Chelsea. 

To history she is known as The Other Boleyn Girl, but I don't believe that. I think she has her own story. She is not merely The Other Boleyn Girl.

I do recommend that if you haven't to read Phillipa Gregory's The Other Boleyn Girl. I couldn't put it down.

Her is the trailer to The Other Boleyn Girl. Enjoy!


 



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Catherine de' Medici 
“The truth is, not one of is innocent. We all have sins to confess.” 
-  The Confessions of Catherine de Medici by C.W. Gortner

I have done posts about the Borgias, so I thought that it only be fitting that I do a post on this lady. Catherine was a Florence born girl from the Medici family who were rivals of the Borgias.

Catherine was born in Florence, Italy in April 1519. Her family at the time were rich, wealthy and powerful bankers in Florence. Her died within a month of her birth, so they was raised by her grandmother and then her aunt. During her life two males in her family became Pope of Rome: Pope Leo X and Clement VII. The citizens of Florence named her duchessina (the little duchess). 

In 1527, her family was overthrown by the Florence people due to Pope Clement's rule. Catherine was put into several convents and forced to work for the nuns. In October 1529, Charles V troops laid siege to Florence. As the siege dragged on, the people wanted Catherine to be killed and exposed naked and chained to the city walls. It was even suggested that she be handed over to the troops to be used for their sexual gratification. The city finally surrendered on 12 August 1530. Clement summoned Catherine from her beloved convent to join him in Rome where he greeted her with open arms and tears in his eyes. Then he set about the business of finding her a husband.

On her arrival in Rome, the Venetian envoy described Catherine as "small of stature, and thin, and without delicate features, but having the protruding eyes peculiar to the Medici family". She had suitors, including James V of Scotland who sent an envoy in his place, queuing out the door for her hand. Well she was the niece to the Pope of Roman Catholic Church. 

But, finally, in 1533 Clement arranged for his niece to wed the Duke of Orleans, Henri Valois (Francis I of France's son). This was a great match as she was wealthy but came from "commoner origins". 

The couple were married in October 1533 at Marseille, France. It was a grand affair with dancing and jousting. It was for a nice day for a white wedding. Sorry, I had to use that in this post. The newly-weds left the celebrations at midnight to... you know. Francis is said to have stand witness to make sure the marriage was consummated. He reported that "each had shown valour in the joust". Clement visited them the next morning in bed and gave his blessing.

Catherine saw little of her husband in the first year of marriage. He rarely came to their bed. She was well treated by her the ladies of the court who were impressed with her intelligence and keenness to please.

In 1536, Henry's older brother died of fever, pushing him and Catherine next in line to the throne. They were now the Dauphin and Dauphine of France.

In the first 10 years, Catherine didn't conceive. Henry took a mistress, openly. In 1537, one of his mistresses gave him a daughter who he acknowledged as his. Was this prove that she was barren? France needed them to have a child.

Her ability to conceive did not improve the marriage. Henry took his old governess, Diane de Poitiers, as his mistress in 1538. Diane was 20 years Henry's senior and had more influential over Henry than his wife. It was also her responsibility to raise any royal children. 

According to the court chronicler Brantôme, "many people advised the king and the Dauphin to repudiate her, since it was necessary to continue the line of France". A divorce was a option for the royal family. In desperation, Catherine tried every trick in the book for getting pregnant, such as placing cow dung and ground stags' antlers on her "source of life", and drinking mule's urine. Disgusting, I know but on 19 January 1544, she gave birth to a son, Francis.

After that she had no trouble getting pregnant again. In April 1545, she gave birth to a daughter named Elizabeth. She gave birth to 8 more children during the course of her marriage: Claude, Duchess of Lorraine, Louis of Valois, Charles IX of France, Henry III of France, Margaret, Queen of France, Francis, Duke of Anjou, Louis of Valois, Joan of Valois and Victoria of Valois. 

In 1547 King Francis died. Catherine became Queen Consort of France. She was crowned in the basilica of Saint-Denis on 10th June 1549. As Queen she was given no power but to produce heirs for the dynasty. She acted as regent during his absences from France.

Henry adored his mistress over Catherine and the imperial ambassador reported that in the presence of guests, Henry would sit on Diane's lap and play the guitar, chat about politics, or fondle her breasts.Catherine as a threat to Diane. She even encouraged the king to sleep with Catherine and father more children. 

In September 1551, Henry was born. He was his mother's favourite; she called him chers yeux ("Precious Eyes") and lavished fondness and affection upon him for most of his life. His elder brother, Charles, grew to detest him, resenting Henry's greater health and activity.

In 1556, Catherine nearly died giving birth to twin daughters: Joan and Victoria. Surgeons saved her life by breaking the legs of Joan, who died in the womb.Victoria died seven weeks later. Pyhscians advised that there be no more children in fear for the Queen's life, so the King stopped visiting her bed. 

At the age of five and a half, Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland, was brought to the French court, where she was betrothed to Francis. Catherine brought her up with her own children at the French court, while Mary of Guise governed Scotland as her daughter's regent.

On 3–4 April 1559, Henry signed the Peace of Cateau-Cambrésis with the Holy Roman Empire and England, ending a long period of Italian wars. The treaty was sealed by the betrothal of Catherine's thirteen-year-old daughter Elisabeth to Philip II of Spain. Their proxy wedding in Paris on 22nd June 1559 was celebrated with festivities, balls, masques, and five days of jousting.

King Henry took part in the jousting, sporting Diane's black-and-white colours. He defeated the dukes of Guise and Nemours, but de Montgomery knocked him half out of the saddle. Henry, like most men, insisted on riding against Montgomery again, and this time, Montgomery's lance shattered into the king's face. Painful. There was blood everywhere, with splinters "of a good bigness" sticking out of his eye and head.

Catherine, Diane, and Prince Francis all fainted. Henry was carried to the Château de Tournelles, where five splinters of wood were removed, but one had pierced his eye and brain. Catherine stayed by his bedside, Diane kept away, "for fear of being expelled by the Queen". 

For the next ten days, Henry's state fluctuated. At times he even felt well enough to dictate letters and listen to music. Slowly he lost his sight, speech, and reason, and on 10th July 1559 he died. From that day, Catherine took a broken lance as her emblem, inscribed with the words "lacrymae hinc, hinc dolor" ("from this come my tears and my pain"), and wore black mourning in memory of Henry.

The Huguenot (protestants) leaders saw the opportunity to take over the French court, but instead were arrested and beheaded. 57 men were killed. That's a lot of heads. The Tudor would be proud. 

The next year, Francis died leaving his 9 year old brother as King Charles IX. Catherine was made regent as her son was too young to rule. During the '60s, there was conflict between the two religions. The Navarre and the Guise conflict grew worse when Gaspard de Coligny ordered the assassination of the Duke of Guise in 1563.

Catherine's youngest daughter, Marguerite, was said to have been in a sexual relationship with Henry Guise. When Catherine found this out, she had her daughter brought from her bed. Catherine and the king then beat her, ripping her nightclothes and pulling out handfuls of her hair.


Catherine pressed Jeanne d'Albret (her late husband's cousin to attend court) writing that she wanted to see Jeanne's children, promising she would not to harm them. Jeanne replied: "Pardon me if, reading that, I want to laugh, because you want to relieve me of a fear that I've never had. I've never thought that, as they say, you eat little children". When Jeanne did come to court, Catherine pressured her hard,playing on Jeanne's hopes for her beloved son for an alliance. Jeanne finally agreed to the marriage between her son and Margaret, so long as Henry could remain a Huguenot. When Jeanne arrived in Paris to buy clothes for the wedding, she was taken ill and died, aged forty-four. Huguenot writers later accused Catherine of murdering her with poisoned gloves.The wedding took place on 18th August 1572 at Notre-Dame, Paris.

Three days after the wedding, de Coligny was almost killed but survived. Catherine was blamed along with Guises for this attack. Whatever the truth, the bloodbath that followed was soon beyond the control of Catherine or any other leader.

The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre began two days later, became a stain Catherine's reputation. On 23rd August Charles IX ordered, "Then kill them all! Kill them all!". This seems wrong to us today as they were their guests in Paris.


At two in the morning, Catholic troops moved to kill the injured Coligny and other Huguenot leaders. Eventually all sense of order broke down; looting and fighting broke out across Paris, and over two thousand men, women, and children wound up dead. 


The slaughter lasted for almost a week spreading through many parts of France, where it persisted into the autumn. "St Bartholomew was not a day, but a season". On 29th September, when Navarre knelt before the altar as a Roman Catholic, having converted to avoid being killed, Catherine turned to the ambassadors and laughed. She know seems quite evil. From that moment she was a known as the evil Italian Queen. Huguenot writers branded Catherine a scheming Italian, who used the Borgias' methods to kill.

In 1574, Charles died leaving Henry as King. But Henry was King of Poland, so Catherine was made regent until he came to France. He depended on Catherine and her team of secretaries until the last few weeks of her life. He often hid from state affairs, immersing himself in acts of piety, such as pilgrimages and flagellation. 




Henry III was crowned in 1575 and married, but he had no children to assume the throne. Catherine urged Henry to settle his differences with the Guise family for the sake of France and Catholic security.

Catherine remained politically active until the end of her life, touring France on Henry's behalf and trying to maintain the loyalty of its many war-torn territories. She also built up a huge collection of books and paintings, and she built or enlarged some of Paris's finest buildings. In 1589 she became ill while dancing at the marriage of one of her granddaughters. 

She died on January 5th, living just long enough to hear that Henry's bodyguards had murdered Guise, which she saw as a rejection by her son of all that she had worked for. Later that year, Henry III was assassinated. In another twist, it was the Huguenot prince Henry of Navarre who took over the throne; he was unable to sit upon it until he adopted the Catholic faith in 1593 with the famous remark, "Paris is worth a Mass."

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