Episode 304: The Grand Tour - podcast episode cover

Episode 304: The Grand Tour

Jun 14, 202431 minSeason 1Ep. 304
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Catherine d'Medici and Charles IX take a grand tour of France while religious turmoils continue to simmer. 

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Hello, and welcome to Western Sieve episode three hundred and four, The Grand Progress. Despite the peace of Ambois, neither side in the French Civil War was completely disarmed. Catherine chose to continue on as though a universal peace had been declared. However, and as though the days of religious strife were in the rear view mirror, they weren't. Even mere days after Ambois, the

Princess de Conde was attacked in her carriage. Conde himself was infuriated and believed that it had all been the work of the Geese faction, but for the moment Catherine managed to calm him down. Her goal was to simply out entertain the rival factions. She would put on so many magnificent balls and masks, with so many beautiful young women, that she would exhaust them all with frivolity. Before long, Catherine reasoned, these feudal lords Huguenot and Catholic would just

forget what all the fuss had been about in the first place. These lavish entertainments quickly made Catherine's court notorious throughout Europe for its brilliance. Yet throughout it all Catherine remained dressed in all black, still technically in mourning for her dead husband. She would have been very conspicuous in a court of so much color, and that was probably the point. Anyway. Catherine might not have had the physical looks of all the other women she kept around herself at court,

but she wasn't without charm. Indeed, in the months after Ambois, even her critics forgot what they had been so angry about. Notwithstanding her efforts, Catherine's days still seemed to be spent answering complaints from both sides of the First War of Religion, each accusing each other of not observing the peace of Ambois. To every complaint, she applied herself with calm determination to settle the disputes

tactfully and above all, expediently. She was so exacerbated by the continual protest from Colonnier that she finally wrote to him stating that if the Protestants continued to agitate and break the law, she would retaliate quote without respect to persons, religion, or any other consideration, but the peace of this state end quote. Catherine was the arbitrator, but she was also indomitable in her task.

The desire for vengeance, the inevitable fruit of civil war seemed endemic. Contract murders were commonplace and acquired the nickname quote vengeance in the Italian manner, and finally recognizing that drastic measures were required, the Queen Mother took a course of audacious political bravery. She decided she would have the thirteen year old king declared to be of age. Technically, as laid down in the past by Charles the Fifth, the legal age of majority for a king in France was fourteen.

Catherine decided her son was close enough. She knew full well that a king was respected more than a regent, and doubtless hoped that this would cow the remaining difficult personalities at court into some form of submission. Catherine would, of course continue to rule, however, the change would be purely cosmetic. So it was that, on the seventeenth of August fifteen sixty three, Charles was declared the King of France. Parliament argued against the designation, but Catherine

was insistent. In a document that she drafted for her son at this time, Catherine set out the four points that she believed essential to successful rule. The king must provide leadership and be accessible and central to all that happened at court. The key to harmony and to maintaining a grip on affairs was quote, to restore the proper function of court end quote. It must be the central attraction of French life and revolve around the king. She stressed the importance

of a regular routine that ought to be kept by her majesty. Within this, priority must be given to public affairs, and the expectation of the nobles had to be fulfilled. Catherine also stressed her determination that the corruption of court officials had to be stamped out. Business had to be dealt with promptly and efficiently. Officials often let urgent affairs untended for weeks or months, adding to

the impression that the king was a instant and uncaring figure. She insisted that Charles be personally available to all the people who came to present their grievances, writing quote, take care to speak to them whenever they present themselves in your chamber. I saw this done in the day of your grandfather and your father, and when they had finished speaking about their business, they were encouraged to converse about their families and their personal matters end quote. She also advised the

king to keep a close hand on all questions of patronage. If he had a firm grasp of affairs relating to available offices, vacancies, and everything within his gift, he would control not only the court but also the provinces, stamp out corruption against the crown, and win the people's loyalty at the same time. Here she cited the story of Louis the Twelfth, who had carried

a list of vacant offices on him everywhere he went. Francis the first paid key provincial figures to keep him abreast of vacancies and developments, down to the very last detail. The provincial garrisons, whose importance Francis consistently dress, were not just for local defense, but also provided a useful quote chivalric center for local magnates. Dispensing the spirit a fair the desire to make trouble. She told Charles that the care of the merchants and the bourgeoisie was now of more

importance than ever before. This political testament doesn't address many important elements required for a successful ruler. It's not a Machiavelian text, and there's no advice, for example, on finance or military matters at all. But it's believed that the original document had two parts, and only one of these remains, so we can't be certain. But if you think about the magnificence of Court and how she stresses the importance of patronage, you can see that we're just a

hop, skip and a jump from Louis the fourteenth. Catherine had now effectively tied the piece of Ambois to the king's coming of age. This riled the ultra Catholic faction led by the Geese family, who now made a very dramatic into court dressed in all black. They demanded that the Duke's murderer be brought to justice immediately, which of course would only have reignited the ongoing civil war. In January fifteen sixty four, the King announced, however, that there

would be no immediate judgment. Instead, the matter would simply be held over for three years. Clearly the true author of this sage pronouncement was Catherine. Its purpose was obvious punt the issue in the hopes that things simply calmed down in the interim, but in reality little changed. Throughout January and February fifteen sixty four, there were multiple attempts on the lives of the leaders of the various factions and Catherine's life, though for the moment there was no further bloodshed.

Unfortunately for Catherine, Charles really did not look the part of a majestic king. It was frail in an emic, but she did the best with what she had, and luckily for her, Charles at least low hunting a fond pastime of any masculine noble male, so she had that to build upon. Like his late brother Francis the Second, Charles seemed to lose himself in the frenzy of the hunt. Although he was weak and his health was often

poor, he would push himself as hard as he could. Everyone noticed that he had difficulty catching his breath, and as the years passed, he grew weaker with each debilitating crisis, slowly becoming maddened in both body and mind. As time progressed, his rages became so violent the courtiers genuinely feared for their lives. Eventually, attacks of complete dementia would seize the king. But even now, at thirteen years of age, an essentially kind and generous hearted boy,

he often found himself prey to occasional, ungovernable outbursts of anger. Charles delighted in the chase, but showed an abnormal and morbid interest in the kill. On occasion he even eviscerated his prey with his own hands. Now, Charles was, to his credit, a very talented artist, as well as evidently novice butcher. He also spoke Latin, Greek, and of course his mothers flew into Italian. Charles was close to his family, though he had

a rivalry with his younger brother Eduard Alexandre. Note throughout history, Edard Alexandre is referred to typically as Ari, Duke of Anjou. I'm going to do the same. Auri was less obsessed with the hunt than his brother, but quite masculine by standards of the day. Charles's sister Margaret, enjoyed the best health of anyone in the family, though her mother certainly liked her the least. The youngest child, by the way, is still around Hercules. He

was clearly the proverbial runt of the litter. He was hideously deformed, and his legs were twisted such that he was only a little taller than the court dwarf. For those fans of Game of Thrones, he may well have been the inspiration for Tyrian Leanister. Ironically, Catherine had a fascination with dwarfs, so there were plenty of them around to compare her son to. It had always been Catherine's dream to take her family on a grand tour of the realm,

a grand progress. Now with her son officially king, she decided this was the moment the whole court, in all its majesty, would go on a visitation. Maybe, she hoped seeing the new king and his court would well the religious unrest that seemed to threaten to terror the kingdom apart even still, but the visitation had another purpose. She intended to personally meet with Philip the Second at the Spanish border in the hopes of cementing a permanent alliance.

Catherine placed the Constable in overall charge of the Royal Progress, which left Paris for Fontainebleau on the twenty fourth of January fifteen sixty four. They were not set to return until May fifteen sixty six, nearly two and a half years later. Several thousand members of the court and their servants made up the Great Royal Progress. Among the essential members of the party were the King's Council. In order that the government business could be conducted as they moved and of course

all the foreign ambassadors. Catherine hoped that the latter would report back to their various masters describing the splendor of the train, thereby refuting the widely held view

that France was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. The royal household traveled with their usual attendants, ladies and gentlemen, including a flying squadron of girls, tutors, priests, five doctors, five kitchen officers, five samollers, cooks, musicians, porters, grooms, beaters for the hunt, and nine, of course, essential dwarfs, who of course had their own miniature coaches. The number of horses and mules required to transport both people and luggage, particularly

the gold studded trunks of the royal family, was phenomenal. With them, the party carried everything from furniture and cooking utensils to clothes and costumes for all the festivals, feasts and masks that had been planned. Portable triumphal arches which could be easily erected when needed, were also stowed and elaborate royal barges for when the royal pageant took to the water, it was quite literally a city

on the move. Catherine brought with her such diverse items as silk sheets, silver washbinds, gold plate for banquets, a writing table registers papers, money, hats, and her loot, and lyar in bad ways. Whether or when the nit arose, she chose to travel either in horse drawn litter or in a cumbersome coach drawn by six horses, so that she could conduct state

business in transit. The seats were lined with green velvet and cushions, and the children would often sit with her in this coach, so spacious that it resembled a small room. Unfortunately, these vast vehicles induced attacks of travel sickness that were anything but majestic. So when weather and work permitted, the Queen Mother, who had six of her finest horses with her, would ride along

with the rest of the nobles. Whenever possible, the royal family would travel by barge, travel by water being simply the easiest way to get around in this age. For protection, of course, there were four companies of soldiers, a company of light horse, and a unit of the French Guard, whose commander was Filippio Stratzi, a second cousin to the Queen Mother. As the progression began, it was joined by the Cardinal of Lorraine. Freshly returned

from the finally resolved Council of Trent. He brought with him the Tridentine Decrees, the rulings of the Council, which today comprise what historians have dubbed the counter Reformation. The initial goal of Trent had been to forced all the Reformation. To that end, the decrees were just a tad too late, you

might say. Catherine was determined to oppose the decrees. They would have largely removed the French Crown's ability to manage the French Church, and all those hard won rights, hard won over centuries would revert instantly back to the papacy. Catherine deeply resented the papacy's attempts to enforce their rule over matters that were, in her opinion, strictly reserved to the Crown. Her attitude hardened further when Jean de Albert, Queen of Navarre, received to summons from Rome on a

charge of heresy. Infuriated that Pope Pius the Fourth dared to threaten a sovereign and moreover won with actual land and property in France, Catherine replied that he had no license to rule over foreign princes, nor to dispose them of their properties. The entire concept was anathema to the Queen Mother, for whom rights of the crown had become almost a religion to itself. She protected the Queen

of Navarre, and Pious deemed it wise to leave the matter alone. Jean would later write, gratefully, quote, I put myself wholly under the wing of your powerful protection. I will go to find you wherever you may be, and shall kiss your feet more willingly than the popes end quote. Finally, the progress set off in Ernest on March the thirteenth, fifteen sixty four.

On March the twenty third, the court reached Twas, where it remained for Easter, the Protestant members having to celebrate the holiday four leagues outside the city, and the practice thereof continued to be such a problem that during the early months of the progress, so on June the twenty fourth rather exacerbated. Charles the ninth, probably through Catherine, ordered that no Protestant ceremonies, accept baptisms, and marriages would be permitted for the duration of the tour. Protestantism

was very much neither to be seen nor heard. That was how Charles was going to keep the peace. Catherine was determined to force this piece no matter what. In lyon, she forced Protestant and Catholic members of court to walk side by side in a procession. See look, everyone's happy. That was the message. We have no record as to whether or not anyone believed this charad. We do know that shortly after the court left Leon, plague struck

the city and twenty thousand people died. The Queen Mother then made a visit to Nostrodamus, the famous astrologer Salon in Provence. It was an interview she probably looked forward to and dread it. At the same time, she had infinite respect for his predictions. Unfortunately, just before the royal party arrived at Salon des Coran, there had been an outbreak of plague, and most of the townspeople had fled for Catherine. There was no question of avoiding the town

or canceling the interview. Accordingly, Charles ordered that the people returned to give their king a proper welcome or face punishment. The local population evidently feared royal ire more than the plague, because they came back to watch their magistri's entry into the town. The royal family arrived in the mid afternoon of the seventeenth of October. Charles was quote seated on an African horse with a harness of black velvet with large trimmings and fringes of gold. His person was robed in

a cloak of Tyrian purple adorned with silver ribbons. He wore an amethys in one ear and a sapphire in the other end quote. It was arranged that the Queen Mother would meet Nostra Damas with no fuss or fanfare, and he suggested he quote move about and meet her majesty away from the vulgar people. End quote. Now suffering from golt, the aging Austra Damis walked up to the chateau to meet the King and Queen Mother, moving slowly with a cane

in one hand and his velvet cap in the other. He eventually presented to the royal party. After greeting the king properly in Latin, a long conversation ensued, during which the prophet announced that Charles would not predecease the constable. This hardly gave cause for celebration, because you know, mont Morency was already in his seventies Catherine gave Nostrodamos two hundred ECUs and made him a royal councilor

and the king's physician. This was not their first meeting, that had actually taken place in Bluaw back in fifteen sixty, where at Catherine's request, she had no Stra Damis draw up Honrey of Anjeu's horoscope that predicted one day he would be king of France. The prophecy seemed to please the Queen mother very much. Indeed, satisfactory was the interest Nostre Damis had shown during his visit

in a young page boy of the French king's suite. He insisted upon seeing the boy, who, when called Bolton and Terror, the page was Henri of Navarre. The following morning, Nostre Damis came back to see the young Henri of Navarre. This time he inspected the boy's body, and when he was done, he declared that Henri of Navarre would one day be king. This pleased Catherine a lot less. Now from there the court proceeded to the

Mediterranean, which Catherine adored. They saw orange trees for the first time, imported from China via Portugal, but then in December, bad news reached the entourage. There was of course trouble, and I mean religious trouble. Back in Paris. Martial de Montmorency, the Constable's oldest son, had gotten a into an argument with the Cardinal of Lorraine, whose of course Geese, and

he was bringing troops to escort him into the city. As armed escorts were banned, the Marshal de Maranci, who was also the governor of Paris, had been forced to use his own men than to try and split up the Cardinal's troops. Hearing this, the Geese family had sent reinforcements to their brother, while simultaneously, Cologni, a Protestant, ordered five hundred soldiers to the

capitol to now counter the Geese's move. Now, after a time, Cologni's men left Paris peacefully, but a renewed outbreak of civil war was only narrowly averted. Marshal de Montmorencis swaggering and overbearing behavior had generally irritated almost everyone who mattered, and his bravado and abuse of power in the king's absence had been

bound to cause trouble. News that can day, another Protestant was fortifying garrisons and Picardy also arrived, to cause the Queen mother much disquiet, to the astonishment of the Spanish ambassador, she refused to do anything other than send a few written reprimands and keep herself informed of further developments. But the biggest event of the tour was yet to take place, the meeting with Philip of Spain in June fifteen sixty five. Now, Catherine knew full well that the Edict

of Ambois disgusted Philip. Now no one knows exactly why, but at some point Philip decided that he was not going to meet Catherine in person. Now, generally monarchs didn't meet face to face, and that might be why. Regardless as to the reason, though, Catherine was very disappointed. However, when she found out she would still be permitted to meet her daughter, then she was once more pleased, and so on May the third, the party

left Bordeaux to meet Elizabeth at Mayon. On May eighth, at Mont Marsan, Catherine heard, to her dismay rumors that Philip had decided not to send

Elizabeth after all. He was particularly displeased having heard that Catherine had, while on the Mediterranean coast, received an emissary from the Sultan of Turkey, and he'd also learned from his spies that a French expedition to Florida was being organized by Catherine to sail from Dieppe. The Spanish felt fiercely protective of their New World discoveries, and they didn't like the threat of any other nation interfering in

lands that they had been so happily plundering. Any last hopes that Catherine might have fostered a Philip attending the meeting had now died, though her daughter finally received permission to meet her mother after all. Unfortunately, Philip had also decided to send the severe and ferocious Duke of Alba, the same guy who's going

to be sent to tame the Netherlands, as his personal representative. He hoped that Alba would talk some sense into the Queen mother about the three issues that irritated him Conversations with the Turk, concessions to French Protestants, and of course, land claims in Florida. Three weeks later, on the thirtieth of May, while the court remained in place, Catherine set off for Bayon incognito. She needed time to prepare for her daughter's arrival, which had been arranged for

the fourteenth of June. The meeting between mother and daughter was extremely touching. By all accounts. Philip demanded that his wife not be quote unquote infected by heretics, so Conde was not permitted anywhere near the meeting. The heat was also so intense that several people fainted from exhaustion, but that was really the only hiccup. Catherine found Elizabeth much changed since leaving her mother in fifteen fifty

nine. Her daughter had become more Spanish than French, and had acquired many of the elaborate formalities of her adopted land. When she spoke, it was with the words of her husband, whom she loved, and years of indoctrination by an older man who at last had found true happiness, it seems, with Elizabeth his third wife, and that brought her uninformed. At least that's

what Philip would have said, Mine to think as he did. Thus, after a few first impulsive embraces and displays of tenderness, Elizabeth suddenly became more formal and restrained. Though they tried to recapture them, the easiness of their former days was just gone. Elizabeth had become Philip's mouthpiece for all practical purposes, and after a long and futile effort begging her mother to see reason, she received a quick response from Catherine. Quote, so your husband Philip suspects

me. Do you know that his suspicions will lead us to war? End quote? Elizabeth replied, what makes you suppose, madame, that the king suspects your majesty? To this, the Queen mother remarked, how Spanish you have become my daughter now. In addition to Elizabeth and Alva, Philip had taken trouble to replace his ambassador to France, Chantonnay, for Francis's Duke of

Alva. He hoped that by removing Chantonnay, whose relationship with Catherine had often been less cordial and marked by his frequent reproaches, veiled threats and supports for the Protestants, this new man might help bring Catherine firmly back into the Catholic

camp. Of course, one of the key reasons that Catherine had wanted this meeting in the first place was that she wanted to promote further marriages between the House of Balos and the Habsburgs. Alba, who had no experience dealing with a woman especially one who employed every device and artifice to flatter and conjole him,

found himself kind of out of sorts. Her naive belief in the power of dynastic unions, and some might say if fundamentally bourgeoisie desire to see her younger children well married were not at all what the Duke of Alba was expecting. The idea old idea of a union between Margot and the insane Don Carlos was resurrected, and then Catherine enthusiastically suggested a new proposal that Aenri of Anjou should be married to Juana, Dowager, Queen of Portugal and Philip's sister.

The fact that Juana was twice Amri's age and Don Carlos also was a homicidal madiac shortly to be locked in the cell didn't worry Catherine in the slightest. Off his guard and just not familiar with having marriage discussions, Alba steadily grew gruff, soldierly, and distant in all the meetings. In each ensuing talk, he did his best to keep the conversation focused on religion, specifically Catherine's

policy of religious toleration, which, of course Philip despised. He even hinted at one point that if Catherine could not contain the growth of heresy within her own realm, then Philip would have to step in into it for her. Clearly, this was a veiled threat of war. Catherine was unmoved. She did not believe a new wave of persecution would solve her problems. Indeed, as Albo was about to find out for himself in the Netherlands, persecution is

rarely a path to peace. Finally, exasperated, the Duke gave up trying to convince Catherine otherwise. Now as an aside, Charles was present for this meeting with his sister, but he took no part at all in the serious negotiations. This was still very much Catherine's show to run. In the end, the meetings solved nothing. Spain was as distrustful of Catherine and in France as ever, Catherine had agreed to nothing on the religious front, so for

the Spanish the whole affair had been a waste of time. On July second, fifteen sixty five, Catherine left she would never see her daughter again. Catherine, for her part, felt the meeting had been a modest success because even if it had resolved nothing, neither had it made the situation worse. But the Huguenots at court didn't see it that way. They had been effectively

banished, plus Catherine had fraternized with Alba, who they hated. Years later they would point to this meeting as a time when the seeds of future deadly conflict were sown. The biggest problem is that Catherine's policy of toleration had only in the end made both sides distrustful of her and gained her no firm allies. She had tried to chart this middle course, and she had now found herself essentially alone on a boat from the Spanish border. The procession now slowly

made its way home. On January sixth, fifteen sixty six, news of terrible atrocities from Florida, where Spanish colonists had massacred the newly arrived mainly French Protestant colonists. The French had actually reached the new territory first, and claimed that in the name of their king, but they had reckoned, without Philip's fury, that there should be a colony of French heretics anywhere even remotely close

to Spanish territory. He had sent a force of twenty six thousand men who attacked the six hundred settlers, which is a little bit of being outnumbered, and four companies of French soldiers. In a fury of bloodletting, most of the settlers, men, women and children had their throats cut. Only a handful managed to escape. The French court was agassed when it heard the news. In the end, however, Catherine was powerless to avenge the killings.

At long last. On the first of May fifteen sixty six, after eight hundred and twenty nine days tour, arrived back in Paris. Catherine saw this as an epic personal triumph. To some extent it was. But beneath the veneer of cooperation, the rest of passions of religion continued to ferment, and, as we will see next week, conflict loomed ominously on the horizon. If you've enjoyed the show, feel free to check out all the links in the show notes. I have a link there to Western SIV two point oh.

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