Diane de Poitiers

Diane de Poitiers (9 January 1500 – 25 April 1566) was a French noblewoman and prominent courtier. She wielded much power and influence as King Henry II's royal mistress and adviser until his death. Her position increased her wealth and family's status. She was a major patron of French Renaissance architecture and a talented landowner.

Diane de Poitiers
Born(1500-01-09)9 January 1500[1]
Died25 April 1566(1566-04-25) (aged 66)
Burial placeChâteau d'Anet, Anet, Eure-et-Loir
TitleGrand Senechal of Normandy
Countess of Saint-Vallier
Duchess of Valentinois and Étampes
Spouse(s)
(m. 1515; died 1531)
ChildrenFrançoise de Brézé, Princess of Sedan
Louise de Brézé, Duchess of Aumale
Parent(s)Jean de Poitiers, Seigneur de Saint Vallier
Jeanne de Batarnay

Early life

Diane de Poitiers was born on 9 January 1500, in Château de Saint-Vallier, Drôme, France. Her parents were Jean de Poitiers, Seigneur de Saint Vallier, and Jeanne de Batarnay.[1] Unusually athletic, Diane kept a fit figure by riding and swimming regularly. She became a keen sportswoman,[2] remaining in good physical condition for her time.

When still a girl, Diane was briefly in the retinue of Princess Anne de Beaujeu,[2] King Charles VIII's eldest sister who skillfully held the regency of France during his minority. Like her fellow chargers, Diane was educated according to the principles of Renaissance humanism, including languages of Latin and Greek, rhetoric, etiquette,[2] finances, laws, and architecture.

Grand Senechal of Normandy

Anonymous sketch of Diane de Poitiers after a 1525 original.

On 29 March 1515, at the age of 15, Diane was married to Louis de Brézé, seigneur d'Anet, Count of Maulévrier, and Grand Senechal of Normandy who was 39 years her senior.[2] He was a grandson of King Charles VII by his mistress Agnès Sorel[3] and served as a courtier to King Francis I. They had two daughters, Françoise (1518–1574) [4] and Louise (1521–1577).[5]

Shortly after her marriage, Diane became lady-in-waiting to Queen Claude of France.[6] After the Queen died, she served in the same capacity to Louise of Savoy, the King's mother,[3] and then Queen Eleanor of Austria. In 1523, her husband uncovered Constable Charles de Bourbon's plot against King Francis I, but didn't know at the time that his father-in-law was involved as well. In 1524, Jean de Poitiers was accused of treason and sentenced to death, but his sentence was commuted. He instead was confined to prison until the Treaty of Madrid in 1526.[5]

After her husband died in 1531 in Anet,[5] Diane adopted the habit of wearing black and white for the rest of her life.[7] They were among the permitted colours of mourning and the symbolic colours of the sides of the moon, playing on her name which derived from the Roman moon goddess. She commissioned sculptor Jean Goujon to build a tomb for Louis in the Cathedral of Rouen.

Diane's keen interest in financial matters and legal acumen became apparent for the first time during this period. She managed to retain her late husband's emoluments as grand senechal of Normandy and challenged in court the obligation to return the family's appanages to the royal domain. Impressed, King Francis I allowed the widowed Diane to manage her inherited estates without the supervision of a male guardian and keep its considerable profits.

Royal favourite

The emblem of Diane de Poitiers, three interlaced crescents.
The painting A Lady in Her Bath by François Clouet possibly depicts either Diane de Poitiers or Mary, Queen of Scots. A noted beauty, Diane maintained her good looks well into her fifties and was immortalized in both sculpture and paintings.[8] She sat for other paintings of the time, often topless or nude, other times in traditional poses.

After the capture of Francis I by Charles V's troops during the battle of Pavia (1525), the princes Francis and Henry were retained as hostages in Spain in exchange for their father. Because the ransom wasn't paid in time, the two boys (eight and seven at the time) had to spend nearly four years isolated in a bleak castle, facing an uncertain future. The experience may account for the strong impression that Diane made on Henry, as the very embodiment of the ideal gentlewomen: as his mother was already dead, his grandmother's lady-in-waiting gave him the farewell kiss when he was sent to Spain.[9] At the tournament held for the coronation of Francis's new wife, Eleanor of Austria, in 1531, while the Dauphin of France saluted the new Queen as expected, Henry addressed his salute to Diane.[9]

In 1533, Henry was married Catherine de' Medici[10] despite the opposition to the alliance, since the Medicis were no more than merchant upstarts in the eyes of many in the French court. However, Diane approved of the choice of bride,[11] whom she was related, their grandmothers were sisters.[12] Based on allusions in their correspondence, it is generally believed that Diane became his mistress in 1534, when she was 35 years old and Henry was 15. [13] As the couple remained childless and she became concerned by rumours of a possible repudiation of a royal wife that she had in control, Diane made sure that Henry's visits to the marital bedroom would be frequent,[14] to the point that he had ten legitimate children. In another act of self-preservation of the royal family, Diane helped nurse Catherine back to health when she fell ill.[15]

Despite the occasional affair with such as Philippa Duci, Janet Fleming, and Nicole de Savigny, Diane would remain Henry's lifelong companion. For the next 25 years, she would be one of the most powerful women in France. When Francis I was still alive, Diane had to compete at the court with Anne de Pisseleu, the King's favourite.[16] Anne convinced Francis I that his son the Dauphin Henry and Diane de Poitiers were working to reinstate Constable Montmorency at court. After his father banished Diane, Henry and his supporters retreated to the chateau of Anet; father and son wouldn't reconcile until 1545. After Francis' death, his son Henry II had Anne banned from government and confiscated the duchy of Estampes.[16] By then, Diane's position in the Court was such that when Pope Paul III sent the new Queen the "Golden Rose", he didn't forget to present the royal mistress with a pearl necklace. She received the prestigious title of Duchess of Valentinois in 1548 and was made Duchesse d'Étampes in 1553. Through the extensive patron-client network she cultivated, her sons-in-law received important positions.

Although she wasn't openly involved, Diane's sharp intellect, confident maturity and loyalty to Henry II made her his most dependable ally in the court. He trusted her to write many of his official letters, which were signed jointly with the one name HenriDiane. Until 1551, she was in charge of the education of Henry's children,[17] and gave orders to their governors, Jean and Françoise d'Humières.[18] Her daughter Françoise managed the Queen's household as Première dame d'honneur (chief lady-in-waiting).[16] The King's adoration for Diane caused a great deal of jealousy on the part of Queen Catherine, particularly when Henry entrusted Diane with the Crown Jewels of France and gave her the Château de Chenonceau, a piece of royal property that Catherine had wanted for herself. However, as long as the King lived, the Queen was powerless to change that.

Construction projects

Diane's home, Anet, in the 18th century.
The Château de Chenonceau on the Cher River. Diane financed and built its bridge.

Most of the sources in Diane's hand are accounts, demonstrating her meticulous attention to finances. She profited from the confiscation of Anne de Pisseleu's states and managed well the lands, to the point she became the beneficiary of 300000 écus. One of the most successful royal mistresses in acquiring wealth, Diane used her income to build castles by commissioning architect Philibert de l'Orme. Making strikingly effective use of Renaissance arts and rhetoric, she constructed an image of herself as a paragon of virtue and presented the image of Henry II as model of chivalry.

Diane supervised the remodeling of Château d'Anet, her late husband's feudal castle of stone. It has a porch with widely spaced paired ionic columns between towers crowned by pyramidal spires. The château is noted for its exterior, notably the Fountain of Diana, in which the mistress represented the goddess reclining with her two dogs and stag.[19] There is the mortuary chapel built according to Diane's wishes to contain her tomb, commissioned from architect Claude de Foucques by her daughter Louise, Duchess of Aumale.

Although her ownership remained with the crown until 1555, Diane was the unquestioned mistress of Château de Chenonceau, the jewel of the Loire Renaissance palaces. In 1555, she asked de l'Orme to build the arched bridge joining the château to its opposite bank and oversaw the planting of extensive gardens filled with varieties of fruit trees. Set along the banks of the river, her exquisite gardens were famous and copied.

Later years

Diane's tomb in the chapel at the Château'd Anet.

Despite wielding such power over the court, Diane's status depended on the King's welfare and remaining in power. In 1559, Henry was critically wounded in a jousting tournament, when his lance wore her favour (ribbon), rather than his wife's. Queen Catherine soon assumed control, restricting access to the royal chambers. Although Henry was alleged to have called out repeatedly for Diane, she wasn't admitted to his deathbed nor invited to his funeral. She was immediately obliged to give to the Queen Mother the Château de Chenonceau in exchange for the less attractive Château de Chaumont, a punishment much less severe than the ones suffered by other royal mistresses.[20]

Diane lived out her remaining years in her château in Anet, Eure-et-Loir, where she lived in comfortable obscurity as a virtual exile.[20] At the age of 64, she suffered a fall during a ride which she never fully recovered and died a year later.[8] In accordance with Diane's wishes and to provide a resting place for her, her daughter completed the funeral chapel, built near the castle. During the French Revolution, her tomb was opened, her corpse desecrated, and her remains thrown into a mass grave. In 1866, Georges Guiffrey published her correspondence. When French experts dug up her remains in 2009, they found high levels of gold in her hair. It is suggested that the "drinkable gold" that she "reportedly" regularly took, believed to preserve youth, may have ultimately killed her.[21][22][23][24] In May 2010, she was reburied at her original tomb in the Château d'Anet.

Novels

Films

Television

See also

References

  1. Wellman 2013, p. 189.
  2. Wellman 2013, p. 190.
  3. Wellman 2013, p. 191.
  4. Carroll 1998, p. 20.
  5. Wellman 2013, p. 192.
  6. Brown 2010, p. 128.
  7. Wellman 2013, p. 193.
  8. Wellman 2013, p. 214.
  9. Wellman 2013, p. 197.
  10. Baumgartner 1988, p. 28.
  11. Wellman 2013, p. 198.
  12. Wellman 2013, p. 194.
  13. Wellman 2013, p. 199.
  14. Wellman 2013, p. 200.
  15. Baumgartner 1988, p. 98.
  16. Wellman 2013, p. 203.
  17. Carroll 2009, p. 55.
  18. Knecht 2016, p. 4-5.
  19. "Fountain of Diana". Louvre. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  20. Wellman 2013, p. 213.
  21. "Henry II’s mistress returned to rightful resting place", May 31, 2010, The Sunday Times
  22. Charlier, Philippe; Poupon, Joel (2009), "Fatal Alchemy" (PDF), British Medical Journal, 339: 1402–1403, retrieved 29 May 2016
  23. Charlier P; Poupon J; Huynh-Charlier I; Saliège JF; Favier D; Keyser C; Ludes B (2009), "A gold elixir of youth in the 16th century French court", British Medical Journal, 339: b5311, doi:10.1136/bmj.b5311, PMID 20015897
  24. ḎḤWTY. "A Mistress with the Midas Touch: Her Hunger for Gold Would Be the Death of Her". Ancient Origins. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  25. "Nostradamus (1994)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 31 July 2012.

Sources

  • Baumgartner, Frederic J. (1988). Henry II: King of France 1547–1559. Duke University Press.
  • Brown, Cynthia Jane, ed. (2010). The Cultural and Political Legacy of Anne de Bretagne: Negotiating. D.S. Brewer.
  • Carroll, Stuart (1998). Noble Power During the French Wars of Religion: The Guise Affinity and the Catholic Cause in Normandy. Cambridge University Press.
  • Carroll, Stuart (2009). Martyrs and Murderers: The Guise Family and the Making of Europe. Oxford University Press.
  • Knecht, R.J. (2016). Hero or Tyrant? Henry III, King of France, 1574-89. Routledge.
  • Wellman, Kathleen (2013). Queens and Mistresses of Renaissance France. Yale University Press.

Further reading

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