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Francis I of France

Francis I (French: François Ier; Middle French: Francoys; 12 September 1494 – 31 March 1547) was King of France from 1515 until his death in 1547. He was the son of Charles, Count of Angoulême, and Louise of Savoy. He succeeded his first cousin once removed and father-in-law Louis XII, who died without a son.

Francis I
Portrait by Jean Clouet, c. 1530
King of France
Reign1 January 1515 – 31 March 1547
Coronation25 January 1515
PredecessorLouis XII
SuccessorHenry II
Duke of Milan
Reign11 October 1515 – 20 November 1521
PredecessorMassimiliano Sforza
SuccessorFrancesco II Sforza
Born12 September 1494
Château de Cognac, Cognac, France
Died31 March 1547(1547-03-31) (aged 52)
Château de Rambouillet, France
Burial23 May 1547
Spouse
(m. 1514; died 1524)

(m. 1530)
Issue
among others...
Francis III, Duke of Brittany
Henry II of France
Madeleine, Queen of Scots
Charles, Duke of Orléans
Margaret, Duchess of Savoy
HouseValois-Angoulême
FatherCharles, Count of Angoulême
MotherLouise of Savoy
ReligionCatholicism
Signature

A prodigious patron of the arts, he promoted the emergent French Renaissance by attracting many Italian artists to work for him, including Leonardo da Vinci, who brought the Mona Lisa with him, which Francis had acquired. Francis' reign saw important cultural changes with the growth of central power in France, the spread of humanism and Protestantism, and the beginning of French exploration of the New World. Jacques Cartier and others claimed lands in the Americas for France and paved the way for the expansion of the first French colonial empire.

For his role in the development and promotion of the French language, he became known as le Père et Restaurateur des Lettres (the 'Father and Restorer of Letters').[1] He was also known as François au Grand Nez ('Francis of the Large Nose'), the Grand Colas, and the Roi-Chevalier (the 'Knight-King').[1]

In keeping with his predecessors, Francis continued the Italian Wars. The succession of his great rival Emperor Charles V to the Habsburg Netherlands and the throne of Spain, followed by his election as Holy Roman Emperor, led to France being geographically encircled by the Habsburg monarchy. In his struggle against Imperial hegemony, Francis sought the support of Henry VIII of England at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.[2] When this was unsuccessful, he formed a Franco-Ottoman alliance with the Muslim sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, a controversial move for a Christian king at the time.[3]

Early life and Accession

Francis of Orléans was born on 12 September 1494 at the Château de Cognac in the town of Cognac,[1] which at that time lay in the province of Saintonge, a part of the Duchy of Aquitaine. Today the town lies in the department of Charente.

Francis was the only son of Charles of Orléans, Count of Angoulême, and Louise of Savoy, and a great-great-grandson of King Charles V of France.[4] His family was not expected to inherit the throne, as his third cousin King Charles VIII was still young at the time of his birth, as was his father's cousin the Duke of Orléans, later King Louis XII. However, Charles VIII died childless in 1498 and was succeeded by Louis XII, who himself had no male heir.[5] The Salic Law prevented women from inheriting the throne. Therefore, the four-year-old Francis (who was already Count of Angoulême after the death of his own father two years earlier) became the heir presumptive to the throne of France in 1498 and was vested with the title of Duke of Valois.[5]

In 1505, Louis XII, having fallen ill, ordered for his daughter Claude and Francis to be married immediately, but only through an assembly of nobles were the two engaged.[6] Claude was heir presumptive to the Duchy of Brittany through her mother, Anne of Brittany. Following Anne's death, the marriage took place on 18 May 1514.[7] On 1 January 1515, Louis died, and Francis inherited the throne. He was crowned King of France in the Cathedral of Reims on 25 January 1515, with Claude as his queen consort.[8]

Reign

 
Francis I painted in 1515

As Francis was receiving his education, ideas emerging from the Italian Renaissance were influential in France. Some of his tutors, such as François Desmoulins de Rochefort (his Latin instructor, who later during the reign of Francis was named Grand Aumônier de France) and Christophe de Longueil (a Brabantian humanist), were attracted by these new ways of thinking and attempted to influence Francis. His academic education had been in arithmetic, geography, grammar, history, reading, spelling, and writing and he became proficient in Hebrew, Italian, Latin and Spanish. Francis came to learn chivalry, dancing, and music, and he loved archery, falconry, horseback riding, hunting, jousting, real tennis and wrestling. He ended up reading philosophy and theology and he was fascinated with art, literature, poetry and science. His mother, who had a high admiration for Italian Renaissance art, passed this interest on to her son. Although Francis did not receive a humanist education, he was more influenced by humanism than any previous French king.

Patron of the arts

 
Francis I receiving the last breath of Leonardo da Vinci in 1519, by Ingres, painted in 1818

By the time he ascended the throne in 1515, the Renaissance had arrived in France, and Francis became an enthusiastic patron of the arts. At the time of his accession, the royal palaces of France were ornamented with only a scattering of great paintings, and not a single sculpture, not ancient nor modern.

Francis patronized many great artists of his time, including Andrea del Sarto and Leonardo da Vinci; the latter of whom was persuaded to make France his home during his last years. While da Vinci painted very little during his years in France, he brought with him many of his greatest works, including the Mona Lisa (known in France as La Joconde), and these remained in France after his death. Other major artists to receive Francis' patronage included the goldsmith Benvenuto Cellini and the painters Rosso Fiorentino, Giulio Romano, and Primaticcio, all of whom were employed in decorating Francis' various palaces. He also invited the noted architect Sebastiano Serlio (1475–1554), who enjoyed a fruitful late career in France.[9] Francis also commissioned a number of agents in Italy to procure notable works of art and ship them to France.

Man of letters

Francis was also renowned as a man of letters. When Francis comes up in a conversation among characters in Baldassare Castiglione's Book of the Courtier, it is as the great hope to bring culture to the war-obsessed French nation. Not only did Francis support a number of major writers of the period, but he was also a poet himself, if not one of particular abilities. Francis worked diligently at improving the royal library. He appointed the great French humanist Guillaume Budé as chief librarian and began to expand the collection. Francis employed agents in Italy to look for rare books and manuscripts, just as he had agents looking for artworks. During his reign, the size of the library greatly increased. Not only did he expand the library, there is also evidence[citation needed] that he read the books he bought for it, a much rarer event in the royal annals. Francis set an important precedent by opening his library to scholars from around the world in order to facilitate the diffusion of knowledge.

In 1537, Francis signed the Ordonnance de Montpellier, which decreed that his library be given a copy of every book to be sold in France. Francis' older sister, Marguerite, Queen of Navarre, was also an accomplished writer who produced the classic collection of short stories known as the Heptameron. Francis corresponded with the abbess and philosopher Claude de Bectoz, of whose letters he was so fond that he would carry them around and show them to the ladies of his court.[10] Together with his sister, he visited her in Tarascon.[11][12]

Construction

 

Francis poured vast amounts of money into new structures. He continued the work of his predecessors on the Château d'Amboise and also started renovations on the Château de Blois. Early in his reign, he began construction of the magnificent Château de Chambord, inspired by the architectural styles of the Italian renaissance, and perhaps even designed by Leonardo da Vinci. Francis rebuilt the Louvre Palace, transforming it from a medieval fortress into a building of Renaissance splendour. He financed the building of a new City Hall (the Hôtel de Ville) for Paris in order to have control over the building's design. He constructed the Château de Madrid in the Bois de Boulogne and rebuilt the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye. The largest of Francis' building projects was the reconstruction and expansion of the Château de Fontainebleau, which quickly became his favourite place of residence, as well as the residence of his official mistress, Anne, Duchess of Étampes. Each of Francis' projects was luxuriously decorated both inside and out. Fontainebleau, for instance, had a gushing fountain in its courtyard where quantities of wine were mixed with the water.

Military action

 
Francis I and Holy Roman Emperor Charles V made peace at the Truce of Nice in 1538. Francis actually refused to meet Charles in person, and the treaty was signed in separate rooms.

Although the Italian Wars (1494–1559) came to dominate the reign of Francis I, the wars were not the sole focus of his policies. Francis merely continued the incessant wars that his predecessors had started and that his successors on the throne of France would drag on after Francis' death. Indeed, the Italian Wars had begun when Milan sent a plea to King Charles VIII of France for protection against the aggressive actions of the King of Naples.[13] Militarily and diplomatically, Francis' reign was a mixed bag of success and failure. Francis tried and failed to become Holy Roman Emperor at the Imperial election of 1519. However, there were also temporary victories, such as in the portion of the Italian Wars called the War of the League of Cambrai (1508–1516) and, more specifically, to the final stage of that war, which history refers to simply as "Francis' First Italian War" (1515–1516), when Francis routed the combined forces of the Papal States and the Old Swiss Confederacy at Marignano on 13–15 September 1515. This victory at Marignano allowed Francis to capture the Italian city-state of Milan. Later, in November 1521, during the Four Years' War (1521–1526) and facing the advancing Imperial forces of the Holy Roman Empire and open revolt within Milan, Francis was forced to abandon Milan, thus, cancelling the triumph at Marignano.

Much of the military activity of Francis's reign was focused on his sworn enemy, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. Francis and Charles maintained an intensely personal rivalry. Charles, in fact, brashly challenged Francis to single combat multiple times. In addition to the Holy Roman Empire, Charles personally ruled Spain, Austria, and a number of smaller possessions neighbouring France. He was thus a constant threat to Francis' kingdom.

 
Francis I at the Battle of Marignano

Francis attempted to arrange an alliance with Henry VIII of England at the famous meeting at the Field of Cloth of Gold on 7 June 1520, but despite a lavish fortnight of diplomacy they failed to reach an agreement.[14] Francis and Henry were both obsessed with dreams of power and chivalric glory; their relationship featured intense personal and dynastic rivalry. Francis was driven by his intense eagerness for retaking Milan, despite the strong opposition of other Powers. Henry was likewise determined to recapture northern France, which Francis could never allow.[15]

Francis suffered his most devastating defeat at the Battle of Pavia on 24 February 1525, during part of the continuing Italian Wars known as the Four Years' War. Francis was actually taken prisoner: Cesare Hercolani injured his horse, and Francis was captured by Diego Dávila, Alonso Pita da Veiga, and Juan de Urbieta, from Guipúzcoa. For this reason, Hercolani was named "Victor of the battle of Pavia". Zuppa alla Pavese was supposedly invented on the spot to feed the captive king right after the battle.[16]

Francis I was held captive in Madrid. In a letter to his mother he wrote, "Of all things, nothing remains to me but honour and life, which is safe." This line has come down in history famously as "All is lost save honour."[17] Francis made major concessions to Charles V in the Treaty of Madrid (1526), signed on 14 January, before he was freed on 17 March. An ultimatum from Ottoman Sultan Suleiman to Charles V also played an important role in his release. Francis I surrendered any claims to Naples and Milan in Italy.[18] Francis recognised the independence of the Duchy of Burgundy, which had been part of France since the death of Charles the Bold in 1477.[19] And finally, Francis was betrothed to Charles' sister Eleanor. Francis was allowed to return to France in exchange for his two sons, Francis and Henry, but once he was free he argued that his agreement with Charles was made under duress. He also claimed that the agreement was void because his sons were taken hostage with the implication that his word alone could not be trusted. Thus he firmly repudiated it. A renewed alliance with England enabled Francis to repudiate the treaty of Madrid.

 
Detail of a tapestry depicting the Battle of Pavia, woven from a cartoon by Bernard van Orley (c. 1531)

Francis persevered in his hatred of Charles V and his desire to control Italy. By the mid-1520s, Pope Clement VII wished to liberate Italy from foreign domination, especially that of Charles V, so he allied with Venice to form the League of Cognac. Francis joined the League in May 1526, in the War of the League of Cognac of 1526–30.[20] Francis' allies proved weak, and the war was ended by the Treaty of Cambrai (1529; "the Peace of the Ladies", negotiated by Francis’ mother and Charles’ aunt).[21] The two boys were released, and Francis married Eleanor.

After the League of Cognac failed, Francis concluded a secret alliance with the Landgrave of Hesse on 27 January 1534. This was directed against Charles V on the pretext of assisting the Duke of Württemberg to regain his traditional seat, from which Charles had removed him in 1519. Francis also obtained the help of the Ottoman Empire and after the death of Francesco II Sforza, ruler of Milan, renewed the contest in Italy in the Italian War of 1536–1538. This round of fighting, which had little result, was ended by the Truce of Nice. The agreement collapsed, however, which led to Francis' final attempt on Italy in the Italian War of 1542–1546. This time Francis managed to hold off the forces of Charles V and Henry VIII. Charles V was forced to sign the Treaty of Crépy because of his financial difficulties and conflicts with the Schmalkaldic League.[22]

Relations with the New World and Asia

 
The voyage of Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524

Francis had been much aggrieved at the papal bull Aeterni regis: in June 1481 Portuguese rule over Africa and the Indies was confirmed by Pope Sixtus IV. Thirteen years later, on 7 June 1494, Portugal and the Crown of Castille signed the Treaty of Tordesillas under which the newly discovered lands would be divided between the two signatories. All this prompted King Francis to declare, "The sun shines for me as it does for others. I would very much like to see the clause of Adam’s will by which I should be denied my share of the world."[23]

In order to counterbalance the power of the Habsburg Empire under Charles V, especially its control of large parts of the New World through the Crown of Spain, Francis I endeavoured to develop contacts with the New World and Asia. Fleets were sent to the Americas and the Far East, and close contacts were developed with the Ottoman Empire permitting the development of French Mediterranean trade as well as the establishment of a strategic military alliance.

The port city now known as Le Havre was founded in 1517 during the early years of Francis' reign. The construction of a new port was urgently needed in order to replace the ancient harbours of Honfleur and Harfleur, whose utility had decreased due to silting. Le Havre was originally named Franciscopolis after the King who founded it, but this name did not survive into later reigns.

Americas

In 1524, Francis assisted the citizens of Lyon in financing the expedition of Giovanni da Verrazzano to North America. On this expedition, Verrazzano visited the present site of New York City, naming it New Angoulême, and claimed Newfoundland for the French crown. Verrazzano's letter to Francis of 8 July 1524 is known as the Cèllere Codex.[24]

In 1531, Bertrand d'Ornesan tried to establish a French trading post at Pernambuco, Brazil.[25]

In 1534, Francis sent Jacques Cartier to explore the St. Lawrence River in Quebec to find "certain islands and lands where it is said there must be great quantities of gold and other riches".[26] In 1541, Francis sent Jean-François de Roberval to settle Canada and to provide for the spread of "the Holy Catholic faith."

Far East Asia

 
An example of the Dieppe maps showing Sumatra. Nicholas Vallard, 1547.

French trade with East Asia was initiated during the reign of Francis I with the help of shipowner Jean Ango. In July 1527, a French Norman trading ship from the city of Rouen is recorded by the Portuguese João de Barros as having arrived in the Indian city of Diu.[27] In 1529, Jean Parmentier, on board the Sacre and the Pensée, reached Sumatra.[27][28] Upon its return, the expedition triggered the development of the Dieppe maps, influencing the work of Dieppe cartographers such as Jean Rotz.[29]

Ottoman Empire

Under the reign of Francis I, France became the first country in Europe to establish formal relations with the Ottoman Empire and to set up instruction in the Arabic language under the guidance of Guillaume Postel at the Collège de France.[30]

 
Francis I (left) and Suleiman the Magnificent (right) initiated a Franco-Ottoman alliance. Both were separately painted by Titian c. 1530.

In a watershed moment in European diplomacy, Francis came to an understanding with the Ottoman Empire that developed into a Franco-Ottoman alliance. The objective for Francis was to find an ally against the House of Habsburg.[31] The pretext used by Francis was the protection of the Christians in Ottoman lands. The alliance has been called "the first nonideological diplomatic alliance of its kind between a Christian and non-Christian empire".[32] It did, however, cause quite a scandal in the Christian world[33] and was designated "the impious alliance", or "the sacrilegious union of the [French] Lily and the [Ottoman] Crescent." Nevertheless, it endured for many years, since it served the objective interests of both parties.[34] The two powers colluded against Charles V, and in 1543 they even combined for a joint naval assault in the Siege of Nice.

In 1533, Francis I sent colonel Pierre de Piton as ambassador to Morocco, initiating official France-Morocco relations.[35] In a letter to Francis I dated 13 August 1533, the Wattassid ruler of Fez, Ahmed ben Mohammed, welcomed French overtures and granted freedom of shipping and protection of French traders.

Bureaucratic reform and language policy

 
The Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts in August 1539 prescribed the use of French in official documents.

Francis took several steps to eradicate the monopoly of Latin as the language of knowledge. In 1530, he declared French the national language of the kingdom, and that same year opened the Collège des trois langues, or Collège Royal, following the recommendation of humanist Guillaume Budé. Students at the Collège could study Greek, Hebrew and Aramaic, then Arabic under Guillaume Postel beginning in 1539.[36]

In 1539, in his castle in Villers-Cotterêts,[37] Francis signed the important edict known as Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts, which, among other reforms, made French the administrative language of the kingdom as a replacement for Latin. This same edict required priests to register births, marriages, and deaths, and to establish a registry office in every parish. This initiated the first records of vital statistics with filiations available in Europe.

Religious policies

Divisions in Christianity in Western Europe during Francis' reign created lasting international rifts. Martin Luther's preaching and writing sparked the Protestant Reformation, which spread through much of Europe, including France.

Initially Francis was relatively tolerant of the new movement, despite burning several heretics at the Place Maubert in 1523.[38] He was influenced by his beloved sister Marguerite de Navarre, who was genuinely attracted by Luther's theology.[39] Francis even considered it politically useful, as it caused many German princes to turn against his enemy Charles V.

Francis' attitude towards Protestantism changed for the worse following the "Affair of the Placards", on the night of 17 October 1534, in which notices appeared on the streets of Paris and other major cities denouncing the Catholic mass. The most fervent Catholics were outraged by the notice's allegations. Francis himself came to view the movement as a plot against him and began to persecute its followers. Protestants were jailed and executed. In some areas, whole villages were destroyed. In Paris, after 1540, Francis had heretics such as Étienne Dolet tortured and burned.[40] Printing was censored and leading Protestant reformers such as John Calvin were forced into exile. The persecutions soon numbered thousands of dead and tens of thousands of homeless.[41]

Persecutions against Protestants were codified in the Edict of Fontainebleau (1540) issued by Francis. Major acts of violence continued, as when Francis ordered the execution of one of the historical pre-Lutheran groups, the Waldensians, at the Massacre of Mérindol in 1545.

Death

Francis died at the Château de Rambouillet on 31 March 1547, on his son and successor's 28th birthday. It is said that "he died complaining about the weight of a crown that he had first perceived as a gift from God".[42] He was interred with his first wife, Claude, Duchess of Brittany, in Saint Denis Basilica. He was succeeded by his son, Henry II.

Francis' tomb and that of his wife and mother, along with the tombs of other French kings and members of the royal family, were desecrated on 20 October 1793 during the Reign of Terror at the height of the French Revolution.

Image and reputation

 
Grand culverin of Francis I, with his emblem and motto. A gift to his Ottoman allies recovered in Algiers in 1830. Musée de l'Armée.

Francis I has a poor reputation in France—his 500th anniversary was little noted in 1994. Popular and scholarly historical memory ignores his building of so many fine chateaux, his stunning art collection, and his lavish patronage of scholars and artists. He is seen as a playboy who disgraced France by allowing himself to be defeated and taken prisoner at Pavia. The historian Jules Michelet set the negative image.[43]

Francis' personal emblem was the salamander and his Latin motto was Nutrisco et extinguo ("I nourish [the good] and extinguish [the bad]").[44] His long nose earned him the nickname François du Grand Nez ('Francis of the Big Nose'), he was also colloquially known as the Grand Colas or Bonhomme Colas. For his personal involvement in battles, he was known as le Roi-Chevalier ('the Knight-King') or le Roi-Guerrier ('the Warrior-King').[45]

British historian Glenn Richardson considers Francis a success:

He was a king who ruled as well as reigned. He knew the importance of war and a high international profile in staking his claim to be a great warrior-king of France. In battle he was brave, if impetuous, which led equally to triumph and disaster. Domestically, Francis exercised the spirit and letter of the royal prerogative to its fullest extent. He bargained hard over taxation and other issues with interest groups, often by appearing not to bargain at all. He enhanced royal power and concentrated decision-making in a tight personal executive but used a wide range of offices, gifts and his own personal charisma to build up an elective personal affinity among the ranks of the nobility upon whom his reign depended .... Under Francis, the court of France was at the height of its prestige and international influence during the 16th century. Although opinion has varied considerably over the centuries since his death, his cultural legacy to France, to its Renaissance, was immense and ought to secure his reputation as among the greatest of its kings.[46]

Marriage and issue

On 18 May 1514, Francis married his second cousin Claude, the daughter of King Louis XII of France and Duchess Anne of Brittany. The couple had seven children:

  • Louise (19 August 1515 – 21 September 1518): died young; engaged to Charles I of Spain almost from birth until death.
  • Charlotte (23 October 1516 – 8 September 1524): died young; engaged to Charles I of Spain from 1518 until death.
  • Francis (28 February 1518 – 10 August 1536), who succeeded his mother Claude as Duke of Brittany, but died aged 18, unmarried with illegitimate issue.
  • Henry II (31 March 1519 – 10 July 1559). Succeeded his father Francis I as King of France and his brother Francis as Duke of Brittany. Married Catherine de' Medici, had issue.
  • Madeleine (10 August 1520 – 2 July 1537), who married James V of Scotland and had no issue.
  • Charles (22 January 1522 – 9 September 1545), who died unmarried and childless.
  • Margaret (5 June 1523 – 14 September 1574), who married Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy, in 1559 and had issue.

On 7 July 1530, Francis I married his second wife Eleanor of Austria,[47] Queen (widow) of Portugal , a sister of Emperor Charles V. The couple had no children. During his reign, Francis kept two official mistresses at court. The first was Françoise de Foix, Countess of Châteaubriant. In 1526, she was replaced by the blonde-haired, cultured Anne de Pisseleu d'Heilly, Duchess of Étampes, who with the death of Queen Claude two years earlier, wielded far more political power at court than her predecessor had done. Another of his earlier mistresses was allegedly Mary Boleyn, mistress of King Henry VIII and sister of Henry's future wife, Anne Boleyn.[48]

Francis I in films, stage and literature

The amorous exploits of Francis inspired the 1832 play by Fanny Kemble, Francis the First, and the 1832 play by Victor Hugo, Le Roi s'amuse ("The King's Amusement"), which featured the jester Triboulet, the inspiration for the 1851 opera Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi.

Francis was first played in the George Méliès short François Ier et Triboulet (1907) by an unknown actor, possibly Méliès. He has been since played by Claude Garry (1910), William Powell (1922), Aimé Simon-Girard (1937), Sacha Guitry (1937), Gérard Oury (1953), Jean Marais (1955), Pedro Armendáriz (1956), Claude Titre (1962), Bernard Pierre Donnadieu (1990), Timothy West (1998), and Emmanuel Leconte (2007– 2010).

Francis was portrayed by Peter Gilmore in the comedy Carry On Henry charting the fictitious two extra wives of Henry VIII (including Marie, cousin of King Francis).

Francis receives a mention in Laurence Sterne's novel Tristram Shandy. The narrator claims that the king, wishing to win the favour of Switzerland, offers to make the country the godmother of his son. When, however, their choice of name conflicts, he declares war.

He is also mentioned in Jean de la Brète's novel Reine, Mon oncle et mon curé, where the main character Reine de Lavalle idolises Francis after reading a biography of the king, much to the dismay of the local priest.

He often receives mentions in novels on the lives of Mary and Anne Boleyn, both of whom were educated at his court. Mary had, according to several accounts, been Francis' one-time mistress and Anne had been a favourite of his sister: the novels The Lady in the Tower, The Other Boleyn Girl, The Last Boleyn, Dear Heart, How Like You This? and Mademoiselle Boleyn feature Francis. He appears in Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall about Henry VIII's minister Thomas Cromwell and is often referred to in its sequel, Bring Up the Bodies.

Francis is portrayed in Diane Haeger's novel Courtesan about Diane de Poitiers and Henri II.

Francis appears as the patron of Benvenuto Cellini in the 1843 French novel L'Orfèvre du roi, ou Ascanio by Alexandre Dumas, père.

Samuel Shellabarger's novel The King's Cavalier describes Francis the man, and the cultural and political circumstances of his reign, in some detail.

He and his court set the scene for Friedrich Schiller's ballad Der Handschuh (The Glove).

Francis I (Timothy West) and his son Henry II (Dougray Scott) are central figures in the 1998 movie Ever After, a retelling of the Cinderella story. The plot includes Leonardo da Vinci (Patrick Godfrey) arriving at court with the Mona Lisa.

He is played by Alfonso Bassave in the TVE series Carlos, rey emperador, opposite Álvaro Cervantes as Charles V.

Colm Meaney portrays the king in The Serpent Queen, which premiered on Starz in 2022.

Ancestors

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Knecht, R.J. Francis I, (Cambridge University Press, 1984), 1–2.
  2. ^ Knecht, R.J. Francis I, 77–78.
  3. ^ Knecht, R.J. Francis I, 224–225, 230.
  4. ^ Knecht, Robert. The Valois, (Hambledon Continuum, 2004), 112.
  5. ^ a b Knecht, R.J. Francis I, 3.
  6. ^ Knecht, R.J. Francis I, 8–9.
  7. ^ Knecht, R.J. Francis I, 11.
  8. ^ Knecht, R.J. Francis I, 16.
  9. ^ Serlio, Sebastiano (1996). On Architecture. Hart & Hicks (ed) Volume 2. Yale. pp. xi.
  10. ^ Plats, John (1826). A New Universal Biography: Forming the first volume of series III. Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper. p. 301.
  11. ^ Cholakian, Patricia Francis; Cholakian, Rouben Charles (2006). Marguerite de Navarre: mother of the Renaissance. Columbia University Press. p. 49. ISBN 0231134126.
  12. ^ Faillon, Étienne-Michel (1835). Monumens de l'église de Sainte-Marthe à Tarascon, département des Bouches-du-Rhône (in French). Tarascon: Élisée Aubanel, Imprimeur-libraire. p. 57.
  13. ^ Hoyt, Robert S. & Stanley Chodorow, Europe in the Middle Ages (Harcourt, Brace & Jovanovich Inc.: New York, 1976) p. 619.
  14. ^ Glenn, Richardson (2014). The Field of Cloth of Gold. Yale University Press. pp. 32–36. ISBN 978-0300160390. OCLC 862814775.
  15. ^ Glen Richardson, "Good friends and brothers?" History Today (1994) 44#9 pp 20–26.
  16. ^ Andrews, Colman. Country Cooking of Italy. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2012, p. 60. ISBN 978-1452123929.
  17. ^ Isaac, Jules (1911). "Francis I. of France" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 935.
  18. ^ Mallet, Michael;and Shaw, Christine. The Italian Wars: 1494–1559 (Harlow, England: Pearson Education Limited, 2012) p. 153.
  19. ^ Kendall, Paul Murray. Louis XI: The Universal Spider (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1971) p. 314.
  20. ^ Michael Mallett, and Christine Shaw, The Italian Wars: 1494–1559, p. 155.
  21. ^ Glenn Richardson, "Le roi-chevalier." History Today (May 2015) p. 41.
  22. ^ Geoffrey Parker, Emperor (2019) pp 308–312.
  23. ^ Lacoursière, Jacques (2005). Canada Quebec 1534–2000. Québec: Septentrion. p. 28. ISBN 978-2894481868.
  24. ^ Destombes, M. (1954). "Nautical Charts Attributed to Verrazano (1525–1528)". Imago Mundi. 11: 57–66. doi:10.1080/03085695408592059. OCLC 1752690.
  25. ^ Knecht, R.J. Francis I, (Cambridge University Press, 1982), 375.
  26. ^ Knecht, R.J. Francis I, 333.
  27. ^ a b Benians, Ernest Alfred; Newton, Arthur Percival; Rose, John Holland (1940). The English history of the British Empire. p. 61. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  28. ^ Oaten, Edward Farley (1991). European travellers in India. p. 123. ISBN 978-8120607101. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  29. ^ Quinn, David B. (1990). Explorers and colonies: America, 1500–1625. p. 57. ISBN 978-1852850241. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  30. ^ Toomer, G. J. Eastern wisdom and learning: the study of Arabic in seventeenth-century... p. 26–27.
  31. ^ Miller, William (4 January 1923). "The Ottoman Empire and its successors, 1801–1922. Being a rev. and enl. ed. of The Ottoman Empire, 1801–1913". Cambridge University Press – via Internet Archive.
  32. ^ Kann, Robert A. (1980). Kann. p. 62. ISBN 978-0520042063. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  33. ^ Miller, p. 2
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  35. ^ "Francois I, hoping that Morocco would open up to France as easily as Mexico had to Spain, sent a commission, half commercial and half diplomatic, which he confided to one Pierre de Piton. The story of his mission is not without interest" in The conquest of Morocco by Cecil Vivian Usborne, S. Paul & co. ltd., 1936, p. 33.
  36. ^ McCabe, Ina Baghdianitz. Orientalism in early modern France. ISBN 978-1845203740, p. 25 ff.
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  38. ^ Pierre Goubert, The Course of French History, Psychology Press, 1991, p. 92.
  39. ^ Pierre Goubert, The Course of French History, Psychology Press, 1991, pp. 91–92.
  40. ^ Goubert, op. cit., p. 92
  41. ^ R. J. Knecht, Francis I pp. 405–406
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  48. ^ Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, X, no.450
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  53. ^ a b Leguai, André (2005). "Agnès de Bourgogne, duchesse de Bourbon (1405?–1476)". Les ducs de Bourbon, le Bourbonnais et le royaume de France à la fin du Moyen Age [The dukes of Bourbon, the Bourbonnais and the kingdom of France at the end of the Middle Ages] (in French). Yzeure: Société bourbonnaise des études locales. pp. 145–160.
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  55. ^ a b Azzolini, Monica (2013). The Duke and the Stars: Astrology and Politics in Renaissance Milan. Harvard University Press. p. 120.
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Further reading

  • Clough, C.H. "Francis I and the Courtiers of Castiglione’s Courtier." European Studies Review. vol. 8, 1978.
  • Denieul-Cormier, Anne. The Renaissance in France. trans. Anne Fremantle and Christopher Fremantle. London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd., 1969.
  • Frieda, Leonie. Francis I: The Maker of Modern France. New York: HarperCollins, 2018.
  • Grant, Arthur James. The French Monarchy, Volume I. New York: Howard Fertig, 1970.
  • Guy, John. Tudor England. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988.
  • Isom-Verhaaren, Christine. "'Barbarossa and His Army Who Came to Succor All of Us': Ottoman and French Views of Their Joint Campaign of 1543–1544." French Historical Studies 30:3 (2007): 395–425 online[dead link].
  • Jensen, De Lamar. "The Ottoman Turks in Sixteenth Century French Diplomacy," Sixteenth Century Journal 16:4 (1985): 451–470. online
  • Jensen, De Lamar, ed. Renaissance Europe: Age of Recovery and Reconciliation. Lexington, Massachusetts: D.C. Heath and Company (2nd ed. 1991).
  • Knecht, R.J. Renaissance Warrior and Patron: The Reign of Francis I. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994. Francis%20I&f=false online
  • Knecht, Robert J. "A Battle of Giants." History Today (2016) 88#1, pp. 49–54 on Battle of Marignano, Italy in 1515.
  • Knecht, R.J. Francis I (Cambridge University Press, 1982) online
  • Knecht, R.J. French Renaissance Monarchy: Francis I and Henry II (2nd ed. 1997), historiography excerpt
  • Knecht, R.J. "An Update on the Reign of Francis I." History Compass 1.1 (2003) pp. 1–9.
  • Knecht, R.J. "Francis and Paris" History 66#216 (1981) online
  • Knecht, Robert J. "'Born between two women ...' Jules Michelet and Francis I." Renaissance Studies (2000) 14#3: 329–343 online.
  • Major, J. Russell. From Renaissance Monarchy to Absolute Monarchy. (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994).
  • Mansfield, Lisa. Representations of Renaissance Monarchy: Francis I and the Image-Makers (2016).
  • Norwich, John Julius. Four Princes: Henry VIII, Francis I, Charles V, Suleiman the Magnificent and the Obsessions that Forged Modern Europe. (Grove Press, 2016).
  • Parker, Geoffrey. Emperor: A New Life of Charles V (Yale University Press, 2019).
  • Potter, D. L. Renaissance France at War: Armies, Culture and Society, c. 1480–1560 (Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press, 2008).
  • Reston Jr., James. Defenders of the Faith: Christianity and Islam Battle for the Soul of Europe, 1520–1536 (Penguin, 2009), popular history.
  • Richardson, Glenn. "Le roi-chevalier." History Today (May 2015) 65#5, pp. 39–45.
  • Richardson, Glenn. "The Field of the Cloth of Gold" History Today (July 2020) 70#7 pp. 28–39.
  • Richardson, Glenn. The Field of the Cloth of Gold (New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2014).
  • Richardson, Glenn. "Good Friends and Brothers? Francis I and Henry VIII" History Today (1994) 44#9 pp. 20–26.
  • Seward, Desmond. Prince of the Renaissance: The Life of François I (New York: Macmillan, 1973). online

External links

  •   Media related to Francis I of France at Wikimedia Commons
Francis I of France
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 12 September 1494 Died: 31 March 1547
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of France
1 January 1515 – 31 March 1547
Succeeded by
Preceded byas sole duchess Duke of Brittany
18 May 1514 – 1 January 1515
with Claude
Succeeded byas sole duchess
Preceded by Duke of Milan
1515–1521
Succeeded by
Preceded by Duke of Milan
1524–1525
French nobility
Vacant
Merged in the crown
Title last held by
Louis
Duke of Valois
1498 – 1 January 1515
Vacant
Merged in the crown
Title next held by
Margaret
Preceded by Count of Angoulême
1 January 1496 – 1 January 1515
Vacant
Merged in the crown
Title next held by
Louise

francis, france, francis, french, françois, middle, french, francoys, september, 1494, march, 1547, king, france, from, 1515, until, death, 1547, charles, count, angoulême, louise, savoy, succeeded, first, cousin, once, removed, father, louis, died, without, f. Francis I French Francois Ier Middle French Francoys 12 September 1494 31 March 1547 was King of France from 1515 until his death in 1547 He was the son of Charles Count of Angouleme and Louise of Savoy He succeeded his first cousin once removed and father in law Louis XII who died without a son Francis IPortrait by Jean Clouet c 1530King of France more Reign1 January 1515 31 March 1547Coronation25 January 1515PredecessorLouis XIISuccessorHenry IIDuke of MilanReign11 October 1515 20 November 1521PredecessorMassimiliano SforzaSuccessorFrancesco II SforzaBorn12 September 1494Chateau de Cognac Cognac FranceDied31 March 1547 1547 03 31 aged 52 Chateau de Rambouillet FranceBurial23 May 1547Basilica of St Denis FranceSpouseClaude Duchess of Brittany m 1514 died 1524 wbr Eleanor of Austria m 1530 wbr Issueamong others Francis III Duke of BrittanyHenry II of FranceMadeleine Queen of ScotsCharles Duke of OrleansMargaret Duchess of SavoyHouseValois AngoulemeFatherCharles Count of AngoulemeMotherLouise of SavoyReligionCatholicismSignatureA prodigious patron of the arts he promoted the emergent French Renaissance by attracting many Italian artists to work for him including Leonardo da Vinci who brought the Mona Lisa with him which Francis had acquired Francis reign saw important cultural changes with the growth of central power in France the spread of humanism and Protestantism and the beginning of French exploration of the New World Jacques Cartier and others claimed lands in the Americas for France and paved the way for the expansion of the first French colonial empire For his role in the development and promotion of the French language he became known as le Pere et Restaurateur des Lettres the Father and Restorer of Letters 1 He was also known as Francois au Grand Nez Francis of the Large Nose the Grand Colas and the Roi Chevalier the Knight King 1 In keeping with his predecessors Francis continued the Italian Wars The succession of his great rival Emperor Charles V to the Habsburg Netherlands and the throne of Spain followed by his election as Holy Roman Emperor led to France being geographically encircled by the Habsburg monarchy In his struggle against Imperial hegemony Francis sought the support of Henry VIII of England at the Field of the Cloth of Gold 2 When this was unsuccessful he formed a Franco Ottoman alliance with the Muslim sultan Suleiman the Magnificent a controversial move for a Christian king at the time 3 Contents 1 Early life and Accession 2 Reign 2 1 Patron of the arts 2 2 Man of letters 2 3 Construction 2 4 Military action 2 5 Relations with the New World and Asia 2 5 1 Americas 2 5 2 Far East Asia 2 5 3 Ottoman Empire 2 6 Bureaucratic reform and language policy 2 7 Religious policies 2 8 Death 2 9 Image and reputation 3 Marriage and issue 4 Francis I in films stage and literature 5 Ancestors 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life and Accession EditFrancis of Orleans was born on 12 September 1494 at the Chateau de Cognac in the town of Cognac 1 which at that time lay in the province of Saintonge a part of the Duchy of Aquitaine Today the town lies in the department of Charente Francis was the only son of Charles of Orleans Count of Angouleme and Louise of Savoy and a great great grandson of King Charles V of France 4 His family was not expected to inherit the throne as his third cousin King Charles VIII was still young at the time of his birth as was his father s cousin the Duke of Orleans later King Louis XII However Charles VIII died childless in 1498 and was succeeded by Louis XII who himself had no male heir 5 The Salic Law prevented women from inheriting the throne Therefore the four year old Francis who was already Count of Angouleme after the death of his own father two years earlier became the heir presumptive to the throne of France in 1498 and was vested with the title of Duke of Valois 5 In 1505 Louis XII having fallen ill ordered for his daughter Claude and Francis to be married immediately but only through an assembly of nobles were the two engaged 6 Claude was heir presumptive to the Duchy of Brittany through her mother Anne of Brittany Following Anne s death the marriage took place on 18 May 1514 7 On 1 January 1515 Louis died and Francis inherited the throne He was crowned King of France in the Cathedral of Reims on 25 January 1515 with Claude as his queen consort 8 Reign Edit Francis I painted in 1515 As Francis was receiving his education ideas emerging from the Italian Renaissance were influential in France Some of his tutors such as Francois Desmoulins de Rochefort his Latin instructor who later during the reign of Francis was named Grand Aumonier de France and Christophe de Longueil a Brabantian humanist were attracted by these new ways of thinking and attempted to influence Francis His academic education had been in arithmetic geography grammar history reading spelling and writing and he became proficient in Hebrew Italian Latin and Spanish Francis came to learn chivalry dancing and music and he loved archery falconry horseback riding hunting jousting real tennis and wrestling He ended up reading philosophy and theology and he was fascinated with art literature poetry and science His mother who had a high admiration for Italian Renaissance art passed this interest on to her son Although Francis did not receive a humanist education he was more influenced by humanism than any previous French king Patron of the arts Edit Francis I receiving the last breath of Leonardo da Vinci in 1519 by Ingres painted in 1818 By the time he ascended the throne in 1515 the Renaissance had arrived in France and Francis became an enthusiastic patron of the arts At the time of his accession the royal palaces of France were ornamented with only a scattering of great paintings and not a single sculpture not ancient nor modern Francis patronized many great artists of his time including Andrea del Sarto and Leonardo da Vinci the latter of whom was persuaded to make France his home during his last years While da Vinci painted very little during his years in France he brought with him many of his greatest works including the Mona Lisa known in France as La Joconde and these remained in France after his death Other major artists to receive Francis patronage included the goldsmith Benvenuto Cellini and the painters Rosso Fiorentino Giulio Romano and Primaticcio all of whom were employed in decorating Francis various palaces He also invited the noted architect Sebastiano Serlio 1475 1554 who enjoyed a fruitful late career in France 9 Francis also commissioned a number of agents in Italy to procure notable works of art and ship them to France Man of letters Edit Francis was also renowned as a man of letters When Francis comes up in a conversation among characters in Baldassare Castiglione s Book of the Courtier it is as the great hope to bring culture to the war obsessed French nation Not only did Francis support a number of major writers of the period but he was also a poet himself if not one of particular abilities Francis worked diligently at improving the royal library He appointed the great French humanist Guillaume Bude as chief librarian and began to expand the collection Francis employed agents in Italy to look for rare books and manuscripts just as he had agents looking for artworks During his reign the size of the library greatly increased Not only did he expand the library there is also evidence citation needed that he read the books he bought for it a much rarer event in the royal annals Francis set an important precedent by opening his library to scholars from around the world in order to facilitate the diffusion of knowledge In 1537 Francis signed the Ordonnance de Montpellier which decreed that his library be given a copy of every book to be sold in France Francis older sister Marguerite Queen of Navarre was also an accomplished writer who produced the classic collection of short stories known as the Heptameron Francis corresponded with the abbess and philosopher Claude de Bectoz of whose letters he was so fond that he would carry them around and show them to the ladies of his court 10 Together with his sister he visited her in Tarascon 11 12 Construction Edit Francis s Chateau de Chambord displays a distinct French Renaissance architecture Francis poured vast amounts of money into new structures He continued the work of his predecessors on the Chateau d Amboise and also started renovations on the Chateau de Blois Early in his reign he began construction of the magnificent Chateau de Chambord inspired by the architectural styles of the Italian renaissance and perhaps even designed by Leonardo da Vinci Francis rebuilt the Louvre Palace transforming it from a medieval fortress into a building of Renaissance splendour He financed the building of a new City Hall the Hotel de Ville for Paris in order to have control over the building s design He constructed the Chateau de Madrid in the Bois de Boulogne and rebuilt the Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye The largest of Francis building projects was the reconstruction and expansion of the Chateau de Fontainebleau which quickly became his favourite place of residence as well as the residence of his official mistress Anne Duchess of Etampes Each of Francis projects was luxuriously decorated both inside and out Fontainebleau for instance had a gushing fountain in its courtyard where quantities of wine were mixed with the water Military action Edit Francis I and Holy Roman Emperor Charles V made peace at the Truce of Nice in 1538 Francis actually refused to meet Charles in person and the treaty was signed in separate rooms Although the Italian Wars 1494 1559 came to dominate the reign of Francis I the wars were not the sole focus of his policies Francis merely continued the incessant wars that his predecessors had started and that his successors on the throne of France would drag on after Francis death Indeed the Italian Wars had begun when Milan sent a plea to King Charles VIII of France for protection against the aggressive actions of the King of Naples 13 Militarily and diplomatically Francis reign was a mixed bag of success and failure Francis tried and failed to become Holy Roman Emperor at the Imperial election of 1519 However there were also temporary victories such as in the portion of the Italian Wars called the War of the League of Cambrai 1508 1516 and more specifically to the final stage of that war which history refers to simply as Francis First Italian War 1515 1516 when Francis routed the combined forces of the Papal States and the Old Swiss Confederacy at Marignano on 13 15 September 1515 This victory at Marignano allowed Francis to capture the Italian city state of Milan Later in November 1521 during the Four Years War 1521 1526 and facing the advancing Imperial forces of the Holy Roman Empire and open revolt within Milan Francis was forced to abandon Milan thus cancelling the triumph at Marignano Much of the military activity of Francis s reign was focused on his sworn enemy the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V Francis and Charles maintained an intensely personal rivalry Charles in fact brashly challenged Francis to single combat multiple times In addition to the Holy Roman Empire Charles personally ruled Spain Austria and a number of smaller possessions neighbouring France He was thus a constant threat to Francis kingdom Francis I at the Battle of Marignano Francis attempted to arrange an alliance with Henry VIII of England at the famous meeting at the Field of Cloth of Gold on 7 June 1520 but despite a lavish fortnight of diplomacy they failed to reach an agreement 14 Francis and Henry were both obsessed with dreams of power and chivalric glory their relationship featured intense personal and dynastic rivalry Francis was driven by his intense eagerness for retaking Milan despite the strong opposition of other Powers Henry was likewise determined to recapture northern France which Francis could never allow 15 Francis suffered his most devastating defeat at the Battle of Pavia on 24 February 1525 during part of the continuing Italian Wars known as the Four Years War Francis was actually taken prisoner Cesare Hercolani injured his horse and Francis was captured by Diego Davila Alonso Pita da Veiga and Juan de Urbieta from Guipuzcoa For this reason Hercolani was named Victor of the battle of Pavia Zuppa alla Pavese was supposedly invented on the spot to feed the captive king right after the battle 16 Francis I was held captive in Madrid In a letter to his mother he wrote Of all things nothing remains to me but honour and life which is safe This line has come down in history famously as All is lost save honour 17 Francis made major concessions to Charles V in the Treaty of Madrid 1526 signed on 14 January before he was freed on 17 March An ultimatum from Ottoman Sultan Suleiman to Charles V also played an important role in his release Francis I surrendered any claims to Naples and Milan in Italy 18 Francis recognised the independence of the Duchy of Burgundy which had been part of France since the death of Charles the Bold in 1477 19 And finally Francis was betrothed to Charles sister Eleanor Francis was allowed to return to France in exchange for his two sons Francis and Henry but once he was free he argued that his agreement with Charles was made under duress He also claimed that the agreement was void because his sons were taken hostage with the implication that his word alone could not be trusted Thus he firmly repudiated it A renewed alliance with England enabled Francis to repudiate the treaty of Madrid Detail of a tapestry depicting the Battle of Pavia woven from a cartoon by Bernard van Orley c 1531 Francis persevered in his hatred of Charles V and his desire to control Italy By the mid 1520s Pope Clement VII wished to liberate Italy from foreign domination especially that of Charles V so he allied with Venice to form the League of Cognac Francis joined the League in May 1526 in the War of the League of Cognac of 1526 30 20 Francis allies proved weak and the war was ended by the Treaty of Cambrai 1529 the Peace of the Ladies negotiated by Francis mother and Charles aunt 21 The two boys were released and Francis married Eleanor After the League of Cognac failed Francis concluded a secret alliance with the Landgrave of Hesse on 27 January 1534 This was directed against Charles V on the pretext of assisting the Duke of Wurttemberg to regain his traditional seat from which Charles had removed him in 1519 Francis also obtained the help of the Ottoman Empire and after the death of Francesco II Sforza ruler of Milan renewed the contest in Italy in the Italian War of 1536 1538 This round of fighting which had little result was ended by the Truce of Nice The agreement collapsed however which led to Francis final attempt on Italy in the Italian War of 1542 1546 This time Francis managed to hold off the forces of Charles V and Henry VIII Charles V was forced to sign the Treaty of Crepy because of his financial difficulties and conflicts with the Schmalkaldic League 22 Relations with the New World and Asia Edit The voyage of Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524 Francis had been much aggrieved at the papal bull Aeterni regis in June 1481 Portuguese rule over Africa and the Indies was confirmed by Pope Sixtus IV Thirteen years later on 7 June 1494 Portugal and the Crown of Castille signed the Treaty of Tordesillas under which the newly discovered lands would be divided between the two signatories All this prompted King Francis to declare The sun shines for me as it does for others I would very much like to see the clause of Adam s will by which I should be denied my share of the world 23 In order to counterbalance the power of the Habsburg Empire under Charles V especially its control of large parts of the New World through the Crown of Spain Francis I endeavoured to develop contacts with the New World and Asia Fleets were sent to the Americas and the Far East and close contacts were developed with the Ottoman Empire permitting the development of French Mediterranean trade as well as the establishment of a strategic military alliance The port city now known as Le Havre was founded in 1517 during the early years of Francis reign The construction of a new port was urgently needed in order to replace the ancient harbours of Honfleur and Harfleur whose utility had decreased due to silting Le Havre was originally named Franciscopolis after the King who founded it but this name did not survive into later reigns Americas Edit Further information France Americas relations In 1524 Francis assisted the citizens of Lyon in financing the expedition of Giovanni da Verrazzano to North America On this expedition Verrazzano visited the present site of New York City naming it New Angouleme and claimed Newfoundland for the French crown Verrazzano s letter to Francis of 8 July 1524 is known as the Cellere Codex 24 In 1531 Bertrand d Ornesan tried to establish a French trading post at Pernambuco Brazil 25 In 1534 Francis sent Jacques Cartier to explore the St Lawrence River in Quebec to find certain islands and lands where it is said there must be great quantities of gold and other riches 26 In 1541 Francis sent Jean Francois de Roberval to settle Canada and to provide for the spread of the Holy Catholic faith Far East Asia Edit Further information France Asia relations An example of the Dieppe maps showing Sumatra Nicholas Vallard 1547 French trade with East Asia was initiated during the reign of Francis I with the help of shipowner Jean Ango In July 1527 a French Norman trading ship from the city of Rouen is recorded by the Portuguese Joao de Barros as having arrived in the Indian city of Diu 27 In 1529 Jean Parmentier on board the Sacre and the Pensee reached Sumatra 27 28 Upon its return the expedition triggered the development of the Dieppe maps influencing the work of Dieppe cartographers such as Jean Rotz 29 Ottoman Empire Edit Further information Franco Ottoman alliance and Orientalism in early modern France Under the reign of Francis I France became the first country in Europe to establish formal relations with the Ottoman Empire and to set up instruction in the Arabic language under the guidance of Guillaume Postel at the College de France 30 Francis I left and Suleiman the Magnificent right initiated a Franco Ottoman alliance Both were separately painted by Titian c 1530 In a watershed moment in European diplomacy Francis came to an understanding with the Ottoman Empire that developed into a Franco Ottoman alliance The objective for Francis was to find an ally against the House of Habsburg 31 The pretext used by Francis was the protection of the Christians in Ottoman lands The alliance has been called the first nonideological diplomatic alliance of its kind between a Christian and non Christian empire 32 It did however cause quite a scandal in the Christian world 33 and was designated the impious alliance or the sacrilegious union of the French Lily and the Ottoman Crescent Nevertheless it endured for many years since it served the objective interests of both parties 34 The two powers colluded against Charles V and in 1543 they even combined for a joint naval assault in the Siege of Nice In 1533 Francis I sent colonel Pierre de Piton as ambassador to Morocco initiating official France Morocco relations 35 In a letter to Francis I dated 13 August 1533 the Wattassid ruler of Fez Ahmed ben Mohammed welcomed French overtures and granted freedom of shipping and protection of French traders Bureaucratic reform and language policy Edit The Ordinance of Villers Cotterets in August 1539 prescribed the use of French in official documents Francis took several steps to eradicate the monopoly of Latin as the language of knowledge In 1530 he declared French the national language of the kingdom and that same year opened the College des trois langues or College Royal following the recommendation of humanist Guillaume Bude Students at the College could study Greek Hebrew and Aramaic then Arabic under Guillaume Postel beginning in 1539 36 In 1539 in his castle in Villers Cotterets 37 Francis signed the important edict known as Ordinance of Villers Cotterets which among other reforms made French the administrative language of the kingdom as a replacement for Latin This same edict required priests to register births marriages and deaths and to establish a registry office in every parish This initiated the first records of vital statistics with filiations available in Europe Religious policies Edit Divisions in Christianity in Western Europe during Francis reign created lasting international rifts Martin Luther s preaching and writing sparked the Protestant Reformation which spread through much of Europe including France Massacre of Merindol in 1545 Initially Francis was relatively tolerant of the new movement despite burning several heretics at the Place Maubert in 1523 38 He was influenced by his beloved sister Marguerite de Navarre who was genuinely attracted by Luther s theology 39 Francis even considered it politically useful as it caused many German princes to turn against his enemy Charles V Francis attitude towards Protestantism changed for the worse following the Affair of the Placards on the night of 17 October 1534 in which notices appeared on the streets of Paris and other major cities denouncing the Catholic mass The most fervent Catholics were outraged by the notice s allegations Francis himself came to view the movement as a plot against him and began to persecute its followers Protestants were jailed and executed In some areas whole villages were destroyed In Paris after 1540 Francis had heretics such as Etienne Dolet tortured and burned 40 Printing was censored and leading Protestant reformers such as John Calvin were forced into exile The persecutions soon numbered thousands of dead and tens of thousands of homeless 41 Persecutions against Protestants were codified in the Edict of Fontainebleau 1540 issued by Francis Major acts of violence continued as when Francis ordered the execution of one of the historical pre Lutheran groups the Waldensians at the Massacre of Merindol in 1545 Death Edit Francis died at the Chateau de Rambouillet on 31 March 1547 on his son and successor s 28th birthday It is said that he died complaining about the weight of a crown that he had first perceived as a gift from God 42 He was interred with his first wife Claude Duchess of Brittany in Saint Denis Basilica He was succeeded by his son Henry II Francis tomb and that of his wife and mother along with the tombs of other French kings and members of the royal family were desecrated on 20 October 1793 during the Reign of Terror at the height of the French Revolution Image and reputation Edit Grand culverin of Francis I with his emblem and motto A gift to his Ottoman allies recovered in Algiers in 1830 Musee de l Armee Francis I has a poor reputation in France his 500th anniversary was little noted in 1994 Popular and scholarly historical memory ignores his building of so many fine chateaux his stunning art collection and his lavish patronage of scholars and artists He is seen as a playboy who disgraced France by allowing himself to be defeated and taken prisoner at Pavia The historian Jules Michelet set the negative image 43 Francis personal emblem was the salamander and his Latin motto was Nutrisco et extinguo I nourish the good and extinguish the bad 44 His long nose earned him the nickname Francois du Grand Nez Francis of the Big Nose he was also colloquially known as the Grand Colas or Bonhomme Colas For his personal involvement in battles he was known as le Roi Chevalier the Knight King or le Roi Guerrier the Warrior King 45 British historian Glenn Richardson considers Francis a success He was a king who ruled as well as reigned He knew the importance of war and a high international profile in staking his claim to be a great warrior king of France In battle he was brave if impetuous which led equally to triumph and disaster Domestically Francis exercised the spirit and letter of the royal prerogative to its fullest extent He bargained hard over taxation and other issues with interest groups often by appearing not to bargain at all He enhanced royal power and concentrated decision making in a tight personal executive but used a wide range of offices gifts and his own personal charisma to build up an elective personal affinity among the ranks of the nobility upon whom his reign depended Under Francis the court of France was at the height of its prestige and international influence during the 16th century Although opinion has varied considerably over the centuries since his death his cultural legacy to France to its Renaissance was immense and ought to secure his reputation as among the greatest of its kings 46 Marriage and issue EditOn 18 May 1514 Francis married his second cousin Claude the daughter of King Louis XII of France and Duchess Anne of Brittany The couple had seven children Louise 19 August 1515 21 September 1518 died young engaged to Charles I of Spain almost from birth until death Charlotte 23 October 1516 8 September 1524 died young engaged to Charles I of Spain from 1518 until death Francis 28 February 1518 10 August 1536 who succeeded his mother Claude as Duke of Brittany but died aged 18 unmarried with illegitimate issue Henry II 31 March 1519 10 July 1559 Succeeded his father Francis I as King of France and his brother Francis as Duke of Brittany Married Catherine de Medici had issue Madeleine 10 August 1520 2 July 1537 who married James V of Scotland and had no issue Charles 22 January 1522 9 September 1545 who died unmarried and childless Margaret 5 June 1523 14 September 1574 who married Emmanuel Philibert Duke of Savoy in 1559 and had issue On 7 July 1530 Francis I married his second wife Eleanor of Austria 47 Queen widow of Portugal a sister of Emperor Charles V The couple had no children During his reign Francis kept two official mistresses at court The first was Francoise de Foix Countess of Chateaubriant In 1526 she was replaced by the blonde haired cultured Anne de Pisseleu d Heilly Duchess of Etampes who with the death of Queen Claude two years earlier wielded far more political power at court than her predecessor had done Another of his earlier mistresses was allegedly Mary Boleyn mistress of King Henry VIII and sister of Henry s future wife Anne Boleyn 48 Francis I in films stage and literature EditThe amorous exploits of Francis inspired the 1832 play by Fanny Kemble Francis the First and the 1832 play by Victor Hugo Le Roi s amuse The King s Amusement which featured the jester Triboulet the inspiration for the 1851 opera Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi Francis was first played in the George Melies short Francois Ier et Triboulet 1907 by an unknown actor possibly Melies He has been since played by Claude Garry 1910 William Powell 1922 Aime Simon Girard 1937 Sacha Guitry 1937 Gerard Oury 1953 Jean Marais 1955 Pedro Armendariz 1956 Claude Titre 1962 Bernard Pierre Donnadieu 1990 Timothy West 1998 and Emmanuel Leconte 2007 2010 Francis was portrayed by Peter Gilmore in the comedy Carry On Henry charting the fictitious two extra wives of Henry VIII including Marie cousin of King Francis Francis receives a mention in Laurence Sterne s novel Tristram Shandy The narrator claims that the king wishing to win the favour of Switzerland offers to make the country the godmother of his son When however their choice of name conflicts he declares war He is also mentioned in Jean de la Brete s novel Reine Mon oncle et mon cure where the main character Reine de Lavalle idolises Francis after reading a biography of the king much to the dismay of the local priest He often receives mentions in novels on the lives of Mary and Anne Boleyn both of whom were educated at his court Mary had according to several accounts been Francis one time mistress and Anne had been a favourite of his sister the novels The Lady in the Tower The Other Boleyn Girl The Last Boleyn Dear Heart How Like You This and Mademoiselle Boleyn feature Francis He appears in Hilary Mantel s Wolf Hall about Henry VIII s minister Thomas Cromwell and is often referred to in its sequel Bring Up the Bodies Francis is portrayed in Diane Haeger s novel Courtesan about Diane de Poitiers and Henri II Francis appears as the patron of Benvenuto Cellini in the 1843 French novel L Orfevre du roi ou Ascanio by Alexandre Dumas pere Samuel Shellabarger s novel The King s Cavalier describes Francis the man and the cultural and political circumstances of his reign in some detail He and his court set the scene for Friedrich Schiller s ballad Der Handschuh The Glove Francis I Timothy West and his son Henry II Dougray Scott are central figures in the 1998 movie Ever After a retelling of the Cinderella story The plot includes Leonardo da Vinci Patrick Godfrey arriving at court with the Mona Lisa He is played by Alfonso Bassave in the TVE series Carlos rey emperador opposite Alvaro Cervantes as Charles V Colm Meaney portrays the king in The Serpent Queen which premiered on Starz in 2022 Ancestors EditAncestors of Francis I of France16 Charles V of France 54 8 Louis I Duke of Orleans 49 17 Joanna of Bourbon 54 4 John Count of Angouleme 49 18 Gian Galeazzo Visconti 55 9 Valentina Visconti 49 19 Isabelle of Valois 55 2 Charles Count of Angouleme20 Alan VIII Viscount of Rohan 56 10 Alan IX Viscount of Rohan 50 21 Beatrice of Clisson 56 5 Margaret of Rohan 50 22 John IV Duke of Brittany 57 11 Margaret of Brittany 50 23 Joan of Navarre 57 1 Francis I of France24 Antipope Felix V 52 12 Louis Duke of Savoy 52 25 Mary of Burgundy 52 6 Philip II Duke of Savoy 51 26 Janus of Cyprus 58 13 Anne of Cyprus 52 27 Charlotte of Bourbon 58 3 Louise of Savoy28 John I Duke of Bourbon 59 14 Charles I Duke of Bourbon 53 29 Marie Duchess of Auvergne 59 7 Margaret of Bourbon 51 30 John II Duke of Burgundy 60 15 Agnes of Burgundy 53 31 Margaret of Bavaria 61 See also Edit Biography portal France portalCastell del Patriarca Franco Ottoman allianceReferences Edit a b c Knecht R J Francis I Cambridge University Press 1984 1 2 Knecht R J Francis I 77 78 Knecht R J Francis I 224 225 230 Knecht Robert The Valois Hambledon Continuum 2004 112 a b Knecht R J Francis I 3 Knecht R J Francis I 8 9 Knecht R J Francis I 11 Knecht R J Francis I 16 Serlio Sebastiano 1996 On Architecture Hart amp Hicks ed Volume 2 Yale pp xi Plats John 1826 A New Universal Biography Forming the first volume of series III Sherwood Gilbert and Piper p 301 Cholakian Patricia Francis Cholakian Rouben Charles 2006 Marguerite de Navarre mother of the Renaissance Columbia University Press p 49 ISBN 0231134126 Faillon Etienne Michel 1835 Monumens de l eglise de Sainte Marthe a Tarascon departement des Bouches du Rhone in French Tarascon Elisee Aubanel Imprimeur libraire p 57 Hoyt Robert S amp Stanley Chodorow Europe in the Middle Ages Harcourt Brace amp Jovanovich Inc New York 1976 p 619 Glenn Richardson 2014 The Field of Cloth of Gold Yale University Press pp 32 36 ISBN 978 0300160390 OCLC 862814775 Glen Richardson Good friends and brothers History Today 1994 44 9 pp 20 26 Andrews Colman Country Cooking of Italy San Francisco Chronicle Books 2012 p 60 ISBN 978 1452123929 Isaac Jules 1911 Francis I of France In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 935 Mallet Michael and Shaw Christine The Italian Wars 1494 1559 Harlow England Pearson Education Limited 2012 p 153 Kendall Paul Murray Louis XI The Universal Spider New York W W Norton and Company 1971 p 314 Michael Mallett and Christine Shaw The Italian Wars 1494 1559 p 155 Glenn Richardson Le roi chevalier History Today May 2015 p 41 Geoffrey Parker Emperor 2019 pp 308 312 Lacoursiere Jacques 2005 Canada Quebec 1534 2000 Quebec Septentrion p 28 ISBN 978 2894481868 Destombes M 1954 Nautical Charts Attributed to Verrazano 1525 1528 Imago Mundi 11 57 66 doi 10 1080 03085695408592059 OCLC 1752690 Knecht R J Francis I Cambridge University Press 1982 375 Knecht R J Francis I 333 a b Benians Ernest Alfred Newton Arthur Percival Rose John Holland 1940 The English history of the British Empire p 61 Retrieved 23 August 2012 Oaten Edward Farley 1991 European travellers in India p 123 ISBN 978 8120607101 Retrieved 23 August 2012 Quinn David B 1990 Explorers and colonies America 1500 1625 p 57 ISBN 978 1852850241 Retrieved 23 August 2012 Toomer G J Eastern wisdom and learning the study of Arabic in seventeenth century p 26 27 Miller William 4 January 1923 The Ottoman Empire and its successors 1801 1922 Being a rev and enl ed of The Ottoman Empire 1801 1913 Cambridge University Press via Internet Archive Kann Robert A 1980 Kann p 62 ISBN 978 0520042063 Retrieved 23 August 2012 Miller p 2 Merriman Roger Bigelow 2007 Merriman p 133 ISBN 978 1406772722 Retrieved 23 August 2012 Francois I hoping that Morocco would open up to France as easily as Mexico had to Spain sent a commission half commercial and half diplomatic which he confided to one Pierre de Piton The story of his mission is not without interest in The conquest of Morocco by Cecil Vivian Usborne S Paul amp co ltd 1936 p 33 McCabe Ina Baghdianitz Orientalism in early modern France ISBN 978 1845203740 p 25 ff Knecht Robert J 2002 The rise and fall of Renaissance France 1483 1610 p 158 ISBN 978 0631227298 Retrieved 23 August 2012 Pierre Goubert The Course of French History Psychology Press 1991 p 92 Pierre Goubert The Course of French History Psychology Press 1991 pp 91 92 Goubert op cit p 92 R J Knecht Francis I pp 405 406 Cavendish Richard The Marriage of Mary Queen of Scots www historytoday com Robert J Knecht Born between two women Jules Michelet and Francis I Renaissance Studies 2000 14 3 329 343 online Richardson 2015 Larousse 1 Richardson 2015 p 45 Wurzbach Constantin von 1860 Habsburg Eleonore von Oesterreich Tochter Philipp s von Oesterreich Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Vienna Verlag L C Zamarski Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII X no 450 a b c Adams Tracy 2010 The Life and Afterlife of Isabeau of Bavaria Johns Hopkins University Press p 255 a b c Gicquel Yvonig in French 1986 Alain IX de Rohan 1382 1462 un grand seigneur de l age d or de la Bretagne in French Editions Jean Picollec p 480 ISBN 9782864770718 a b Jackson Laufer Guida Myrl 1999 Women Rulers Throughout the Ages An Illustrated Guide ABC CLIO p 231 ISBN 9781576070918 a b c d Palluel Guillard Andre La Maison de Savoie in French Conseil Savoie Mont Blanc Archived from the original on 8 July 2014 Retrieved 28 June 2018 a b Leguai Andre 2005 Agnes de Bourgogne duchesse de Bourbon 1405 1476 Les ducs de Bourbon le Bourbonnais et le royaume de France a la fin du Moyen Age The dukes of Bourbon the Bourbonnais and the kingdom of France at the end of the Middle Ages in French Yzeure Societe bourbonnaise des etudes locales pp 145 160 a b Anselme de Sainte Marie Pere 1726 Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France Genealogical and chronological history of the royal house of France in French Vol 1 3rd ed Paris La compagnie des libraires p 110 a b Azzolini Monica 2013 The Duke and the Stars Astrology and Politics in Renaissance Milan Harvard University Press p 120 a b Y Gicquel Alain IX de Rohan p 97 a b Jones Michael 1988 The Creation of Brittany London Hambledon Press p 123 ISBN 090762880X a b Hill George 2010 Janus 1398 1432 A History of Cyprus Cambridge University Press p 468 ISBN 9781108020633 a b Anselme vol 3 p 137 O Reilly Elizabeth Boyle 1921 How France Built Her Cathedrals A Study in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries Harper amp Brothers p 265 van Leeuwen Canneman Mieke 13 January 2014 Margaretha van Beieren 1363 1424 Margaret of Bavaria Online Dictionary of Dutch Women Digitaal Vrouwenlexicon van Nederland Retrieved 29 June 2018 Further reading EditClough C H Francis I and the Courtiers of Castiglione s Courtier European Studies Review vol 8 1978 Denieul Cormier Anne The Renaissance in France trans Anne Fremantle and Christopher Fremantle London George Allen and Unwin Ltd 1969 Frieda Leonie Francis I The Maker of Modern France New York HarperCollins 2018 Grant Arthur James The French Monarchy Volume I New York Howard Fertig 1970 Guy John Tudor England Oxford Oxford University Press 1988 Isom Verhaaren Christine Barbarossa and His Army Who Came to Succor All of Us Ottoman and French Views of Their Joint Campaign of 1543 1544 French Historical Studies 30 3 2007 395 425 online dead link Jensen De Lamar The Ottoman Turks in Sixteenth Century French Diplomacy Sixteenth Century Journal 16 4 1985 451 470 online Jensen De Lamar ed Renaissance Europe Age of Recovery and Reconciliation Lexington Massachusetts D C Heath and Company 2nd ed 1991 Knecht R J Renaissance Warrior and Patron The Reign of Francis I Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 Francis 20I amp f false online Knecht Robert J A Battle of Giants History Today 2016 88 1 pp 49 54 on Battle of Marignano Italy in 1515 Knecht R J Francis I Cambridge University Press 1982 online Knecht R J French Renaissance Monarchy Francis I and Henry II 2nd ed 1997 historiography excerpt Knecht R J An Update on the Reign of Francis I History Compass 1 1 2003 pp 1 9 Knecht R J Francis and Paris History 66 216 1981 online Knecht Robert J Born between two women Jules Michelet and Francis I Renaissance Studies 2000 14 3 329 343 online Major J Russell From Renaissance Monarchy to Absolute Monarchy Johns Hopkins University Press 1994 Mansfield Lisa Representations of Renaissance Monarchy Francis I and the Image Makers 2016 Norwich John Julius Four Princes Henry VIII Francis I Charles V Suleiman the Magnificent and the Obsessions that Forged Modern Europe Grove Press 2016 Parker Geoffrey Emperor A New Life of Charles V Yale University Press 2019 Potter D L Renaissance France at War Armies Culture and Society c 1480 1560 Woodbridge UK Boydell Press 2008 Reston Jr James Defenders of the Faith Christianity and Islam Battle for the Soul of Europe 1520 1536 Penguin 2009 popular history Richardson Glenn Le roi chevalier History Today May 2015 65 5 pp 39 45 Richardson Glenn The Field of the Cloth of Gold History Today July 2020 70 7 pp 28 39 Richardson Glenn The Field of the Cloth of Gold New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press 2014 Richardson Glenn Good Friends and Brothers Francis I and Henry VIII History Today 1994 44 9 pp 20 26 Seward Desmond Prince of the Renaissance The Life of Francois I New York Macmillan 1973 onlineExternal links Edit Media related to Francis I of France at Wikimedia CommonsFrancis I of FranceHouse of Valois Orleans Angouleme branchCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyBorn 12 September 1494 Died 31 March 1547Regnal titlesPreceded byLouis XII King of France1 January 1515 31 March 1547 Succeeded byHenry IIPreceded byClaudeas sole duchess Duke of Brittany18 May 1514 1 January 1515with Claude Succeeded byClaudeas sole duchessPreceded byMaximilian Sforza Duke of Milan1515 1521 Succeeded byFrancis II SforzaPreceded byFrancis II Sforza Duke of Milan1524 1525French nobilityVacantMerged in the crownTitle last held byLouis Duke of Valois1498 1 January 1515 VacantMerged in the crownTitle next held byMargaretPreceded byCharles Count of Angouleme1 January 1496 1 January 1515 VacantMerged in the crownTitle next held byLouise Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis I of France amp oldid 1142252875, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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