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Françoise d'Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon

Françoise d'Aubigné (27 November 1635 – 15 April 1719), known first as Madame Scarron and subsequently as Madame de Maintenon (French: [madam mɛ̃t(ə)nɔ̃] ), was a French noblewoman and the second wife of Louis XIV of France from 1683 until his death in 1715. Although she was never considered queen of France, as the marriage was carried out in secret, Madame de Maintenon had considerable political influence as one of the King's closest advisers and the governess of the royal children.

Madame

Françoise d'Aubigné
Marquise of Maintenon
Portrait by Pierre Mignard, 1694
Born(1635-11-27)27 November 1635
Niort, Kingdom of France
Died15 April 1719(1719-04-15) (aged 83)
Saint-Cyr-l'École, Kingdom of France
Noble familyd'Aubigné
Spouse(s)
(m. 1652; died 1660)
Louis XIV (private)
(m. 1683; died 1715)
FatherConstant d'Aubigné
MotherJeanne de Cardilhac
Signature

Born into an impoverished Huguenot noble family, Françoise married the poet Paul Scarron in 1652, which allowed her access to the Parisian high society. She was widowed in 1660, but later saw her fortunes improve through her friendship with Louis XIV's mistress, Madame de Montespan, who tasked her with the upbringing of the king's illegitimate children. She was made royal governess when the children were legitimised, and in 1675 Louis XIV granted her the title Marquise de Maintenon. By the late 1670s, she had essentially supplanted Montespan as the king's maîtresse-en-titre.

After the death of Queen Maria Theresa in 1683, Madame de Maintenon married Louis in a private ceremony. She came to be regarded as the second most powerful person in France, and her piety had a strong influence on her husband, who became firmer in his Catholic faith and had no more open mistresses. In 1686, she founded the Maison royale de Saint-Louis, a school for girls from impoverished noble families, which had a significant influence on female education under the Ancien Régime. After Louis XIV's death in 1715, Madame de Maintenon retired to Saint-Cyr, where she died four years later at the age of 83.

Childhood edit

Birth at Niort edit

 
d'Aubigné Coat-of-Arms

Françoise d'Aubigné was born on 27 November 1635, in Niort, France. A plaque suggests her birthplace was at the Hotel du Chaumont,[1] but some sources indicate she was born in[2] or just outside the local prison, where her Huguenot father Constant d'Aubigné was incarcerated for conspiring against King Louis XIII's powerful chief minister, Cardinal Richelieu.[3] Her mother, Jeanne de Cardilhac, was the daughter of the prison director[4] and was probably seduced by the incarcerated Constant.[2] She was a fervent Catholic and had her child baptised in her religion. Her paternal grandfather was Agrippa d'Aubigné, a former intimate servant of the late king Henry IV well known for his roles as Protestant general and propagandist.[3] Her godmother was the nine-year-old Suzanne de Baudéan, daughter of the comtesse de Neuillant[2][5] and the governor of Niort,[3] and her godfather was the duc de la Rochefoucauld, father of François de La Rochefoucauld, the author of the famous Maxims.[5]

Protestant upbringing edit

In 1639, Constant was released from prison and went with Jeanne and Françoise to the French island colony of Martinique[5] in the West Indies. Jeanne was a strict mother, allowing her children few liberties. She gave them a Protestant education despite their Catholic baptism. Constant returned to France, leaving his family behind in Martinique, causing Jeanne to try to be "mother and father" to their children until they also returned to France, in 1647.[6] Within months of the family's return, both parents died, and the children went to the care of their paternal aunt, Madame de Villette. The Villettes' home, Mursay, became a happy memory for Françoise, who had been in the care of her aunt and uncle before leaving for Martinique. The de Villettes were wealthy and took good care of the children, but were ardent Protestants and continued to school their nieces and nephews in their beliefs. When this became known to the family of Françoise's godmother, an order was issued that she had to be educated in a convent.[7]

Education edit

Françoise disliked convent life, mainly because she received only limited education and freedom. Her lessons included basic mathematics, French, Latin, and domestic work. The main emphasis was on religion and liturgy, with no opening onto the secular world. Despite her disgust, Françoise grew to love one of the nuns there, Sister Céleste, who persuaded the young girl to receive her first communion. In her older days, Maintenon would say, "I loved [Sister Céleste] more than I could possibly say. I wanted to sacrifice myself for her service."[7] Françoise would also prove adept in the art of writing, going on to send more than 90,000 letters in her lifetime.[8]

Madame de Neuillant, the mother of Françoise's godmother, then brought the girl to Paris and introduced her to sophisticated people, who became vital contacts that she would use in the future.

Arrival at the court edit

Marriage edit

 
Mme de Scarron

In her excursion with Madame de Neuillant, Françoise met accomplished poet Paul Scarron, who was 25 years her senior, and began to correspond with him. He counted King Louis XIII's favourites among his patrons and offered her marriage or pay her dowry so that she might enter a convent. Although Scarron suffered from chronic and crippling pain, Françoise accepted his proposal and the two married in 1652. The match permitted her to gain access to the highest levels of Parisian society,[3] something that would have otherwise been impossible for a girl from an impoverished background. For nine years, she was more a nurse than a wife to Paul[5] who, in turn, gave her exposure to education and a vocation as a teacher.

Royal governess edit

 
Madame de Maintenon with her niece, Françoise Amable d'Aubigné.

After Paul Scarron's death in 1660,[9] the Queen Mother Anne of Austria, continued his pension to his widow and even increased it to 2,000 livres a year, thus enabling Françoise to remain in literary society.[5] After his mother's death in 1666, Louis XIV suspended the pension. Once again in straitened circumstances and having spent several years living off the charity of her friends, Madame Scarron prepared to leave Paris for Lisbon as a lady-in-waiting to the new queen of Portugal,[5] Marie-Françoise de Nemours. Before setting off, however, she met Madame de Montespan, who was secretly already the king's mistress. Montespan took such a fancy to Scarron that she had the king reinstate her pension, which enabled the latter to stay in Paris.[5]

In 1669, Madame de Montespan placed her second child by Louis XIV with Madame Scarron in a house on Rue de Vaugirard, provided with a large income and staff of servants.[5] Scarron took care to keep the house well-guarded and discreet, doing many duties as secretary and caretaker.[10] Her care for the infant Louis Auguste, Duke of Maine (born 1670) first brought her to the attention of Louis XIV, though he was initially repelled by her strong temper and strict religious practice.[9] After Louis Auguste and his siblings were legitimised on 20 December 1673, she moved to the Château de Saint-Germain and became the Governess of the Children of France, one of the very few people permitted to speak candidly with the king as an equal.[9] Madame de Sévigné observed that Louis XIV was charmed by having someone who would speak to him in this way.[9]

 
Madame de Maintenon with the natural children of Louis XIV by Antoine Coypel, 1684

Due to her hard work, the king rewarded Scarron with 200,000 livres, which she used to purchase the property at Maintenon in 1674.[9] In 1675, Louis XIV gave her the title of Marquise de Maintenon after the name of her estate.[9] Such favours incurred the jealousy of Madame de Montespan, who began to spar frequently over the children and their care. In 1680, the king made Madame de Maintenon the second mistress of the robes to his daughter-in-law, the Dauphine.[9] Soon after the Affair of the Poisons, Montespan left the court and was unofficially replaced by de Maintenon, who proved to be a good influence on Louis XIV. His wife, Queen Marie Thérèse, who for years had been rudely treated by Madame de Montespan, openly declared she had never been so well-treated as at this time.[5]

Uncrowned queen of France edit

Secret marriage to Louis XIV edit

 
Madame de Maintenon sitting in silk and wearing discreet but rich robes.

"Madame de Maintenon knows how to love. There would be great pleasure in being loved by her," said the king, Louis XIV. He probably asked her to become his mistress at that time. [when?] Though she later claimed she didn't yield to his advances ("Nothing is so clever as to conduct one's self irreproachably,"[11]) the king spent much of his spare time with the royal governess by the late 1670s, discussing politics, economics, and religion. After the death of Marie-Thérèse, Françoise married Louis in a private ceremony by François de Harlay de Champvallon, archbishop of Paris. It is believed that in attendance were Père la Chaise, the king's confessor, the Marquis de Montchevreuil, the Chevalier de Forbin and Alexandre Bontemps,[5] a valet with whom the groom was very close. Owing to the disparity in their social status, the marriage was morganatic, meaning that Madame de Maintenon wasn't openly acknowledged as the king's wife and didn't become queen. No official documentation of the marriage exists, but that it took place is nevertheless accepted by historians.[5] Biographers have dated the wedding to 9 October 1683[12] or January 1684.[13]

In his memoirs, the duc de Saint-Simon (himself only a boy at the time of the event) wrote the following: "But what is very certain and very true, is, that some time after the return of the King from Fontainebleau, and in the midst of the winter that followed the death of the Queen (posterity will with difficulty believe it, although perfectly true and proved), Père de la Chaise, confessor of the King, said mass at the dead of night in one of the King's cabinets at Versailles. Bontemps, governor of Versailles, chief valet on duty, and the most confidential of the four, was present at this mass, at which the monarch and La Maintenon were married in presence of Harlay, Archbishop of Paris, as diocesan, of Louvois (both of whom drew from the King a promise that he would never declare this marriage), and of Montchevreuil...
The satiety of the honeymoon, usually so fatal, and especially the honeymoon of such marriages, only consolidated the favour of Madame de Maintenon. Soon after, she astonished everybody by the apartments given to her at Versailles, at the top of the grand staircase facing those of the King and on the same floor. From that moment the King always passed some hours with her every day of his life; wherever she might be she was always lodged near him, and on the same floor if possible."[14]

The Marquise of Montespan wrote the following in her memoirs about the marriage between her former friend and ex-lover: "The following week, Madame de Maintenon... consented to the King's will, which she had opposed in order to excite it, and in the presence of the Marquis and Marquise de Montchevreuil, the Duc de Noailles, the Marquis de Chamarante, M. Bontems and Mademoiselle Ninon, her permanent chambermaid, was married to the King of France and Navarre in the chapel of the château. The Abbé de Harlay, Archbishop of Paris, assisted by the Bishop of Chartres and Père de la Chaise, had the honour of blessing this marriage and presenting the rings of gold. After the ceremony, which took place at an early hour, and even by torchlight, there was a slight repast in the small apartments. The same persons, taking carriages, then repaired to Maintenon, where the great ceremony, the mass, and all that is customary in such cases were celebrated. At her return, Madame de Maintenon took possession of an extremely sumptuous apartment that had been carefully arranged and furnished for her. Her people continued to wear her livery, but she scarcely ever rode anymore except in the great carriage of the King, where we saw her in the place, which had been occupied by the Queen. In her interior, the title of Majesty was given her, and the King, when he had to speak of her, only used the word Madame, without adding Maintenon, that having become too familiar and trivial."[15]

Political influence edit

Historians have often remarked upon Madame de Maintenon's political influence, which was considerable. She was regarded as the next most powerful person after the king, considered the equivalent of a prime minister after 1700.[3] Without an official position as queen, she was more easily approached by those wishing to have an audience with the king.[3] However, her judgment wasn't infallible and some mistakes were undoubtedly made; replacing the military commander Nicolas Catinat by the Duke of Villeroi in 1701 may be attributed to her, but certainly not the Spanish Succession.[5]

As a strongly religious person, Madame de Maintenon had a strong influence on her husband,[16] who no longer had open mistresses and banned operas during Lent.[16] Some have accused her of responsibility for the revocation of the Edict of Nantes and for the dragonnades, but recent investigations have shown that she opposed the cruelties of the dragonnades, though she was pleased with the conversions they produced.[5][17] She told her confessor that in view of her own Protestant upbringing, she feared that a plea for tolerance on behalf of the Huguenots might lead her enemies to claim that she was still a secret Protestant.[18] In 1692, Pope Innocent XII granted her the right of visitation over all the convents in France. Unlike what others believed, Madame de Maintenon mainly used her power for personal patronage- for example, in the frequent economical assistance she gave to her brother Charles d'Aubigné, Comte d'Aubigné. In the latter years of her life, she encouraged her husband to promote her previous charges, the children of the king by Madame de Montespan, to high positions at court intermediate between the prince and princesses du sang and the peers of the realm.[5]

Educational efforts edit

 
Rules of the Maison Royale de Saint-Louis.

Madame de Maintenon founded the Maison royale de Saint-Louis, a school for girls of impoverished noble families,[16] who were becoming increasingly numerous because many provincial noblemen died in wars or expended their fortunes in the King's service. The school began at Rueil and moved to Noisy-le-Roi until the King endowed Saint-Cyr, a village 5 km west of Versailles, at her request by using the funds of the Abbey of St. Denis.[5] According to her wishes, the education would be different from that traditionally practised in convents, where education was minimal and principally centred on religion: her students were educated to be ladies of the nobility, receiving an education that was severe but showed proof of the era's modernity. Madame de Maintenon was considered a born teacher and a friendly, motherly influence on her pupils, who included Dauphine Marie-Adélaïde of Savoy.[19]

Madame de Maintenon drew up the rules of the institution and attended to every detail.[5] The school buildings housed 250 students, cared for by 36 lay female educators or "professes", 24 "converses" sisters carrying out domestic tasks, and some priests. The students, aged 7 to 20, were divided by their uniform colour: red for 7 to 10 years old; green for 11 to 14; yellow for 15–16; blue for 17–20, and black for the most talented and disciplined from the "blues". Each class had a timetable appropriate to its students' age: the "reds" learned arithmetic, geometry, reading and writing, along with receiving the rudiments of Catechism, Latin, and religious history; the "greens" continued in these subjects, along with geography and history; the "yellows" also learned drawing and dancing; the "blues" were initiated into heraldry, the history of the Catholic Church and more detailed teaching in morality; and the blacks were in charge of helping the teachers in classes, accounts, hospital, refectory, and sewing clothes for their fellow students or the teachers. Leisure time was also important for Maintenon, who encouraged the students to play intellectual games such as chess and checkers, though card games were banned. She asked Jean Racine to write Esther and Athalie for the girls at Saint-Cyr.[5]

Influence in education edit

Maison royale de Saint-Louis is considered to have greatly influenced the demands of the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women, the first women's political interest group founded in 1793. Their successful attempt to link gender equality through the educational system's reformation and the enforcement of the 1724 royal ordinance that imposed compulsory universal primary education, was inspired by the 17th-century treatises by Madame de Maintenon and François Fénelon. In the Revolutionary context, Madame de Maintenon's ideas were used by local officials and philanthropists who successfully established neighbourhood primary schools that accepted many young poor girls. Her work had a lasting impact on the original feminist movement, which gathered in Parisian salons and during the Age of Enlightenment, one aim of which was to promote educational equality between sexes to both improve society with more capable workers and help lower-class women escape their condition and prostitution.[20]

Later life edit

After her husband's death in 1715, Françoise retired to the Maison royale de Saint-Louis at Saint-Cyr-l'École with a pension of 48,000 livres by the Duc d'Orléans and regent of France.[5] She continued to receive visitors at Saint-Cyr, including Tsar Peter the Great of Russia. He was seated at a chair by the foot of her bed and asked what her illness was, to which she replied, "Old age". She asked what brought him to her room, to which he replied, "I came to see everything worthy of note that France contains." He later remarked to his aides that she had rendered a great service to the King and nation.[21]

Françoise died on 15 April 1719, at the age of 83. Her will expressed her wishes to be buried in the choir at Saint-Cyr and bequeath her Château de Maintenon to her niece, Françoise Charlotte d'Aubigné, Duchess of Noailles[5] and her brother Charles' only daughter. In her honour, a small island, off the coast of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada, which at that time was known as "L'Île Royale", was attributed to her; this island was named Isle Madame (first noted as l'Isle de la Marquise).

In popular culture edit

  • Madame de Maintenon is briefly mentioned in Alexandre Dumas' book Twenty Years After. She converses with Raoul, the fictional Vicomte de Bragelonne, at Abbe Scarron's party.
  • Madame de Maintenon is featured by Arthur Conan Doyle in his novel The Refugees, which includes the story of her midnight marriage ceremony.
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald references Madame de Maintenon in The Great Gatsby in describing "Ella Kaye, the newspaper woman," who apparently murders Gatsby's father figure Dan Cody.[22]
  • Madame de Maintenon was portrayed by Catherine Walker in the TV series Versailles.
  • Irène Silvagni depicted Madame de Maintenon in the French film The Death of Louis XIV (2016).
  • Mme de Maintenon is featured in the novel The King's Way, where she explains her life to one of her students at Saint Cyr.
  • A depiction of Madame de Maintenon File:Mme de Maintenon.jpg of unknown provenance, similar to that seen on a 1719 miniature recently offered for sale,[23] is the logo of IDA Pro reverse engineering software.[24]
  • Madame Scarron is also mentioned in Angélique, a series of thirteen historical adventure romance novels written by French author Anne Golon.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 149.
  2. ^ a b c Buckley, Veronica (31 August 2010). "The Secret Wife of Louis XIV: Françoise d'Aubigné, Madame de Maintenon". Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Retrieved 14 August 2023 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Bryant 2004, p. 79.
  4. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 150.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Stephens 1911.
  6. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 151.
  7. ^ a b Fraser 2006, p. 152.
  8. ^ Herman, Eleanor (2004). Sex With Kings: 500 Years of Adultery, Power, Rivalry, and Revenge (1st ed.). New York, NY: HarperCollins. pp. 4. ISBN 978-0-06-058544-0.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Bryant 2004, p. 80.
  10. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 158.
  11. ^ Herman 2004, p. 115.
  12. ^ Buckley 2008, p. 276.
  13. ^ Bryant 2004, p. 77.
  14. ^ de Rouvroy, vol. 10, ch. 75.
  15. ^ de Rochechouart de Mortemart 1899, bk. 7, ch. 47.
  16. ^ a b c Bryant 2004, p. 83.
  17. ^ Nancy Mitford The Sun King Penguin Books edition 1994 p.144
  18. ^ Mitford p.144
  19. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 251.
  20. ^ Gay Levy, Darline (1981). Women in Revolutionary Paris: 1789-1795. University of Illinois: University of Illinois Press. pp. 5–7.
  21. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 280.
  22. ^ Fitzgerald, F. Scott (1925). The Great Gatsby. New York: Scribner. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-7432-7356-5.
  23. ^ "Französische Schule, Nachfolge Pierre Mignard - Osterauktion 17.04.2019 - Schätzwert: EUR 1.500 bis EUR 2.600 - Dorotheum". www.dorotheum.com. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
  24. ^ "Hex Rays – State-of-the-art binary code analysis solutions". hex-rays.com. Retrieved 14 August 2023.

References edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Works by Madame de Maintenon at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Madame de Maintenon at Internet Archive
  • Works by Françoise d'Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • "Françoise d'Aubigné" article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • A picture of Françoise d'Aubigné as a young woman from the Lëtzebuergesch Wikipedia.
  • Additional picture of Françoise d'Aubigné from the German Wikipedia.
  • Another additional picture of Françoise d'Aubigné from the Swedish Wikipedia.
  • , until 30 April 2011, a one-woman play written and played by Lorraine Pintal in French in Montreal, Quebec.
  • Project Continua: Biography of Madame de Maintenon

françoise, aubigné, marquise, maintenon, françoise, aubigné, november, 1635, april, 1719, known, first, madame, scarron, subsequently, madame, maintenon, french, madam, french, noblewoman, second, wife, louis, france, from, 1683, until, death, 1715, although, . Francoise d Aubigne 27 November 1635 15 April 1719 known first as Madame Scarron and subsequently as Madame de Maintenon French madam de mɛ t e nɔ was a French noblewoman and the second wife of Louis XIV of France from 1683 until his death in 1715 Although she was never considered queen of France as the marriage was carried out in secret Madame de Maintenon had considerable political influence as one of the King s closest advisers and the governess of the royal children MadameFrancoise d AubigneMarquise of MaintenonPortrait by Pierre Mignard 1694Born 1635 11 27 27 November 1635Niort Kingdom of FranceDied15 April 1719 1719 04 15 aged 83 Saint Cyr l Ecole Kingdom of FranceNoble familyd AubigneSpouse s Paul Scarron m 1652 died 1660 wbr Louis XIV private m 1683 died 1715 wbr FatherConstant d AubigneMotherJeanne de CardilhacSignature Born into an impoverished Huguenot noble family Francoise married the poet Paul Scarron in 1652 which allowed her access to the Parisian high society She was widowed in 1660 but later saw her fortunes improve through her friendship with Louis XIV s mistress Madame de Montespan who tasked her with the upbringing of the king s illegitimate children She was made royal governess when the children were legitimised and in 1675 Louis XIV granted her the title Marquise de Maintenon By the late 1670s she had essentially supplanted Montespan as the king s maitresse en titre After the death of Queen Maria Theresa in 1683 Madame de Maintenon married Louis in a private ceremony She came to be regarded as the second most powerful person in France and her piety had a strong influence on her husband who became firmer in his Catholic faith and had no more open mistresses In 1686 she founded the Maison royale de Saint Louis a school for girls from impoverished noble families which had a significant influence on female education under the Ancien Regime After Louis XIV s death in 1715 Madame de Maintenon retired to Saint Cyr where she died four years later at the age of 83 Contents 1 Childhood 1 1 Birth at Niort 1 2 Protestant upbringing 1 3 Education 2 Arrival at the court 2 1 Marriage 2 2 Royal governess 3 Uncrowned queen of France 3 1 Secret marriage to Louis XIV 3 2 Political influence 4 Educational efforts 4 1 Influence in education 5 Later life 6 In popular culture 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksChildhood editBirth at Niort edit nbsp d Aubigne Coat of Arms Francoise d Aubigne was born on 27 November 1635 in Niort France A plaque suggests her birthplace was at the Hotel du Chaumont 1 but some sources indicate she was born in 2 or just outside the local prison where her Huguenot father Constant d Aubigne was incarcerated for conspiring against King Louis XIII s powerful chief minister Cardinal Richelieu 3 Her mother Jeanne de Cardilhac was the daughter of the prison director 4 and was probably seduced by the incarcerated Constant 2 She was a fervent Catholic and had her child baptised in her religion Her paternal grandfather was Agrippa d Aubigne a former intimate servant of the late king Henry IV well known for his roles as Protestant general and propagandist 3 Her godmother was the nine year old Suzanne de Baudean daughter of the comtesse de Neuillant 2 5 and the governor of Niort 3 and her godfather was the duc de la Rochefoucauld father of Francois de La Rochefoucauld the author of the famous Maxims 5 Protestant upbringing edit In 1639 Constant was released from prison and went with Jeanne and Francoise to the French island colony of Martinique 5 in the West Indies Jeanne was a strict mother allowing her children few liberties She gave them a Protestant education despite their Catholic baptism Constant returned to France leaving his family behind in Martinique causing Jeanne to try to be mother and father to their children until they also returned to France in 1647 6 Within months of the family s return both parents died and the children went to the care of their paternal aunt Madame de Villette The Villettes home Mursay became a happy memory for Francoise who had been in the care of her aunt and uncle before leaving for Martinique The de Villettes were wealthy and took good care of the children but were ardent Protestants and continued to school their nieces and nephews in their beliefs When this became known to the family of Francoise s godmother an order was issued that she had to be educated in a convent 7 Education edit Francoise disliked convent life mainly because she received only limited education and freedom Her lessons included basic mathematics French Latin and domestic work The main emphasis was on religion and liturgy with no opening onto the secular world Despite her disgust Francoise grew to love one of the nuns there Sister Celeste who persuaded the young girl to receive her first communion In her older days Maintenon would say I loved Sister Celeste more than I could possibly say I wanted to sacrifice myself for her service 7 Francoise would also prove adept in the art of writing going on to send more than 90 000 letters in her lifetime 8 Madame de Neuillant the mother of Francoise s godmother then brought the girl to Paris and introduced her to sophisticated people who became vital contacts that she would use in the future Arrival at the court editMarriage edit nbsp Mme de Scarron In her excursion with Madame de Neuillant Francoise met accomplished poet Paul Scarron who was 25 years her senior and began to correspond with him He counted King Louis XIII s favourites among his patrons and offered her marriage or pay her dowry so that she might enter a convent Although Scarron suffered from chronic and crippling pain Francoise accepted his proposal and the two married in 1652 The match permitted her to gain access to the highest levels of Parisian society 3 something that would have otherwise been impossible for a girl from an impoverished background For nine years she was more a nurse than a wife to Paul 5 who in turn gave her exposure to education and a vocation as a teacher Royal governess edit nbsp Madame de Maintenon with her niece Francoise Amable d Aubigne After Paul Scarron s death in 1660 9 the Queen Mother Anne of Austria continued his pension to his widow and even increased it to 2 000 livres a year thus enabling Francoise to remain in literary society 5 After his mother s death in 1666 Louis XIV suspended the pension Once again in straitened circumstances and having spent several years living off the charity of her friends Madame Scarron prepared to leave Paris for Lisbon as a lady in waiting to the new queen of Portugal 5 Marie Francoise de Nemours Before setting off however she met Madame de Montespan who was secretly already the king s mistress Montespan took such a fancy to Scarron that she had the king reinstate her pension which enabled the latter to stay in Paris 5 In 1669 Madame de Montespan placed her second child by Louis XIV with Madame Scarron in a house on Rue de Vaugirard provided with a large income and staff of servants 5 Scarron took care to keep the house well guarded and discreet doing many duties as secretary and caretaker 10 Her care for the infant Louis Auguste Duke of Maine born 1670 first brought her to the attention of Louis XIV though he was initially repelled by her strong temper and strict religious practice 9 After Louis Auguste and his siblings were legitimised on 20 December 1673 she moved to the Chateau de Saint Germain and became the Governess of the Children of France one of the very few people permitted to speak candidly with the king as an equal 9 Madame de Sevigne observed that Louis XIV was charmed by having someone who would speak to him in this way 9 nbsp Madame de Maintenon with the natural children of Louis XIV by Antoine Coypel 1684 Due to her hard work the king rewarded Scarron with 200 000 livres which she used to purchase the property at Maintenon in 1674 9 In 1675 Louis XIV gave her the title of Marquise de Maintenon after the name of her estate 9 Such favours incurred the jealousy of Madame de Montespan who began to spar frequently over the children and their care In 1680 the king made Madame de Maintenon the second mistress of the robes to his daughter in law the Dauphine 9 Soon after the Affair of the Poisons Montespan left the court and was unofficially replaced by de Maintenon who proved to be a good influence on Louis XIV His wife Queen Marie Therese who for years had been rudely treated by Madame de Montespan openly declared she had never been so well treated as at this time 5 Uncrowned queen of France editSecret marriage to Louis XIV edit nbsp Madame de Maintenon sitting in silk and wearing discreet but rich robes Madame de Maintenon knows how to love There would be great pleasure in being loved by her said the king Louis XIV He probably asked her to become his mistress at that time when Though she later claimed she didn t yield to his advances Nothing is so clever as to conduct one s self irreproachably 11 the king spent much of his spare time with the royal governess by the late 1670s discussing politics economics and religion After the death of Marie Therese Francoise married Louis in a private ceremony by Francois de Harlay de Champvallon archbishop of Paris It is believed that in attendance were Pere la Chaise the king s confessor the Marquis de Montchevreuil the Chevalier de Forbin and Alexandre Bontemps 5 a valet with whom the groom was very close Owing to the disparity in their social status the marriage was morganatic meaning that Madame de Maintenon wasn t openly acknowledged as the king s wife and didn t become queen No official documentation of the marriage exists but that it took place is nevertheless accepted by historians 5 Biographers have dated the wedding to 9 October 1683 12 or January 1684 13 In his memoirs the duc de Saint Simon himself only a boy at the time of the event wrote the following But what is very certain and very true is that some time after the return of the King from Fontainebleau and in the midst of the winter that followed the death of the Queen posterity will with difficulty believe it although perfectly true and proved Pere de la Chaise confessor of the King said mass at the dead of night in one of the King s cabinets at Versailles Bontemps governor of Versailles chief valet on duty and the most confidential of the four was present at this mass at which the monarch and La Maintenon were married in presence of Harlay Archbishop of Paris as diocesan of Louvois both of whom drew from the King a promise that he would never declare this marriage and of Montchevreuil The satiety of the honeymoon usually so fatal and especially the honeymoon of such marriages only consolidated the favour of Madame de Maintenon Soon after she astonished everybody by the apartments given to her at Versailles at the top of the grand staircase facing those of the King and on the same floor From that moment the King always passed some hours with her every day of his life wherever she might be she was always lodged near him and on the same floor if possible 14 The Marquise of Montespan wrote the following in her memoirs about the marriage between her former friend and ex lover The following week Madame de Maintenon consented to the King s will which she had opposed in order to excite it and in the presence of the Marquis and Marquise de Montchevreuil the Duc de Noailles the Marquis de Chamarante M Bontems and Mademoiselle Ninon her permanent chambermaid was married to the King of France and Navarre in the chapel of the chateau The Abbe de Harlay Archbishop of Paris assisted by the Bishop of Chartres and Pere de la Chaise had the honour of blessing this marriage and presenting the rings of gold After the ceremony which took place at an early hour and even by torchlight there was a slight repast in the small apartments The same persons taking carriages then repaired to Maintenon where the great ceremony the mass and all that is customary in such cases were celebrated At her return Madame de Maintenon took possession of an extremely sumptuous apartment that had been carefully arranged and furnished for her Her people continued to wear her livery but she scarcely ever rode anymore except in the great carriage of the King where we saw her in the place which had been occupied by the Queen In her interior the title of Majesty was given her and the King when he had to speak of her only used the word Madame without adding Maintenon that having become too familiar and trivial 15 Political influence edit Historians have often remarked upon Madame de Maintenon s political influence which was considerable She was regarded as the next most powerful person after the king considered the equivalent of a prime minister after 1700 3 Without an official position as queen she was more easily approached by those wishing to have an audience with the king 3 However her judgment wasn t infallible and some mistakes were undoubtedly made replacing the military commander Nicolas Catinat by the Duke of Villeroi in 1701 may be attributed to her but certainly not the Spanish Succession 5 As a strongly religious person Madame de Maintenon had a strong influence on her husband 16 who no longer had open mistresses and banned operas during Lent 16 Some have accused her of responsibility for the revocation of the Edict of Nantes and for the dragonnades but recent investigations have shown that she opposed the cruelties of the dragonnades though she was pleased with the conversions they produced 5 17 She told her confessor that in view of her own Protestant upbringing she feared that a plea for tolerance on behalf of the Huguenots might lead her enemies to claim that she was still a secret Protestant 18 In 1692 Pope Innocent XII granted her the right of visitation over all the convents in France Unlike what others believed Madame de Maintenon mainly used her power for personal patronage for example in the frequent economical assistance she gave to her brother Charles d Aubigne Comte d Aubigne In the latter years of her life she encouraged her husband to promote her previous charges the children of the king by Madame de Montespan to high positions at court intermediate between the prince and princesses du sang and the peers of the realm 5 Educational efforts edit nbsp Rules of the Maison Royale de Saint Louis Madame de Maintenon founded the Maison royale de Saint Louis a school for girls of impoverished noble families 16 who were becoming increasingly numerous because many provincial noblemen died in wars or expended their fortunes in the King s service The school began at Rueil and moved to Noisy le Roi until the King endowed Saint Cyr a village 5 km west of Versailles at her request by using the funds of the Abbey of St Denis 5 According to her wishes the education would be different from that traditionally practised in convents where education was minimal and principally centred on religion her students were educated to be ladies of the nobility receiving an education that was severe but showed proof of the era s modernity Madame de Maintenon was considered a born teacher and a friendly motherly influence on her pupils who included Dauphine Marie Adelaide of Savoy 19 Madame de Maintenon drew up the rules of the institution and attended to every detail 5 The school buildings housed 250 students cared for by 36 lay female educators or professes 24 converses sisters carrying out domestic tasks and some priests The students aged 7 to 20 were divided by their uniform colour red for 7 to 10 years old green for 11 to 14 yellow for 15 16 blue for 17 20 and black for the most talented and disciplined from the blues Each class had a timetable appropriate to its students age the reds learned arithmetic geometry reading and writing along with receiving the rudiments of Catechism Latin and religious history the greens continued in these subjects along with geography and history the yellows also learned drawing and dancing the blues were initiated into heraldry the history of the Catholic Church and more detailed teaching in morality and the blacks were in charge of helping the teachers in classes accounts hospital refectory and sewing clothes for their fellow students or the teachers Leisure time was also important for Maintenon who encouraged the students to play intellectual games such as chess and checkers though card games were banned She asked Jean Racine to write Esther and Athalie for the girls at Saint Cyr 5 Influence in education edit Maison royale de Saint Louis is considered to have greatly influenced the demands of the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women the first women s political interest group founded in 1793 Their successful attempt to link gender equality through the educational system s reformation and the enforcement of the 1724 royal ordinance that imposed compulsory universal primary education was inspired by the 17th century treatises by Madame de Maintenon and Francois Fenelon In the Revolutionary context Madame de Maintenon s ideas were used by local officials and philanthropists who successfully established neighbourhood primary schools that accepted many young poor girls Her work had a lasting impact on the original feminist movement which gathered in Parisian salons and during the Age of Enlightenment one aim of which was to promote educational equality between sexes to both improve society with more capable workers and help lower class women escape their condition and prostitution 20 Later life editAfter her husband s death in 1715 Francoise retired to the Maison royale de Saint Louis at Saint Cyr l Ecole with a pension of 48 000 livres by the Duc d Orleans and regent of France 5 She continued to receive visitors at Saint Cyr including Tsar Peter the Great of Russia He was seated at a chair by the foot of her bed and asked what her illness was to which she replied Old age She asked what brought him to her room to which he replied I came to see everything worthy of note that France contains He later remarked to his aides that she had rendered a great service to the King and nation 21 Francoise died on 15 April 1719 at the age of 83 Her will expressed her wishes to be buried in the choir at Saint Cyr and bequeath her Chateau de Maintenon to her niece Francoise Charlotte d Aubigne Duchess of Noailles 5 and her brother Charles only daughter In her honour a small island off the coast of Cape Breton Nova Scotia Canada which at that time was known as L Ile Royale was attributed to her this island was named Isle Madame first noted as l Isle de la Marquise In popular culture editMadame de Maintenon is briefly mentioned in Alexandre Dumas book Twenty Years After She converses with Raoul the fictional Vicomte de Bragelonne at Abbe Scarron s party Madame de Maintenon is featured by Arthur Conan Doyle in his novel The Refugees which includes the story of her midnight marriage ceremony F Scott Fitzgerald references Madame de Maintenon in The Great Gatsby in describing Ella Kaye the newspaper woman who apparently murders Gatsby s father figure Dan Cody 22 Madame de Maintenon was portrayed by Catherine Walker in the TV series Versailles Irene Silvagni depicted Madame de Maintenon in the French film The Death of Louis XIV 2016 Mme de Maintenon is featured in the novel The King s Way where she explains her life to one of her students at Saint Cyr A depiction of Madame de Maintenon File Mme de Maintenon jpg of unknown provenance similar to that seen on a 1719 miniature recently offered for sale 23 is the logo of IDA Pro reverse engineering software 24 Madame Scarron is also mentioned in Angelique a series of thirteen historical adventure romance novels written by French author Anne Golon Footnotes edit Fraser 2006 p 149 a b c Buckley Veronica 31 August 2010 The Secret Wife of Louis XIV Francoise d Aubigne Madame de Maintenon Farrar Straus and Giroux Retrieved 14 August 2023 via Google Books a b c d e f Bryant 2004 p 79 Fraser 2006 p 150 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Stephens 1911 Fraser 2006 p 151 a b Fraser 2006 p 152 Herman Eleanor 2004 Sex With Kings 500 Years of Adultery Power Rivalry and Revenge 1st ed New York NY HarperCollins pp 4 ISBN 978 0 06 058544 0 a b c d e f g Bryant 2004 p 80 Fraser 2006 p 158 Herman 2004 p 115 Buckley 2008 p 276 Bryant 2004 p 77 de Rouvroy vol 10 ch 75 de Rochechouart de Mortemart 1899 bk 7 ch 47 a b c Bryant 2004 p 83 Nancy Mitford The Sun King Penguin Books edition 1994 p 144 Mitford p 144 Fraser 2006 p 251 Gay Levy Darline 1981 Women in Revolutionary Paris 1789 1795 University of Illinois University of Illinois Press pp 5 7 Fraser 2006 p 280 Fitzgerald F Scott 1925 The Great Gatsby New York Scribner p 99 ISBN 978 0 7432 7356 5 Franzosische Schule Nachfolge Pierre Mignard Osterauktion 17 04 2019 Schatzwert EUR 1 500 bis EUR 2 600 Dorotheum www dorotheum com Retrieved 14 August 2023 Hex Rays State of the art binary code analysis solutions hex rays com Retrieved 14 August 2023 References editBryant Mark Queen of Versailles Madame de Maintenon First Lady of Louis XIV s France 2020 online Bryant Mark 2004 Partner Matriarch and Minister Mme de Maintenon of France Clandestine Consort 1680 1715 In Campbell Orr Clarissa ed Queenship in Europe 1660 1815 The Role of the Consort Cambridge University Press pp 77 106 ISBN 0 521 81422 7 Buckley Veronica 2008 Madame de Maintenon The Secret Wife of Louis XIV London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 8098 0 Fraser Antonia 2006 Love and Louis XIV London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 82997 1 Herman Eleanor 2004 Sex with Kings New York Harper Collins ISBN 0 06 058543 9 Irene Silvagni portrayed Madame de Maintenon in the French film The Death of Louis XIV de Rochechouart de Mortemart Francoise Athenais 1899 The Memoirs of Madame de Montespan Boston L C Page and Company Inc de Rouvroy Louis St John Bayle ed The Memoirs of Louis XIV His Court and The Regency Complete Stephens Henry Morse 1911 Maintenon Francoise d Aubigne Marquise de In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 442 444 Further reading editFrancoise Chandernagor L Allee du Roi a novel in French Paris Julliard 1995 ISBN 2 266 06787 7 Alice Acland The Secret Wife novel London Peter Davies Ltd 1975 ISBN 978 0 432 00411 1 Lucy Norton The Sun King and His Loves London The Folio Society 1982 External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Madame de Maintenon nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1921 Collier s Encyclopedia article about Francoise d Aubigne Marquise de Maintenon Works by Madame de Maintenon at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Madame de Maintenon at Internet Archive Works by Francoise d Aubigne Marquise de Maintenon at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Francoise d Aubigne article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy A picture of Francoise d Aubigne as a young woman from the Letzebuergesch Wikipedia Additional picture of Francoise d Aubigne from the German Wikipedia Another additional picture of Francoise d Aubigne from the Swedish Wikipedia Madame Louis 14 until 30 April 2011 a one woman play written and played by Lorraine Pintal in French in Montreal Quebec Project Continua Biography of Madame de Maintenon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francoise d 27Aubigne Marquise de Maintenon amp oldid 1220268554, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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