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Louise de La Vallière

Françoise Louise de La Vallière, Duchess of La Vallière and Vaujours, born Françoise Louise de La Baume Le Blanc de La Vallière, Mademoiselle de La Vallière (6 August 1644 – 7 June 1710) was a French noblewoman and the first mistress of Louis XIV of France from 1661 to 1667. She was created suo jure Duchess of La Vallière and Duchess of Vaujours. After leaving the royal court, Louise dedicated her life to religion, becoming a nun in 1674.

Louise de La Vallière

Portrait by Pierre Mignard I
Born
Françoise Louise de La Blaume Le Blanc de La Vallière

(1644-08-06)6 August 1644
Died7 June 1710(1710-06-07) (aged 65)
Burial placeCemetery of the Carmelite convent in Notre-Dame-des-Champs, Paris
Other namesMademoiselle de La Vallière
Sister Louise de la Miséricordie
Known forMistress of Louis XIV
TitleDuchess de La Vallière, Duchess of Vaujours
SuccessorMarie Anne de Bourbon
Children5, including
Marie Anne de Bourbon
Louis, Count of Vermandois
Parent(s)Laurent de La Vallière
Françoise Le Prévost

Ancestry and early life (1644–1661)

Françoise Louise de La Baume Le Blanc de La Vallière, Mademoiselle de La Vallière was born on 6 August 1644 at the Hôtel de la Crouzille (also known as Hôtel de la Vallière) in Tours, Kingdom of France[1] as the daughter of military officer Laurent de La Baume Le Blanc, Lord of La Vallière and his wife, born Françoise Le Prévost, widow of a councillor of the parlement. The La Blaume Le Blanc family had distungished itself in military service to the crown, while the Le Prévosts had served the throne with their legal knowledge for generations.[2] At the time of her birth, her father was the governor of the Castle of Amboise, where she spent her first years, also spending time in her family's Castle of La Vallière in Reugny.[3] During these years, she was educated by her aunts, Ursuline nuns Élisabeth and Charlotte in reading, grammar, musical composition and public speaking.[2]

Following her father's death, La Vallière's mother married Jacques de Courtavel, Marquess of Saint-Rémy, butler of the exiled Gaston, Duke of Orléans (uncle of Louis XIV, known as "Monsieur", 1608–1660). La Vallière served as a lady's companion to the duke's three younger daughters, Princesses Marguerite-Louise (1645–1721), Élisabeth-Marguerite "Isabelle" (1646–1696), and Françoise-Madeleine (1648–1664), being educated with them in painting, music, etiquette, equitation, literature and philosophy by the duke's first almoner,[4] Armand Jean le Bouthillier de Rancé,[2] who went on to found the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance ("Trappists").[4] After the death of the Duke of Orléans, his widow Marguerite (1615–1672) moved with her daughters to the Luxembourg Palace, Paris and took then-sixteen-year-old La Vallière with them.[citation needed]

Life at the royal court (1661–1671)

Through the influence of a distant relative, Madame de Choisy (born Jeanne-Olympe Hurault de L'Hospital; 1604–1669) Mademoiselle de La Vallière was named maid of honour to Henrietta (1644–1670), the new Duchess of Orléans, wife of Louis XIV's brother Philippe I, Duke of Orléans (1640–1701) and moved to her home, the Tuileries Palace.[5] Henrietta, known as "Madame" joined the court at Fontainebleau in 1661,[citation needed] where La Vallière likely first met her future lover, Louis XIV, King of France (1638–1715).[5] She served the duchess together with Françoise de Rochechouart de Mortemart, Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente (1640–1707), the future Madame de Montespan.[6]

Louis XIV's mistress (1661–1667)

 
Louis XIV in 1660 on an engraving by Abraham van Diepenbeeck and Adriaen Millaert.

A close relationship soon formed between the king and Madame, which concerned the Queen Dowager, Anne (1601–1666).[7] In order to counter rumours, they allegedly decided that he should court other women as a front, for which Madame herself selected three young ladies, including La Vallière.[citation needed] She spent only two months in Fontainebleau before becoming the king's mistress. According to one version of the events, she knew nothing of her part in a ploy to avert a scandal, delightfully believing that the monarch's feelings for her were sincere. Apart from her skills in various arts and sports, it was La Vallière's innocence and sincerity that captured the king: one source states that he fell in love with her after, upon their first meeting, she exclaimed "Ah! if he was not the King...".[8][9]

This was Mademoiselle de La Vallière's first relationship. She was reportedly an innocent, religious girl who did not behave flirtatiously or acted on self-interest during the romance. She was not extravagant, nor was she interested in the wealth or the titles she could receive. from her situation. Antonia Fraser writes that she was a "secret lover not a maîtresse-en-titre like Barbara Villiers."[10] Nicolas Fouquet's curiosity in the affair was one of the causes of his disgrace, for, when he bribed Louise, the king mistakenly thought that Fouquet was attempting to take her as a lover.[11][clarification needed] The affair, although discreet, quickly became public, angering the clergy, including celebrated orator and future Bishop of Meaux, Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet (1627–1704), as well as many religiously devoted people in the court. It also invoked the bitter sarcasm of Madame.[citation needed] Wishing to avoid scandal and a confrontation with his mother, the king moved La Vallière to a hunting lodge in the forest near Versailles, not far from Saint-Germain-en-Laye.[8]

In February 1662, the couple had a conflict: upon direct questioning by the king, La Vallière refused to tell him about the alleged affair between the Duchess of Orléans and Armand de Gramont, Count of Guiche (1637–1673).[citation needed] Around the same time, Bossuet delivered a series of Lenten sermons condemning the immoral activities of the king through the example of David's adultery, which troubled the pious girl's conscience, and she fled to a convent in Chaillot.[12] Meanwhile, her enemies, lead by the Countess of Soissons, born Olympia Mancini conspired to bring La Vallière down by bringing the affair to the attention of Queen Maria Theresa (1638–1683).[13]

During her first pregnancy in 1663, La Vallière was removed from the service of the Duchess of Orléans and sent to live in the Palais-Royal, where, on 19 December 1663, she gave birth to a son, Charles (1663–1665). He was taken immediately and secretly to Saint-Leu and entrusted to the care of two faithful servants of Chief Minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619–1683). Despite the attempts of Dr Boucher, who was present at the birth and tried to make the transfer as secret as possible, the story quickly spread through Paris. The public scorn at the Midnight Mass on 24 December was so great that La Vallière escaped from the church.[14]

 
The theatre installed for the premiere of The Princess of Elid on a contemporary engraving by Israel Silvestre (1621–1691).[15]

In 1664, Louis XIV hosted a multi-day performance and party, called Les Plaisirs de l’Île enchantée ("The Pleasures of the Enchanted Island") in the hunting lodge where his mistress lived. During the festivities, Molière (1622–1673) presented two new plays, La Princesse d'Élide (The Princess of Elid) and Le Tartuffe, ou l'Imposteur (Tartuffe, or The Impostor/Hypocrite)[16][17] with the musical arrangements of Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632–1687). Queen Maria Theresa and the dowager queen were the official dedicators, while La Vallière was the unofficial dedicatee, leading to court gossip.[clarification needed] This only worsened when she received the domain of Carrières-sur-Seine, and started building a castle there, with gardens designed by André Le Nôtre (1613–1700), the royal landscape architect.[citation needed]

In 1665, the king had two affairs beside the one with La Vallière: he was temporarily involved with Bonne de Pons d'Heudicourt (1644–1709), whose family quickly had her removed from the court,[18] then with the Princess of Monaco, born Catherine Charlotte de Gramont (1639–1678). After the death of his mother in 1666, Louis XIV started to publicly display his affair, which greatly displeased La Vallière. Within a week of the dowager queen's death, La Vallière had to appear at mass next to the queen. Ashamed, she treated Maria Theresa with humility and respect.[citation needed]

The end of the royal affair and later life at the royal court (1666–1669)

 
Madame de Montespan in 1670

Around the time of the death of the queen dowager,[citation needed] the former Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente, now the Marquise of Montespan returned to the service of the Duchess of Orléans, which she left because of her marriage in 1663. Now a lady-in-waiting, she quickly established herself as the reigning beauty of the court.[9] Enamoured, the king sought to take her as his new mistress.[19]

In May 1667, before going on a military campaign to Flanders, the king legitimised their only living child, Marie-Anne (1666–1739). Their three eldest children, Charles (1663–1665), Philippe (1665–1666), and Louis (1665–1666) had already died by this time. Marie-Anne thus became a fille legitimée de France ("legitimised daughter of France"), could use the surname de Bourbon and received the title Mademoiselle de Blois. On the same day, he created his mistress Duchess of La Vallière and Duchess of Vaujours.[8] As a duchess, La Vallière had the right to sit on a taboret in the presence of the queen, which was a highly prized privilege. However, La Vallière was not impressed, saying that the title resembled a present given to a servant when he retired. Affirming this, Louis XIV commented that legitimising their daughter and the gifts to La Vallière "matched the affection he had had for her for six years".[20]

When the king left for the campaign, La Vallière, again pregnant, was ordered to stay at the court. Worrying for the king and maybe feeling jealous, she travelled to the battlefield without permission and threw herself at his feet, sobbing uncontrollably. Infuriated, Louis forced her to return home immediately. Madame de Montespan was the first to denounce her for the scandal.[citation needed] The king made La Vallière share an apartment with Montespan at the Tuileries Palace, as the latter's husband was very uncomfortable with his wife's affair.[citation needed] During this time, a devastated La Vallière wrote a poem, titled Sonnet to the King.[21]

Five months after the battlefield scandal, on 2 October 1667, La Vallière gave birth to her fifth and last child, Louis (1667–1683), who would later be legitimised. Hoping to win back the heart of the king, La Vallière accepted all the humiliations inflicted upon her by the new situation: Montespan demanded that she assist her with her toilette, and the king would often demand the two rivals to travel in the carriage of the queen on journeys. Her tactic was unsuccessful: the king did not return to her, nor did he end his other affairs.[8]

In 1669, when, effectively, their relationship had long since ended, their son was legitimised, created Count of Vermandois, and given the post of Admiral of France. As he was only 2 years old, the king retained his authority over the navy.[22] Around the same time, at the end of March 1669, Madame de Montespan gave birth to her first child by the king, a daughter (1669–1672). La Vallière served as the newborn daughter's godmother, who was named Louise-Françoise after her.[citation needed]

The strain of being forced to live with her former lover and his current mistress took its toll on La Vallière: she lost weight and became increasingly pale and exhausted. In 1670, after a nearly fatal, long illness (which, according to some sources, was the result of a miscarriage[23]), she turned to religion, writing her Réflexions sur la miséricorde de Dieu ("Reflections on the Mercy of God"). She remained at court for two more years, trying to lead an exemplary life in the hope of inspiring others.[citation needed] Her love for the king was not yet dead: she admitted that she was not "dead to her passions, while I feel them live more strongly than ever in what I love more than myself".[24]

Later life (1671–1710)

Following the advice of Jesuit preacher Louis Bourdaloue (1632–1704), supported Bossuet and Bernardin Gigault de Bellefond, Marquis de Bellefonds (1630–1694), head of the Maison du Roi, she decided to leave the court and enter the Carmelite convent in the Faubourg Saint-Jacques part of Paris, later known as Notre-Dame-des-Champs. Even though the Carmelites followed very strict rules, La Vallière rejected the option of being placed in a more relaxed order. She first attempted to leave in 1671, without the king's permission, fleeing to the Convent of the Visitandines of Chaillot.[citation needed]

Madame de Montespan wanted La Vallière to return so that her own affair with the king could remain hidden. He urged the king to publicly recognise his daughter with La Vallière as Mademoiselle de Blois.[citation needed] She asked her confidant and governess of her children, Madame Scarron (the future Madame de Maintenon, born Françoise d'Aubigné; 1635–1719) to detail to La Vallière the suffering she would be exposed to at a Carmelite convent, as well as the court scandal that her decision would provoke. Scarron highlighted that she would eventually be forbidden from wearing her custom-made shoes that allowed her to walk without a limp, as one of her legs was shorter than the other. "When I shall be suffering at the convent", Louise replied, ""I shall only have to remember what they made me suffer here, and all the pain shall seem light to me."

As a Carmelite nun (1675–1710)

 
La Vallière asking the queen for forgiveness on Louise Adélaïde Desnos' painting from 1838

All of the attempts at dissuading her were in vain and, in 1674, La Vallière was finally permitted to enter the Carmelite convent in the Faubourg Saint-Jacques. The day she left the court she threw herself at the feet of the queen, begging forgiveness, saying that "My crimes were public, my repentance must be public, too."[25] One year later, on 3 June 1675, La Vallière took her perpetual vows under the name Louise de la Miséricorde ("Louise of Mercy"), and accepted the black veil from the queen herself, who kissed and blessed her.[26]

In her absence, the new Duchess of Orléans, born Princess Elizabeth Charlotte "Liselotte" of the Palatinate, known as Madame Palatine, took care of the education of her son Louis. He died on his first military campaign at the age of 16, in 1683, while in exile in Flanders for his involvement with a secret group of young aristocrats practicing what was then called "le vice italien", homosexuality.[27] His sister and aunt were greatly affected by his death, while his father did not shed a tear. His mother, in reference to the adultery of her son's conception, said upon receiving the news, "I ought to weep for his birth far more than [for] his death."[28]

Queen Maria Theresia, the Duchess of Orléans, Bishop Bossuet, and Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, Marquise de Sévigné (1626–1696) had a habit of visiting Louise at the convent for spiritual consolation and repose. Later in life, Madame de Montespan herself also went to her for advice on a pious life. Louise forgave her and counselled her on the mysteries of divine grace.[citation needed]

Sister Louise de la Miséricordie died on 6 June 1710, at the age of 65, after 36 years of religious life, and was buried in the cemetery of her convent. Her titles and possessions were inherited by her only surviving child, Marie-Anne, by then Princess Dowager of Conti.[citation needed]

Physical appearance

Although she was never described as a striking beauty or naturally brilliant, Louise had qualities that attracted attention: she was discreet, modest and had blonde hair and soft blue eyes. She was afflicted with a limp as one of her legs was shorter than the other,[29] but she wore custom-made shoes and managed to be an accomplished and graceful rider and dancer.[citation needed] At the age of 17, she reportedly "had an exquisite complexion, blond hair, blue eyes, a sweet smile . . . [and] an expression [at] once tender and modest."[30]

Issue

 
Louise de La Vallière and her children by Peter Lely, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rennes

Louise de la Vallière had five children by Louis XIV, two of whom survived infancy:

  • Charles de La Baume Le Blanc (19 December 1663 – 15 July 1665), died in infancy and was never legitimised;
  • Philippe de La Baume Le Blanc (7 January 1665 – 1666), died in infancy and was never legitimised;
  • Louis de La Baume Le Blanc (27 December 1665 – 1666), died in infancy and was never legitimised;
  • Marie-Anne de Bourbon, Légitimée de France (2 October 1666 – 3 May 1739); known as Mademoiselle de Blois after her legitimation. She married Louis Armand I, Prince of Conti (1661–1685) and had no issue. She inherited the title of Duchess of La Vallière from her mother;
  • Louis de Bourbon, Count of Vermandois (2 October 1667 – 18 November 1683); died at the age of 16 in exile, during his first military campaign, and had no issue.[31][32]

Legacy and appearances in popular culture

  • The term lavalier, meaning a jeweled pendant necklace, comes from her name (or possibly from that of Ève Lavallière). In French, a lavallière is a neck tie tied to form a bow at the front of the neck (reminiscent of a pussy bow), which was popular in the 19th century;[8]
  • La Vallière's book Réflexions sur la miséricorde de Dieu ("Reflections on the Mercy of God) were printed in 1767, and in again in 1860 as Réflexions, lettres et sermons, by M. P. Clement;[citation needed]
  • Letitia Elizabeth Landon's poetical illustration, Louise, Duchess of La Valliere, to an engraving of a painting by Edmund Thomas Parris, was published in 1838.[33]
  • Louise de la Vallière by Maria McIntosh (1854) is her earliest known fictionalised portrayal in English;[citation needed]
  • She is one of the main characters in Alexandre Dumas's novel The Vicomte de Bragelonne, the second sequel to The Three Musketeers. Dumas makes her the fiancée of the fictional titular character, son of the musketeer Athos. Some editions break the novel up in several books, one of which is titled Louise de la Vallière.[citation needed]
  • In 1922, a German silent film titled Louise de Lavallière was made about her life;[citation needed]
  • Marcelle Vioux wrote a 1938 novel about her titled Louise de La Valliere;[34]
  • Sandra Gulland wrote a historical novel featuring her, titled Mistress of the Sun, published in 2008;
  • Karleen Koen's 2011 novel Before Versailles is told from Louise de la Vallière's point of view;
  • Joan Sanders published a biography of Louise in 1959 titled La Petite : Louise de la Vallière ("The Little: Louise de la Vallière");
  • Louise Françoise le Blanc de la Vallière, the main female character of The Familiar of Zero, was named after her;
  • Christina Rossetti's poem Sœur Louise de la Miséricorde is presumed to be about the Duchess of La Vallière.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Mauclair & Maillard 2010, p. 6.
  2. ^ a b c "La Valliere, Louise de | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  3. ^ Gustave Braux: Louise de La Vallière – de sa Touraine natale au Carmel de Paris, C.L.D., 1981, p. 17.
  4. ^ a b Butler, Charles (1814). The Lives of Dom Armand-Jean Le Bouthillier de Rancé, Abbot Regular and Reformer of the Monastery of La Trappe; and of Thomas À Kempis ... With Some Account of the Principal Religious and Military Orders of the Roman Catholic Church. Longman & Company.
  5. ^ a b Montpensier, Anne-Marie-Louise-Henriette d'Orléans (1627–1693 ; duchesse de) Auteur du texte (1858–1859). Mémoires de Mlle de Montpensier, petite-fille de Henri IV / collationnés sur le manuscrit autographe avec notes biographiques et historiques, par A. Chéruel,... We had already seen that Mademoiselle de la Vallière was maid of honor to Henrietta of England, who at that time was still living at the Tuileries
  6. ^ "Princess Henrietta, Madame: A Fairy Tale". Aspects of History. 12 December 2021. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  7. ^ HILLEMAND, P. (1975). A propos de la mort d'Henriette d'Angleterre Madame, Duchesse d'Orléans (PDF) (in French). p. 117.
  8. ^ a b c d e Calon, Oliver (2017). "Ah! s'il n'était pas le roi – Louise de la Vallière". Les petites phrases qui ont fait la grande histoire. Vuibert. pp. 84–85. ISBN 978-2311-10216-1
  9. ^ a b Fraser, Antonia, Love and Louis XIV, Anchor Books, 2006, pp. 70–71.
  10. ^ ib. Fraser, pp. 83–84.
  11. ^ ib. Fraser, pp. 70–75.
  12. ^ ib. Fraser, pp. 80–81.
  13. ^ Montpensier, Anne-Marie-Louise-Henriette d'Orléans (1627-1693 ; duchesse de) Auteur du texte (1858–1859). Mémoires de Mlle de Montpensier, petite-fille de Henri IV / collationnés sur le manuscrit autographe avec notes biographiques et historiques, par A. Chéruel,...
  14. ^ Breton, Guy; Histoires d'amour de l'histoire de France IV: Les favorites de Louis XIV, Presses de la Cité, Paris, 1991, p. 115.
  15. ^ "Réunion des Musées Nationaux-Grand Palais". www.photo.rmn.fr. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  16. ^ Dance, spectacle, and the body politick, 1250-1750. Jennifer Nevile. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 2008. ISBN 978-0-253-35153-1. OCLC 180577252.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  17. ^ Fischer-Lichte, Erika (2002). History of European drama and theatre. Library Genesis. London ; New York : Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-18059-7.
  18. ^ Buckley, Veronica (2010). The secret wife of Louis XIV : Francoise d'Aubigne, Madame de Maintenon. Picador. ISBN 978-0-312-43005-4. OCLC 587198685.
  19. ^ Letter to Madame de Grignan from 29 July 1676, No. 563 in the edition of Mr. Monmerqué, p. 564 online [retrieved 26 July 2018].
  20. ^ ib. Fraser, pp. 111–112.
  21. ^ Sonnet, quoted in Lair 1881, p. 224.
  22. ^ Rowlands, Guy (29 August 2002). The Dynastic State and the Army under Louis XIV. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511496882. ISBN 978-0-521-64124-1.
  23. ^ Les enfants cachés du Roi-Soleil in: histoire-et-secrets.com [retrieved 16 November 2016].
  24. ^ Huertas 1998, pp. 134–135.
  25. ^ Herman, Elizabeth, Sex with Kings, Harper Collins, 2004, p. 222.
  26. ^ Saint-Simon: Memoires, Paris, Librairie L. Hachette et Cie, 1864, vol. 5 of 1864 edition, chapter XXIII, pp. 303–304.
  27. ^ Louis was later suspected of being the Man in the Iron Mask.
  28. ^ ib. Fraser
  29. ^ Louis Bertrand: La Vie amoureuse de Louis XIV, Frédérique Patat, 2013, p. 24.
  30. ^ Herman, Eleanor, Sex with Kings, Harper Collins, 2004, p. 106.
  31. ^ François Bluche: "Dictionnaire du Grand Siècle".
  32. ^ Jean-Christian Petitfils: "Louise de la Vallière".
  33. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1838). "poetical illustration". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1839. Fisher, Son & Co.Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1838). "picture". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1839. Fisher, Son & Co.
  34. ^ Marcelle Vioux: Louise de La Valliere, Fasquelle 1938, 263 p.

References

  • Breton, Guy (1991). Histoires d'amour de l'histoire de France IV: Les favorites de Louis XIV. Presses de la Cité.
  • Eleanor Herman (17 March 2009). Sex with Kings. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-175155-4.
  • Antonia Fraser (25 June 2010). Love and Louis XIV: The Women in the Life of the Sun King. Doubleday Canada. ISBN 978-0-385-67251-1.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "La Vallière, Louise Françoise de" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Mauclair, Fabrice; Maillard, Brigitte (2010). La Justice seigneuriale du duché-prairie de La Vallière (1667-1790) - Thèse doctorante (in French). Université François-Rabelais, Tours.
  • John J. Conley (2002). Mademoiselle de la Vallière: The Logic of Mercy in: The Suspicion of virtue : Women Philosophers in Neoclassical France. Ithaca, Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-4020-5.
  • Catherine Valogne (1964). Louis XIV et Louise de la Vallière à Versailles (in French). Payot, Lausanne.
  • Jean-Christian Petitfils (2002). Louise de La Vallière (in French). Perrin, Paris.
  • Jean-Christian Petitfils (2002). Louis XIV (in French). Perrin, Paris.
  • Historia magazine n°o 459, March 1985 ISSN 1270-0835
  • Huertas, Monique de (1998). Louise de la Vallière, De Versailles au Carmel (in French). Pygmalion.
  • Jules Lair (1881). Louise de La Vallière et la Jeunesse de Louis XIV (in French). Plon.
  • Claude Puzin (2007). Louis de Bourbon ou le Soleil maudit (in French). T. G.
  • Simone Bertière (1998). Les Femmes du Roi-Soleil (in French). éditions de Fallois.

louise, vallière, 1922, film, louise, lavallière, film, françoise, duchess, vallière, vaujours, born, françoise, louise, baume, blanc, vallière, mademoiselle, vallière, august, 1644, june, 1710, french, noblewoman, first, mistress, louis, france, from, 1661, 1. For the 1922 film see Louise de Lavalliere film Francoise Louise de La Valliere Duchess of La Valliere and Vaujours born Francoise Louise de La Baume Le Blanc de La Valliere Mademoiselle de La Valliere 6 August 1644 7 June 1710 was a French noblewoman and the first mistress of Louis XIV of France from 1661 to 1667 She was created suo jure Duchess of La Valliere and Duchess of Vaujours After leaving the royal court Louise dedicated her life to religion becoming a nun in 1674 Louise de La ValliereO C D Portrait by Pierre Mignard IBornFrancoise Louise de La Blaume Le Blanc de La Valliere 1644 08 06 6 August 1644Tours Kingdom of FranceDied7 June 1710 1710 06 07 aged 65 Paris Kingdom of FranceBurial placeCemetery of the Carmelite convent in Notre Dame des Champs ParisOther namesMademoiselle de La ValliereSister Louise de la MisericordieKnown forMistress of Louis XIVTitleDuchess de La Valliere Duchess of VaujoursSuccessorMarie Anne de BourbonChildren5 includingMarie Anne de BourbonLouis Count of VermandoisParent s Laurent de La ValliereFrancoise Le Prevost Contents 1 Ancestry and early life 1644 1661 2 Life at the royal court 1661 1671 2 1 Louis XIV s mistress 1661 1667 2 1 1 The end of the royal affair and later life at the royal court 1666 1669 3 Later life 1671 1710 3 1 As a Carmelite nun 1675 1710 4 Physical appearance 5 Issue 6 Legacy and appearances in popular culture 7 Footnotes 8 ReferencesAncestry and early life 1644 1661 EditFrancoise Louise de La Baume Le Blanc de La Valliere Mademoiselle de La Valliere was born on 6 August 1644 at the Hotel de la Crouzille also known as Hotel de la Valliere in Tours Kingdom of France 1 as the daughter of military officer Laurent de La Baume Le Blanc Lord of La Valliere and his wife born Francoise Le Prevost widow of a councillor of the parlement The La Blaume Le Blanc family had distungished itself in military service to the crown while the Le Prevosts had served the throne with their legal knowledge for generations 2 At the time of her birth her father was the governor of the Castle of Amboise where she spent her first years also spending time in her family s Castle of La Valliere in Reugny 3 During these years she was educated by her aunts Ursuline nuns Elisabeth and Charlotte in reading grammar musical composition and public speaking 2 Following her father s death La Valliere s mother married Jacques de Courtavel Marquess of Saint Remy butler of the exiled Gaston Duke of Orleans uncle of Louis XIV known as Monsieur 1608 1660 La Valliere served as a lady s companion to the duke s three younger daughters Princesses Marguerite Louise 1645 1721 Elisabeth Marguerite Isabelle 1646 1696 and Francoise Madeleine 1648 1664 being educated with them in painting music etiquette equitation literature and philosophy by the duke s first almoner 4 Armand Jean le Bouthillier de Rance 2 who went on to found the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance Trappists 4 After the death of the Duke of Orleans his widow Marguerite 1615 1672 moved with her daughters to the Luxembourg Palace Paris and took then sixteen year old La Valliere with them citation needed Life at the royal court 1661 1671 EditThrough the influence of a distant relative Madame de Choisy born Jeanne Olympe Hurault de L Hospital 1604 1669 Mademoiselle de La Valliere was named maid of honour to Henrietta 1644 1670 the new Duchess of Orleans wife of Louis XIV s brother Philippe I Duke of Orleans 1640 1701 and moved to her home the Tuileries Palace 5 Henrietta known as Madame joined the court at Fontainebleau in 1661 citation needed where La Valliere likely first met her future lover Louis XIV King of France 1638 1715 5 She served the duchess together with Francoise de Rochechouart de Mortemart Mademoiselle de Tonnay Charente 1640 1707 the future Madame de Montespan 6 Louis XIV s mistress 1661 1667 Edit Louis XIV in 1660 on an engraving by Abraham van Diepenbeeck and Adriaen Millaert A close relationship soon formed between the king and Madame which concerned the Queen Dowager Anne 1601 1666 7 In order to counter rumours they allegedly decided that he should court other women as a front for which Madame herself selected three young ladies including La Valliere citation needed She spent only two months in Fontainebleau before becoming the king s mistress According to one version of the events she knew nothing of her part in a ploy to avert a scandal delightfully believing that the monarch s feelings for her were sincere Apart from her skills in various arts and sports it was La Valliere s innocence and sincerity that captured the king one source states that he fell in love with her after upon their first meeting she exclaimed Ah if he was not the King 8 9 This was Mademoiselle de La Valliere s first relationship She was reportedly an innocent religious girl who did not behave flirtatiously or acted on self interest during the romance She was not extravagant nor was she interested in the wealth or the titles she could receive from her situation Antonia Fraser writes that she was a secret lover not a maitresse en titre like Barbara Villiers 10 Nicolas Fouquet s curiosity in the affair was one of the causes of his disgrace for when he bribed Louise the king mistakenly thought that Fouquet was attempting to take her as a lover 11 clarification needed The affair although discreet quickly became public angering the clergy including celebrated orator and future Bishop of Meaux Jacques Benigne Bossuet 1627 1704 as well as many religiously devoted people in the court It also invoked the bitter sarcasm of Madame citation needed Wishing to avoid scandal and a confrontation with his mother the king moved La Valliere to a hunting lodge in the forest near Versailles not far from Saint Germain en Laye 8 In February 1662 the couple had a conflict upon direct questioning by the king La Valliere refused to tell him about the alleged affair between the Duchess of Orleans and Armand de Gramont Count of Guiche 1637 1673 citation needed Around the same time Bossuet delivered a series of Lenten sermons condemning the immoral activities of the king through the example of David s adultery which troubled the pious girl s conscience and she fled to a convent in Chaillot 12 Meanwhile her enemies lead by the Countess of Soissons born Olympia Mancini conspired to bring La Valliere down by bringing the affair to the attention of Queen Maria Theresa 1638 1683 13 During her first pregnancy in 1663 La Valliere was removed from the service of the Duchess of Orleans and sent to live in the Palais Royal where on 19 December 1663 she gave birth to a son Charles 1663 1665 He was taken immediately and secretly to Saint Leu and entrusted to the care of two faithful servants of Chief Minister Jean Baptiste Colbert 1619 1683 Despite the attempts of Dr Boucher who was present at the birth and tried to make the transfer as secret as possible the story quickly spread through Paris The public scorn at the Midnight Mass on 24 December was so great that La Valliere escaped from the church 14 The theatre installed for the premiere of The Princess of Elid on a contemporary engraving by Israel Silvestre 1621 1691 15 In 1664 Louis XIV hosted a multi day performance and party called Les Plaisirs de l Ile enchantee The Pleasures of the Enchanted Island in the hunting lodge where his mistress lived During the festivities Moliere 1622 1673 presented two new plays La Princesse d Elide The Princess of Elid and Le Tartuffe ou l Imposteur Tartuffe or The Impostor Hypocrite 16 17 with the musical arrangements of Jean Baptiste Lully 1632 1687 Queen Maria Theresa and the dowager queen were the official dedicators while La Valliere was the unofficial dedicatee leading to court gossip clarification needed This only worsened when she received the domain of Carrieres sur Seine and started building a castle there with gardens designed by Andre Le Notre 1613 1700 the royal landscape architect citation needed In 1665 the king had two affairs beside the one with La Valliere he was temporarily involved with Bonne de Pons d Heudicourt 1644 1709 whose family quickly had her removed from the court 18 then with the Princess of Monaco born Catherine Charlotte de Gramont 1639 1678 After the death of his mother in 1666 Louis XIV started to publicly display his affair which greatly displeased La Valliere Within a week of the dowager queen s death La Valliere had to appear at mass next to the queen Ashamed she treated Maria Theresa with humility and respect citation needed The end of the royal affair and later life at the royal court 1666 1669 Edit Madame de Montespan in 1670 Around the time of the death of the queen dowager citation needed the former Mademoiselle de Tonnay Charente now the Marquise of Montespan returned to the service of the Duchess of Orleans which she left because of her marriage in 1663 Now a lady in waiting she quickly established herself as the reigning beauty of the court 9 Enamoured the king sought to take her as his new mistress 19 In May 1667 before going on a military campaign to Flanders the king legitimised their only living child Marie Anne 1666 1739 Their three eldest children Charles 1663 1665 Philippe 1665 1666 and Louis 1665 1666 had already died by this time Marie Anne thus became a fille legitimee de France legitimised daughter of France could use the surname de Bourbon and received the title Mademoiselle de Blois On the same day he created his mistress Duchess of La Valliere and Duchess of Vaujours 8 As a duchess La Valliere had the right to sit on a taboret in the presence of the queen which was a highly prized privilege However La Valliere was not impressed saying that the title resembled a present given to a servant when he retired Affirming this Louis XIV commented that legitimising their daughter and the gifts to La Valliere matched the affection he had had for her for six years 20 When the king left for the campaign La Valliere again pregnant was ordered to stay at the court Worrying for the king and maybe feeling jealous she travelled to the battlefield without permission and threw herself at his feet sobbing uncontrollably Infuriated Louis forced her to return home immediately Madame de Montespan was the first to denounce her for the scandal citation needed The king made La Valliere share an apartment with Montespan at the Tuileries Palace as the latter s husband was very uncomfortable with his wife s affair citation needed During this time a devastated La Valliere wrote a poem titled Sonnet to the King 21 Five months after the battlefield scandal on 2 October 1667 La Valliere gave birth to her fifth and last child Louis 1667 1683 who would later be legitimised Hoping to win back the heart of the king La Valliere accepted all the humiliations inflicted upon her by the new situation Montespan demanded that she assist her with her toilette and the king would often demand the two rivals to travel in the carriage of the queen on journeys Her tactic was unsuccessful the king did not return to her nor did he end his other affairs 8 In 1669 when effectively their relationship had long since ended their son was legitimised created Count of Vermandois and given the post of Admiral of France As he was only 2 years old the king retained his authority over the navy 22 Around the same time at the end of March 1669 Madame de Montespan gave birth to her first child by the king a daughter 1669 1672 La Valliere served as the newborn daughter s godmother who was named Louise Francoise after her citation needed The strain of being forced to live with her former lover and his current mistress took its toll on La Valliere she lost weight and became increasingly pale and exhausted In 1670 after a nearly fatal long illness which according to some sources was the result of a miscarriage 23 she turned to religion writing her Reflexions sur la misericorde de Dieu Reflections on the Mercy of God She remained at court for two more years trying to lead an exemplary life in the hope of inspiring others citation needed Her love for the king was not yet dead she admitted that she was not dead to her passions while I feel them live more strongly than ever in what I love more than myself 24 Later life 1671 1710 EditFollowing the advice of Jesuit preacher Louis Bourdaloue 1632 1704 supported Bossuet and Bernardin Gigault de Bellefond Marquis de Bellefonds 1630 1694 head of the Maison du Roi she decided to leave the court and enter the Carmelite convent in the Faubourg Saint Jacques part of Paris later known as Notre Dame des Champs Even though the Carmelites followed very strict rules La Valliere rejected the option of being placed in a more relaxed order She first attempted to leave in 1671 without the king s permission fleeing to the Convent of the Visitandines of Chaillot citation needed Madame de Montespan wanted La Valliere to return so that her own affair with the king could remain hidden He urged the king to publicly recognise his daughter with La Valliere as Mademoiselle de Blois citation needed She asked her confidant and governess of her children Madame Scarron the future Madame de Maintenon born Francoise d Aubigne 1635 1719 to detail to La Valliere the suffering she would be exposed to at a Carmelite convent as well as the court scandal that her decision would provoke Scarron highlighted that she would eventually be forbidden from wearing her custom made shoes that allowed her to walk without a limp as one of her legs was shorter than the other When I shall be suffering at the convent Louise replied I shall only have to remember what they made me suffer here and all the pain shall seem light to me As a Carmelite nun 1675 1710 Edit La Valliere asking the queen for forgiveness on Louise Adelaide Desnos painting from 1838All of the attempts at dissuading her were in vain and in 1674 La Valliere was finally permitted to enter the Carmelite convent in the Faubourg Saint Jacques The day she left the court she threw herself at the feet of the queen begging forgiveness saying that My crimes were public my repentance must be public too 25 One year later on 3 June 1675 La Valliere took her perpetual vows under the name Louise de la Misericorde Louise of Mercy and accepted the black veil from the queen herself who kissed and blessed her 26 In her absence the new Duchess of Orleans born Princess Elizabeth Charlotte Liselotte of the Palatinate known as Madame Palatine took care of the education of her son Louis He died on his first military campaign at the age of 16 in 1683 while in exile in Flanders for his involvement with a secret group of young aristocrats practicing what was then called le vice italien homosexuality 27 His sister and aunt were greatly affected by his death while his father did not shed a tear His mother in reference to the adultery of her son s conception said upon receiving the news I ought to weep for his birth far more than for his death 28 Queen Maria Theresia the Duchess of Orleans Bishop Bossuet and Marie de Rabutin Chantal Marquise de Sevigne 1626 1696 had a habit of visiting Louise at the convent for spiritual consolation and repose Later in life Madame de Montespan herself also went to her for advice on a pious life Louise forgave her and counselled her on the mysteries of divine grace citation needed Sister Louise de la Misericordie died on 6 June 1710 at the age of 65 after 36 years of religious life and was buried in the cemetery of her convent Her titles and possessions were inherited by her only surviving child Marie Anne by then Princess Dowager of Conti citation needed Physical appearance EditAlthough she was never described as a striking beauty or naturally brilliant Louise had qualities that attracted attention she was discreet modest and had blonde hair and soft blue eyes She was afflicted with a limp as one of her legs was shorter than the other 29 but she wore custom made shoes and managed to be an accomplished and graceful rider and dancer citation needed At the age of 17 she reportedly had an exquisite complexion blond hair blue eyes a sweet smile and an expression at once tender and modest 30 Issue Edit Louise de La Valliere and her children by Peter Lely Musee des Beaux Arts de RennesLouise de la Valliere had five children by Louis XIV two of whom survived infancy Charles de La Baume Le Blanc 19 December 1663 15 July 1665 died in infancy and was never legitimised Philippe de La Baume Le Blanc 7 January 1665 1666 died in infancy and was never legitimised Louis de La Baume Le Blanc 27 December 1665 1666 died in infancy and was never legitimised Marie Anne de Bourbon Legitimee de France 2 October 1666 3 May 1739 known as Mademoiselle de Blois after her legitimation She married Louis Armand I Prince of Conti 1661 1685 and had no issue She inherited the title of Duchess of La Valliere from her mother Louis de Bourbon Count of Vermandois 2 October 1667 18 November 1683 died at the age of 16 in exile during his first military campaign and had no issue 31 32 Legacy and appearances in popular culture EditThe term lavalier meaning a jeweled pendant necklace comes from her name or possibly from that of Eve Lavalliere In French a lavalliere is a neck tie tied to form a bow at the front of the neck reminiscent of a pussy bow which was popular in the 19th century 8 La Valliere s book Reflexions sur la misericorde de Dieu Reflections on the Mercy of God were printed in 1767 and in again in 1860 as Reflexions lettres et sermons by M P Clement citation needed Letitia Elizabeth Landon s poetical illustration Louise Duchess of La Valliere to an engraving of a painting by Edmund Thomas Parris was published in 1838 33 Louise de la Valliere by Maria McIntosh 1854 is her earliest known fictionalised portrayal in English citation needed She is one of the main characters in Alexandre Dumas s novel The Vicomte de Bragelonne the second sequel to The Three Musketeers Dumas makes her the fiancee of the fictional titular character son of the musketeer Athos Some editions break the novel up in several books one of which is titled Louise de la Valliere citation needed In 1922 a German silent film titled Louise de Lavalliere was made about her life citation needed Marcelle Vioux wrote a 1938 novel about her titled Louise de La Valliere 34 Sandra Gulland wrote a historical novel featuring her titled Mistress of the Sun published in 2008 Karleen Koen s 2011 novel Before Versailles is told from Louise de la Valliere s point of view Joan Sanders published a biography of Louise in 1959 titled La Petite Louise de la Valliere The Little Louise de la Valliere Louise Francoise le Blanc de la Valliere the main female character of The Familiar of Zero was named after her Christina Rossetti s poem Sœur Louise de la Misericorde is presumed to be about the Duchess of La Valliere Wikisource has original text related to this article Louise Duchess of LaValliere a poetical illustration by L E L Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louise de La Valliere Footnotes Edit Biography portal Mauclair amp Maillard 2010 p 6 a b c La Valliere Louise de Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 25 May 2022 Gustave Braux Louise de La Valliere de sa Touraine natale au Carmel de Paris C L D 1981 p 17 a b Butler Charles 1814 The Lives of Dom Armand Jean Le Bouthillier de Rance Abbot Regular and Reformer of the Monastery of La Trappe and of Thomas A Kempis With Some Account of the Principal Religious and Military Orders of the Roman Catholic Church Longman amp Company a b Montpensier Anne Marie Louise Henriette d Orleans 1627 1693 duchesse de Auteur du texte 1858 1859 Memoires de Mlle de Montpensier petite fille de Henri IV collationnes sur le manuscrit autographe avec notes biographiques et historiques par A Cheruel We had already seen that Mademoiselle de la Valliere was maid of honor to Henrietta of England who at that time was still living at the Tuileries Princess Henrietta Madame A Fairy Tale Aspects of History 12 December 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2022 HILLEMAND P 1975 A propos de la mort d Henriette d Angleterre Madame Duchesse d Orleans PDF in French p 117 a b c d e Calon Oliver 2017 Ah s il n etait pas le roi Louise de la Valliere Les petites phrases qui ont fait la grande histoire Vuibert pp 84 85 ISBN 978 2311 10216 1 a b Fraser Antonia Love and Louis XIV Anchor Books 2006 pp 70 71 ib Fraser pp 83 84 ib Fraser pp 70 75 ib Fraser pp 80 81 Montpensier Anne Marie Louise Henriette d Orleans 1627 1693 duchesse de Auteur du texte 1858 1859 Memoires de Mlle de Montpensier petite fille de Henri IV collationnes sur le manuscrit autographe avec notes biographiques et historiques par A Cheruel Breton Guy Histoires d amour de l histoire de France IV Les favorites de Louis XIV Presses de la Cite Paris 1991 p 115 Reunion des Musees Nationaux Grand Palais www photo rmn fr Retrieved 25 May 2022 Dance spectacle and the body politick 1250 1750 Jennifer Nevile Bloomington Indiana University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 253 35153 1 OCLC 180577252 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Fischer Lichte Erika 2002 History of European drama and theatre Library Genesis London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 18059 7 Buckley Veronica 2010 The secret wife of Louis XIV Francoise d Aubigne Madame de Maintenon Picador ISBN 978 0 312 43005 4 OCLC 587198685 Letter to Madame de Grignan from 29 July 1676 No 563 in the edition of Mr Monmerque p 564 online retrieved 26 July 2018 ib Fraser pp 111 112 Sonnet quoted in Lair 1881 p 224 Rowlands Guy 29 August 2002 The Dynastic State and the Army under Louis XIV Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9780511496882 ISBN 978 0 521 64124 1 Les enfants caches du Roi Soleil in histoire et secrets com retrieved 16 November 2016 Huertas 1998 pp 134 135 Herman Elizabeth Sex with Kings Harper Collins 2004 p 222 Saint Simon Memoires Paris Librairie L Hachette et Cie 1864 vol 5 of 1864 edition chapter XXIII pp 303 304 Louis was later suspected of being the Man in the Iron Mask ib Fraser Louis Bertrand La Vie amoureuse de Louis XIV Frederique Patat 2013 p 24 Herman Eleanor Sex with Kings Harper Collins 2004 p 106 Francois Bluche Dictionnaire du Grand Siecle Jean Christian Petitfils Louise de la Valliere Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1838 poetical illustration Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1839 Fisher Son amp Co Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1838 picture Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1839 Fisher Son amp Co Marcelle Vioux Louise de La Valliere Fasquelle 1938 263 p References EditBreton Guy 1991 Histoires d amour de l histoire de France IV Les favorites de Louis XIV Presses de la Cite Eleanor Herman 17 March 2009 Sex with Kings HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 175155 4 Antonia Fraser 25 June 2010 Love and Louis XIV The Women in the Life of the Sun King Doubleday Canada ISBN 978 0 385 67251 1 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 La Valliere Louise Francoise de Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Mauclair Fabrice Maillard Brigitte 2010 La Justice seigneuriale du duche prairie de La Valliere 1667 1790 These doctorante in French Universite Francois Rabelais Tours John J Conley 2002 Mademoiselle de la Valliere The Logic of Mercyin The Suspicion of virtue Women Philosophers in Neoclassical France Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4020 5 Catherine Valogne 1964 Louis XIV et Louise de la Valliere a Versailles in French Payot Lausanne Jean Christian Petitfils 2002 Louise de La Valliere in French Perrin Paris Jean Christian Petitfils 2002 Louis XIV in French Perrin Paris Historia magazine n o 459 March 1985 ISSN 1270 0835 Huertas Monique de 1998 Louise de la Valliere De Versailles au Carmel in French Pygmalion Jules Lair 1881 Louise de La Valliere et la Jeunesse de Louis XIV in French Plon Claude Puzin 2007 Louis de Bourbon ou le Soleil maudit in French T G Simone Bertiere 1998 Les Femmes du Roi Soleil in French editions de Fallois Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louise de La Valliere amp oldid 1145961231, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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