fbpx
Wikipedia

Marguerite de Navarre

Marguerite de Navarre (French: Marguerite d'Angoulême, Marguerite d'Alençon; 11 April 1492 – 21 December 1549), also known as Marguerite of Angoulême and Margaret of Navarre, was a princess of France, Duchess of Alençon and Berry,[1] and Queen of Navarre by her second marriage to King Henry II of Navarre. Her brother became King of France, as Francis I, and the two siblings were responsible for the celebrated intellectual and cultural court and salons of their day in France. Marguerite is the ancestress of the Bourbon kings of France, being the mother of Jeanne d'Albret, whose son, Henry of Navarre, succeeded as Henry IV of France, the first Bourbon king. As an author and a patron of humanists and reformers, she was an outstanding figure of the French Renaissance. Samuel Putnam called her "The First Modern Woman".[2]

Marguerite de Navarre
Portrait attributed to Jean Clouet, c. 1527
Queen consort of Navarre
Tenure24 January 1527 – 21 December 1549
Born11 April 1492
Angoulême, Angoumois, France
Died21 December 1549(1549-12-21) (aged 57)
Odos, Gascony, France
Spouse
(m. 1509; died 1525)
(m. 1526)
Issue
more...
Jeanne III of Navarre
HouseValois-Angoulême
FatherCharles, Count of Angoulême
MotherLouise of Savoy
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Early life edit

Marguerite was born in Angoulême on 11 April 1492, the eldest child of Louise of Savoy and Charles, Count of Angoulême.[3] Her father was a descendant of Charles V, and would thus have been on the line of succession to the French crown by masculine primogeniture, if both Charles VIII and the presumptive heir, Louis, Duke of Orléans, had died without producing male offspring.

Two years after Marguerite's birth, the family moved from Angoulême to Cognac, "where the Italian influence reigned supreme, and where Boccaccio was looked upon as a little less than a god".[4]

She had several half-siblings from illegitimate relationships of her father, who were raised alongside Marguerite and her brother Francis. Two girls, Jeanne of Angoulême and Madeleine, were born of her father's long relationship with his châtelaine, Antoinette de Polignac, Dame de Combronde, who later became Louise's lady-in-waiting and confidante.[5] Another half-sister, Souveraine, was born to Jeanne le Conte, also one of her father's mistresses.

Thanks to her mother, who was only nineteen when widowed, Marguerite was carefully tutored from her earliest childhood and given a classical education that included Latin. The young princess was to be called "Maecenas to the learned ones of her brother's kingdom".[4] When Marguerite was ten, Louise tried to marry her to the Prince of Wales, who would later become Henry VIII of England, but the alliance was courteously rebuffed.[4] Perhaps the one real love in her life was Gaston de Foix, Duc de Nemours, nephew of King Louis XII. Gaston went to Italy, however, and died a hero at Ravenna, when the French defeated Spanish and Papal forces.[6]

First marriage edit

 
17th century portrait of Charles d'Alençon, Marguerite's first husband.

At the age of seventeen Marguerite was married to Charles IV of Alençon, aged twenty, by the decree of King Louis XII (who also arranged the marriage of his ten-year-old daughter, Claude, to Francis). With this decree, Marguerite was forced to marry a generally kind but practically illiterate man for political expediency—"the radiant young princess of the violet-blue eyes... had become the bride of a laggard and a dolt". She had been bartered to save the royal pride of Louis, by keeping the County of Armagnac in the family. There were no offspring from this marriage.

Following the example set by her mother, Marguerite became the most influential woman in France during her lifetime when her brother acceded to the crown as Francis I in 1515. Her salon, known as the "New Parnassus", became famous internationally.

After the death of Queen Claude, she took in her two nieces Madeleine and Marguerite, for whom she would continue to care during her second marriage.[7]

Issue edit

 
Coat of arms of Marquerite as Queen of Navarre

Marguerite was married twice, first to Charles IV of Alençon, but this marriage was childless.

Her next marriage was to Henry II of Navarre. The children of Marguerite and Henry were:

  1. Jeanne III of Navarre (16 November 1528– 9 June 1572),[8] the mother of the future Henry IV of France, also known as Henry III of Navarre. She became Queen regnant of Navarre from 1555 to 1572. She was the wife of Antoine de Bourbon, Duke of Vendôme, and mother of Henry of Bourbon, who became King of Navarre and also of France as the first Bourbon king. She was the acknowledged spiritual and political leader of the French Huguenot movement.[9]
  2. Jean (7 July 1530- 25 December 1530), who died as an infant

Queen of Navarre edit

 
Henri d'Albret King of Navarre

After the death of her first husband in 1525, Marguerite married Henry II of Navarre in January 1527 at St. Germain-en-Laye.[10] Ferdinand II of Aragon had invaded the Kingdom of Navarre in 1512, and Henry ruled only Lower Navarre, the independent principality of Béarn, and several dependencies in Gascony. Approximately a year after the lead image (in the information box) that was painted by Jean Clouet, on 16 November 1528, Marguerite gave birth to a daughter by Henry, the future Jeanne III of Navarre, who became the mother of the future Henry IV of France.

A Venetian ambassador of that time praised Marguerite as knowing all the secrets of diplomatic art, hence to be treated with deference and circumspection. Marguerite's most remarkable adventure involved freeing her brother, King Francis I, who had been held prisoner in Spain by Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor after being captured in the Battle of Pavia, Italy, 1525. During a critical period of the negotiations, Queen Marguerite rode horseback through wintry woods, twelve hours a day for many days, to meet a safe-conduct deadline, while writing her diplomatic letters at night.

Her only son, Jean, was born in Blois on 7 July 1530, when Marguerite was thirty-eight. The child died on Christmas Day the same year. Scholars believe that her grief motivated Marguerite to write her most controversial work, Miroir de l'âme pécheresse (The Mirror of the Sinful Soul), in 1531.

Sorbonne theologians condemned the work as heresy. A monk said Marguerite should be sewn into a sack and thrown into the Seine. Students at the Collège de Navarre satirized her in a play as "a Fury from Hell". Her brother forced the charges to be dropped, however, and obtained an apology from the Sorbonne.[11]

Writer edit

Marguerite wrote many poems and plays. Her most notable works are a classic collection of short stories, the Heptameron, and a remarkably intense religious poem, Miroir de l'âme pécheresse (The Mirror of the Sinful Soul). This poem is a first-person, mystical narrative of the soul as a yearning woman calling out to Christ as her father-brother-lover. Her work was passed to the royal court of England, suggesting that Marguerite had influence on the Protestant Reformation in England.

Role in the Reformation edit

Following the expulsion of John Calvin and William Farel from Geneva in 1538, Marguerite de Navarre wrote to Marie Dentière, a notable Walloon Protestant reformer in Geneva. The two women appear to have personal history outside of their written correspondence: Marguerite was godmother to the daughter of Marie Dentière and Dentière's daughter composed a French guide to the Hebrew language to send to Marguerite's daughter.[12] In her letter, Marguerite inquired what was the cause for Calvin and Farel's expulsion. Dentière responded in 1539 with the Epistre tres utile, commonly known today as the Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre.[13] This epistle criticized the Protestant clergy who had expelled Calvin and Farel, asked for Marguerite's support and aid in increasing scriptural literacy and access among women, and advised her to act in expelling Catholic clergy from France.[14]

During her years in France, Anne Boleyn had been a lady-in-waiting to Queen Claude. There is conjecture that the courts of Claude and Marguerite overlapped and that perhaps Anne was in service to Marguerite,[15] not only to Claude, and may have become a follower of Marguerite's, absorbing her views about Christianity. A letter by Anne Boleyn after she became queen exists in which she makes strong expressions of affection to Marguerite.

It is conjectured that Marguerite gave Anne the original manuscript of Miroir de l'âme pécheresse at some point. It is certain that in 1544, nine years after Anne Boleyn's execution, Anne's daughter, who would become Elizabeth I (1533–1603), translated the poem into English prose as The Miroir or Glasse of the Synneful Soul when she was eleven years old and presented it, written in her own hand, to her then-stepmother, the English queen Katherine Parr.[16] This literary connection between Marguerite, Anne Boleyn, Katherine Parr, and Elizabeth suggests a direct mentoring link or legacy of reformist religious convictions.

 
Francis I and Marguerite de Navarre by Richard Parkes Bonington

Patron of the arts edit

As a generous patron of the arts, Marguerite befriended and protected many artists and writers, among them François Rabelais (1483–1553), Clément Marot (1496–1544), Claude de Bectoz (1490–1547), Pierre de Ronsard (1524–1585) and Julián Íñiguez de Medrano (1520's-1585-1588). Also, Marguerite served as a mediator between Roman Catholics and Protestants (including John Calvin). Although Marguerite espoused reform within the Catholic Church, she was not a Calvinist. She did, however, do her best to protect the reformers and dissuaded Francis I from intolerant measures as long as she could. After her death, eight religious wars occurred in France, including the notorious St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre of 1572.

 
Clos Lucé in Amboise, France, where Leonardo da Vinci died in 1519

Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) died while guest of Marguerite and her brother, Francis I. They had been raised at Château d'Amboise, which belonged to their mother, Louise of Savoy. The king maintained his residence there and Marguerite maintained a residence nearby. During the first few years of the reign of Francis the château in which he lived reached the pinnacle of its glory. Leonardo had been the architect of a large château for them, among many other projects, and they provided quarters for him when he left Italy and joined her court. As a guest of the king, who provided him with a comfortable stipend, Leonardo da Vinci came to Château Amboise in December 1515 and lived and worked in the nearby Clos Lucé, connected to the château by an underground passage. Tourists are told that he is buried in the Chapel of Saint-Hubert, adjoining the Château, which had been built in 1491–96.[17]

Legacy edit

 
Marguerite de Navarre, from a crayon drawing by François Clouet, preserved at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris

Pierre Brantôme said of her: "She was a great princess. But in addition to all that, she was very kind, gentle, gracious, charitable, a great dispenser of alms and friendly to all."

The Dutch humanist Erasmus wrote to her: "For a long time I have cherished all the many excellent gifts that God bestowed upon you; prudence worthy of a philosopher; chastity; moderation; piety; an invincible strength of soul, and a marvelous contempt for all the vanities of this world. Who could keep from admiring, in a great king's sister, such qualities as these, so rare even among the priests and monks."

In 1550, one year after Marguerite's death, a tributary poem, Annae, Margaritae, Ianae, sororum virginum heroidum Anglarum, in mortem Diuae Margaritae Valesiae, Nauarrorum Reginae, Hecatodistichon, was published in England. It was written by the nieces of Jane Seymour (1505–1537), third wife of King Henry VIII.

American historian Will Durant wrote: "In Marguerite the Renaissance and the Reformation were for a moment one. Her influence radiated throughout France. Every free spirit looked upon her as protectoress and ideal .... Marguerite was the embodiment of charity. She would walk unescorted in the streets of Navarre, allowing any one to approach her and would listen at first hand to the sorrows of the people. She called herself 'The Prime Minister of the Poor'. Henri, her husband, King of Navarre, believed in what she was doing, even to the extent of setting up a public works system that became a model for France. Together he and Marguerite financed the education of needy students."

Jules Michelet (1798–1874), the most celebrated historian of his time, wrote of her: "Let us always remember this tender Queen of Navarre, in whose arms our people, fleeing from prison or the pyre, found safety, honor, and friendship. Our gratitude to you, Mother of our [French] Renaissance! Your hearth was that of our saints, your heart the nest of our freedom."

Pierre Bayle (1647–1706), French philosopher and critic, whose Dictionnaire historique et critique (Historical and Critical Dictionary, 1697) greatly influenced the French Encyclopedists and the rationalist philosophers of the eighteenth century, such as Voltaire and Diderot, esteemed her highly, writing: "... for a queen to grant her protection to people persecuted for opinions which she believes to be false; to open a sanctuary to them; to preserve them from the flames prepared for them; to furnish them with a subsistence; liberally to relieve the troubles and inconveniences of their exile, is an heroic magnanimity which has hardly any precedent ..."

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Marie Dentiére, Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre and Preface to a Sermon by John Calvin (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), 51.
  2. ^ Patricia F. Cholakian and Rouben C. Cholakian, Marguerite de Navarre: Mother of the Renaissance (2006).
  3. ^ Reid 2009, pp. 56–57.
  4. ^ a b c Putnam, Samuel. Marguerite of Navarre. New York: Coward McCann, Inc.: 1935. Print.
  5. ^ Francis Hackett, Francis The First, pages 48-52.
  6. ^ Cholakian and Cholakian, Marguerite de Navarre: Mother of the Renaissance (2006) p. 21.
  7. ^ Marshall, Rosalind K. (2003). Scottish Queens, 1034–1714. Tuckwell Press. p. 100.
  8. ^ Roelker 1968, p. xiv.
  9. ^ Strage 1976, p. 148.
  10. ^ Roelker 1968, p. 2-3, 6.
  11. ^ Navarre, Queen Margaret Of (March 2014). The Mirror of the Sinful Soul. Literary Licensing, LLC. ISBN 978-1-4979-7511-8.
  12. ^ Dentiére, Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre, 53.
  13. ^ Marie Dentiere, Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre and Preface to a Sermon by John Calvin. Edited and translated by Mary B. McKinley. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2004.
  14. ^ Dentiére, Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre.
  15. ^ Nott, G. F. (1815). The works of Henry Howard earl of Surrey and of Sir Thomas Wyatt the elder.
  16. ^ Willis, Sam; Daybell, James (29 October 2018). Histories of the Unexpected: How Everything Has a History. Atlantic Books. pp. XCII. ISBN 9781786494153 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Records show that Leonardo da Vinci was buried in the church of Saint-Florentin, part of the Château Amboise. At the time of Napoleon this church was in such a ruinous state, dilapidated during the French Revolution, that the engineer appointed by Napoleon decided it was not worth preserving; it was demolished and the stonework was used to repair the château. Some sixty years later the site of Saint-Florentin was excavated: a complete skeleton was found with fragments of a stone inscription containing some of the letters of Leonardo's name. It is this collection of bones that is now in the chapel of Saint-Hubert.
  18. ^ a b c Adams, Tracy (2010). The Life and Afterlife of Isabeau of Bavaria. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 255.
  19. ^ a b c Gicquel, Yvonig [in French] (1986). Alain IX de Rohan, 1382–1462: un grand seigneur de l'âge d'or de la Bretagne (in French). Éditions Jean Picollec. p. 480. ISBN 9782864770718.
  20. ^ a b Jackson-Laufer, Guida Myrl (1999). Women Rulers Throughout the Ages: An Illustrated Guide. ABC-CLIO. p. 231. ISBN 9781576070918.
  21. ^ a b Palluel-Guillard, André. "La Maison de Savoie" (in French). Conseil Savoie Mont Blanc. Retrieved 2018-06-28.
  22. ^ a b Leguai, André (2005). "Agnès de Bourgogne, duchesse de Bourbon (1405?–1476)". Les ducs de Bourbon, le Bourbonnais et le royaume de France à la fin du Moyen Age [The dukes of Bourbon, the Bourbonnais and the kingdom of France at the end of the Middle Ages] (in French). Yzeure: Société bourbonnaise des études locales. pp. 145–160.

Sources edit

  • Patricia F. Cholakian and Rouben C. Cholakian. Marguerite de Navarre: Mother of the Renaissance. New York, Columbia University Press, 2006. 448 pp. excerpt
  • Randall, Michael. "Marguerite de Navarre and Ambiguous Deceit." Sixteenth Century Journal 47.3 (2016) pp. 579–598.
  • Reid, Jonathan A. (2009). Gow, Andrew Colin (ed.). King's Sister – Queen of Dissent: Marguerite of Navarre (1492-1549) and her Evangelical Network. Brill.
  • Roelker, Nancy Lyman (1968). Queen of Navarre, Jeanne d'Albret. Harvard University Press.
  • Williams, H. Noel. The pearl of princesses : the life of Marguerite d'Angoulême, Queen of Navarre (1916) online
  • Putnam, Samuel, Marguerite of Navarre, Grosset & Dunlap, New York, 1936.
  • Winn, Colette H. "An instance of narrative seduction: The HeptamEron of Marguerite De Navarre." Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures (1985) 39#3 pp. 217–226.
  • Hackett, Francis, Francis The First, pages 48–52, Doubleday, Doran and Company, Inc., Garden City, New York, 1937.online
  • Durant, Will, The Story of Civilization, v. VI, The Reformation, p. 501, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1953.
  • Jourda, Pierre, Une princesse de la Renaissance, Marguerite d'Angoulême, reine de Navarre, 1492–1549, Genève, Slatkine Reprints, 1973.
  • Anderson Magalhães, Le Comédies bibliques di Margherita di Navarra, tra evangelismo e mistero medievale, in La mujer: de los bastidores al proscenio en el teatro del siglo XVI, ed. de I. Romera Pintor y J. L. Sirera, Valencia, Publicacions de la Universitat de València, 2011, pp. 171–201.
  • Anderson Magalhães, «Trouver une eaue vive et saine»: la cura del corpo e dell'anima nell'opera di Margherita di Navarra, in Le salut par les eaux et par les herbes: medicina e letteratura tra Italia e Francia nel Cinquecento e nel Seicento, a cura di R. Gorris Camos, Verona, Cierre Edizioni, 2012, pp. 227–262.
  • Dale, Hilda (translated by), The Prisons of Marguerite de Navarre, Whiteknights Press, Reading, U.K, 1989.

External links edit

  • Marguerite de Navarre.com - Poet, Princess and her world class Subway exit to the heart of Paris (in Spanish)
  • Works by Marguerite de Navarre at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Marguerite de Navarre at Internet Archive
  • Works by Marguerite de Navarre at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Margaret Queen of Navarre (in Spanish)
  • University of Virginia's Gordon Project background page
Marguerite de Navarre
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 11 April 1492 Died: 21 December 1549
French royalty
Preceded by Queen consort of Navarre
1527–1549
Succeeded by
French nobility
Preceded by Duchess of Alençon
Countess of Armagnac
and Perche

1525–1549
Reverted to the
royal domain

marguerite, navarre, this, article, about, sixteenth, century, queen, navarre, twelfth, century, sicilian, queen, consort, margaret, navarre, french, marguerite, angoulême, marguerite, alençon, april, 1492, december, 1549, also, known, marguerite, angoulême, m. This article is about the sixteenth century queen of Navarre For the twelfth century Sicilian queen consort see Margaret of Navarre Marguerite de Navarre French Marguerite d Angouleme Marguerite d Alencon 11 April 1492 21 December 1549 also known as Marguerite of Angouleme and Margaret of Navarre was a princess of France Duchess of Alencon and Berry 1 and Queen of Navarre by her second marriage to King Henry II of Navarre Her brother became King of France as Francis I and the two siblings were responsible for the celebrated intellectual and cultural court and salons of their day in France Marguerite is the ancestress of the Bourbon kings of France being the mother of Jeanne d Albret whose son Henry of Navarre succeeded as Henry IV of France the first Bourbon king As an author and a patron of humanists and reformers she was an outstanding figure of the French Renaissance Samuel Putnam called her The First Modern Woman 2 Marguerite de NavarrePortrait attributed to Jean Clouet c 1527Queen consort of NavarreTenure24 January 1527 21 December 1549Born11 April 1492Angouleme Angoumois FranceDied21 December 1549 1549 12 21 aged 57 Odos Gascony FranceSpouseCharles IV Duke of Alencon m 1509 died 1525 wbr Henry II of Navarre m 1526 wbr Issuemore Jeanne III of NavarreHouseValois AngoulemeFatherCharles Count of AngoulemeMotherLouise of SavoyReligionRoman Catholicism Contents 1 Early life 2 First marriage 3 Issue 4 Queen of Navarre 5 Writer 6 Role in the Reformation 7 Patron of the arts 8 Legacy 9 Ancestry 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEarly life editMarguerite was born in Angouleme on 11 April 1492 the eldest child of Louise of Savoy and Charles Count of Angouleme 3 Her father was a descendant of Charles V and would thus have been on the line of succession to the French crown by masculine primogeniture if both Charles VIII and the presumptive heir Louis Duke of Orleans had died without producing male offspring Two years after Marguerite s birth the family moved from Angouleme to Cognac where the Italian influence reigned supreme and where Boccaccio was looked upon as a little less than a god 4 She had several half siblings from illegitimate relationships of her father who were raised alongside Marguerite and her brother Francis Two girls Jeanne of Angouleme and Madeleine were born of her father s long relationship with his chatelaine Antoinette de Polignac Dame de Combronde who later became Louise s lady in waiting and confidante 5 Another half sister Souveraine was born to Jeanne le Conte also one of her father s mistresses Thanks to her mother who was only nineteen when widowed Marguerite was carefully tutored from her earliest childhood and given a classical education that included Latin The young princess was to be called Maecenas to the learned ones of her brother s kingdom 4 When Marguerite was ten Louise tried to marry her to the Prince of Wales who would later become Henry VIII of England but the alliance was courteously rebuffed 4 Perhaps the one real love in her life was Gaston de Foix Duc de Nemours nephew of King Louis XII Gaston went to Italy however and died a hero at Ravenna when the French defeated Spanish and Papal forces 6 First marriage edit nbsp 17th century portrait of Charles d Alencon Marguerite s first husband At the age of seventeen Marguerite was married to Charles IV of Alencon aged twenty by the decree of King Louis XII who also arranged the marriage of his ten year old daughter Claude to Francis With this decree Marguerite was forced to marry a generally kind but practically illiterate man for political expediency the radiant young princess of the violet blue eyes had become the bride of a laggard and a dolt She had been bartered to save the royal pride of Louis by keeping the County of Armagnac in the family There were no offspring from this marriage Following the example set by her mother Marguerite became the most influential woman in France during her lifetime when her brother acceded to the crown as Francis I in 1515 Her salon known as the New Parnassus became famous internationally After the death of Queen Claude she took in her two nieces Madeleine and Marguerite for whom she would continue to care during her second marriage 7 Issue edit nbsp Coat of arms of Marquerite as Queen of Navarre Marguerite was married twice first to Charles IV of Alencon but this marriage was childless Her next marriage was to Henry II of Navarre The children of Marguerite and Henry were Jeanne III of Navarre 16 November 1528 9 June 1572 8 the mother of the future Henry IV of France also known as Henry III of Navarre She became Queen regnant of Navarre from 1555 to 1572 She was the wife of Antoine de Bourbon Duke of Vendome and mother of Henry of Bourbon who became King of Navarre and also of France as the first Bourbon king She was the acknowledged spiritual and political leader of the French Huguenot movement 9 Jean 7 July 1530 25 December 1530 who died as an infantQueen of Navarre edit nbsp Henri d Albret King of Navarre After the death of her first husband in 1525 Marguerite married Henry II of Navarre in January 1527 at St Germain en Laye 10 Ferdinand II of Aragon had invaded the Kingdom of Navarre in 1512 and Henry ruled only Lower Navarre the independent principality of Bearn and several dependencies in Gascony Approximately a year after the lead image in the information box that was painted by Jean Clouet on 16 November 1528 Marguerite gave birth to a daughter by Henry the future Jeanne III of Navarre who became the mother of the future Henry IV of France A Venetian ambassador of that time praised Marguerite as knowing all the secrets of diplomatic art hence to be treated with deference and circumspection Marguerite s most remarkable adventure involved freeing her brother King Francis I who had been held prisoner in Spain by Charles V Holy Roman Emperor after being captured in the Battle of Pavia Italy 1525 During a critical period of the negotiations Queen Marguerite rode horseback through wintry woods twelve hours a day for many days to meet a safe conduct deadline while writing her diplomatic letters at night Her only son Jean was born in Blois on 7 July 1530 when Marguerite was thirty eight The child died on Christmas Day the same year Scholars believe that her grief motivated Marguerite to write her most controversial work Miroir de l ame pecheresse The Mirror of the Sinful Soul in 1531 Sorbonne theologians condemned the work as heresy A monk said Marguerite should be sewn into a sack and thrown into the Seine Students at the College de Navarre satirized her in a play as a Fury from Hell Her brother forced the charges to be dropped however and obtained an apology from the Sorbonne 11 Writer editMarguerite wrote many poems and plays Her most notable works are a classic collection of short stories the Heptameron and a remarkably intense religious poem Miroir de l ame pecheresse The Mirror of the Sinful Soul This poem is a first person mystical narrative of the soul as a yearning woman calling out to Christ as her father brother lover Her work was passed to the royal court of England suggesting that Marguerite had influence on the Protestant Reformation in England Role in the Reformation editFollowing the expulsion of John Calvin and William Farel from Geneva in 1538 Marguerite de Navarre wrote to Marie Dentiere a notable Walloon Protestant reformer in Geneva The two women appear to have personal history outside of their written correspondence Marguerite was godmother to the daughter of Marie Dentiere and Dentiere s daughter composed a French guide to the Hebrew language to send to Marguerite s daughter 12 In her letter Marguerite inquired what was the cause for Calvin and Farel s expulsion Dentiere responded in 1539 with the Epistre tres utile commonly known today as the Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre 13 This epistle criticized the Protestant clergy who had expelled Calvin and Farel asked for Marguerite s support and aid in increasing scriptural literacy and access among women and advised her to act in expelling Catholic clergy from France 14 During her years in France Anne Boleyn had been a lady in waiting to Queen Claude There is conjecture that the courts of Claude and Marguerite overlapped and that perhaps Anne was in service to Marguerite 15 not only to Claude and may have become a follower of Marguerite s absorbing her views about Christianity A letter by Anne Boleyn after she became queen exists in which she makes strong expressions of affection to Marguerite It is conjectured that Marguerite gave Anne the original manuscript of Miroir de l ame pecheresse at some point It is certain that in 1544 nine years after Anne Boleyn s execution Anne s daughter who would become Elizabeth I 1533 1603 translated the poem into English prose as The Miroir or Glasse of the Synneful Soul when she was eleven years old and presented it written in her own hand to her then stepmother the English queen Katherine Parr 16 This literary connection between Marguerite Anne Boleyn Katherine Parr and Elizabeth suggests a direct mentoring link or legacy of reformist religious convictions nbsp Francis I and Marguerite de Navarre by Richard Parkes BoningtonPatron of the arts editAs a generous patron of the arts Marguerite befriended and protected many artists and writers among them Francois Rabelais 1483 1553 Clement Marot 1496 1544 Claude de Bectoz 1490 1547 Pierre de Ronsard 1524 1585 and Julian Iniguez de Medrano 1520 s 1585 1588 Also Marguerite served as a mediator between Roman Catholics and Protestants including John Calvin Although Marguerite espoused reform within the Catholic Church she was not a Calvinist She did however do her best to protect the reformers and dissuaded Francis I from intolerant measures as long as she could After her death eight religious wars occurred in France including the notorious St Bartholomew s Day Massacre of 1572 nbsp Clos Luce in Amboise France where Leonardo da Vinci died in 1519 Leonardo da Vinci 1452 1519 died while guest of Marguerite and her brother Francis I They had been raised at Chateau d Amboise which belonged to their mother Louise of Savoy The king maintained his residence there and Marguerite maintained a residence nearby During the first few years of the reign of Francis the chateau in which he lived reached the pinnacle of its glory Leonardo had been the architect of a large chateau for them among many other projects and they provided quarters for him when he left Italy and joined her court As a guest of the king who provided him with a comfortable stipend Leonardo da Vinci came to Chateau Amboise in December 1515 and lived and worked in the nearby Clos Luce connected to the chateau by an underground passage Tourists are told that he is buried in the Chapel of Saint Hubert adjoining the Chateau which had been built in 1491 96 17 Legacy edit nbsp Marguerite de Navarre from a crayon drawing by Francois Clouet preserved at the Bibliotheque nationale de France Paris Pierre Brantome said of her She was a great princess But in addition to all that she was very kind gentle gracious charitable a great dispenser of alms and friendly to all The Dutch humanist Erasmus wrote to her For a long time I have cherished all the many excellent gifts that God bestowed upon you prudence worthy of a philosopher chastity moderation piety an invincible strength of soul and a marvelous contempt for all the vanities of this world Who could keep from admiring in a great king s sister such qualities as these so rare even among the priests and monks In 1550 one year after Marguerite s death a tributary poem Annae Margaritae Ianae sororum virginum heroidum Anglarum in mortem Diuae Margaritae Valesiae Nauarrorum Reginae Hecatodistichon was published in England It was written by the nieces of Jane Seymour 1505 1537 third wife of King Henry VIII American historian Will Durant wrote In Marguerite the Renaissance and the Reformation were for a moment one Her influence radiated throughout France Every free spirit looked upon her as protectoress and ideal Marguerite was the embodiment of charity She would walk unescorted in the streets of Navarre allowing any one to approach her and would listen at first hand to the sorrows of the people She called herself The Prime Minister of the Poor Henri her husband King of Navarre believed in what she was doing even to the extent of setting up a public works system that became a model for France Together he and Marguerite financed the education of needy students Jules Michelet 1798 1874 the most celebrated historian of his time wrote of her Let us always remember this tender Queen of Navarre in whose arms our people fleeing from prison or the pyre found safety honor and friendship Our gratitude to you Mother of our French Renaissance Your hearth was that of our saints your heart the nest of our freedom Pierre Bayle 1647 1706 French philosopher and critic whose Dictionnaire historique et critique Historical and Critical Dictionary 1697 greatly influenced the French Encyclopedists and the rationalist philosophers of the eighteenth century such as Voltaire and Diderot esteemed her highly writing for a queen to grant her protection to people persecuted for opinions which she believes to be false to open a sanctuary to them to preserve them from the flames prepared for them to furnish them with a subsistence liberally to relieve the troubles and inconveniences of their exile is an heroic magnanimity which has hardly any precedent Ancestry editAncestors of Marguerite of Angouleme8 Louis I Duke of Orleans 18 4 John Count of Angouleme 18 9 Valentina Visconti 18 2 Charles Count of Angouleme10 Alain IX Viscount of Rohan 19 5 Marguerite de Rohan 19 11 Margaret of Brittany 19 1 Marguerite of Angouleme12 Louis Duke of Savoy 21 6 Philip II Duke of Savoy 20 13 Anne of Cyprus 21 3 Louise of Savoy14 Charles I Duke of Bourbon 22 7 Margaret of Bourbon 20 15 Agnes of Burgundy 22 References edit Marie Dentiere Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre and Preface to a Sermon by John Calvin Chicago University of Chicago Press 2004 51 Patricia F Cholakian and Rouben C Cholakian Marguerite de Navarre Mother of the Renaissance 2006 Reid 2009 pp 56 57 a b c Putnam Samuel Marguerite of Navarre New York Coward McCann Inc 1935 Print Francis Hackett Francis The First pages 48 52 Cholakian and Cholakian Marguerite de Navarre Mother of the Renaissance 2006 p 21 Marshall Rosalind K 2003 Scottish Queens 1034 1714 Tuckwell Press p 100 Roelker 1968 p xiv Strage 1976 p 148 Roelker 1968 p 2 3 6 Navarre Queen Margaret Of March 2014 The Mirror of the Sinful Soul Literary Licensing LLC ISBN 978 1 4979 7511 8 Dentiere Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre 53 Marie Dentiere Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre and Preface to a Sermon by John Calvin Edited and translated by Mary B McKinley Chicago The University of Chicago Press 2004 Dentiere Epistle to Marguerite de Navarre Nott G F 1815 The works of Henry Howard earl of Surrey and of Sir Thomas Wyatt the elder Willis Sam Daybell James 29 October 2018 Histories of the Unexpected How Everything Has a History Atlantic Books pp XCII ISBN 9781786494153 via Google Books Records show that Leonardo da Vinci was buried in the church of Saint Florentin part of the Chateau Amboise At the time of Napoleon this church was in such a ruinous state dilapidated during the French Revolution that the engineer appointed by Napoleon decided it was not worth preserving it was demolished and the stonework was used to repair the chateau Some sixty years later the site of Saint Florentin was excavated a complete skeleton was found with fragments of a stone inscription containing some of the letters of Leonardo s name It is this collection of bones that is now in the chapel of Saint Hubert a b c Adams Tracy 2010 The Life and Afterlife of Isabeau of Bavaria Johns Hopkins University Press p 255 a b c Gicquel Yvonig in French 1986 Alain IX de Rohan 1382 1462 un grand seigneur de l age d or de la Bretagne in French Editions Jean Picollec p 480 ISBN 9782864770718 a b Jackson Laufer Guida Myrl 1999 Women Rulers Throughout the Ages An Illustrated Guide ABC CLIO p 231 ISBN 9781576070918 a b Palluel Guillard Andre La Maison de Savoie in French Conseil Savoie Mont Blanc Retrieved 2018 06 28 a b Leguai Andre 2005 Agnes de Bourgogne duchesse de Bourbon 1405 1476 Les ducs de Bourbon le Bourbonnais et le royaume de France a la fin du Moyen Age The dukes of Bourbon the Bourbonnais and the kingdom of France at the end of the Middle Ages in French Yzeure Societe bourbonnaise des etudes locales pp 145 160 Sources editPatricia F Cholakian and Rouben C Cholakian Marguerite de Navarre Mother of the Renaissance New York Columbia University Press 2006 448 pp excerpt Randall Michael Marguerite de Navarre and Ambiguous Deceit Sixteenth Century Journal 47 3 2016 pp 579 598 Reid Jonathan A 2009 Gow Andrew Colin ed King s Sister Queen of Dissent Marguerite of Navarre 1492 1549 and her Evangelical Network Brill Roelker Nancy Lyman 1968 Queen of Navarre Jeanne d Albret Harvard University Press Williams H Noel The pearl of princesses the life of Marguerite d Angouleme Queen of Navarre 1916 online Putnam Samuel Marguerite of Navarre Grosset amp Dunlap New York 1936 Winn Colette H An instance of narrative seduction The HeptamEron of Marguerite De Navarre Symposium A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures 1985 39 3 pp 217 226 Hackett Francis Francis The First pages 48 52 Doubleday Doran and Company Inc Garden City New York 1937 online Durant Will The Story of Civilization v VI The Reformation p 501 Simon and Schuster New York 1953 Jourda Pierre Une princesse de la Renaissance Marguerite d Angouleme reine de Navarre 1492 1549 Geneve Slatkine Reprints 1973 Anderson Magalhaes Le Comedies bibliques di Margherita di Navarra tra evangelismo e mistero medievale in La mujer de los bastidores al proscenio en el teatro del siglo XVI ed de I Romera Pintor y J L Sirera Valencia Publicacions de la Universitat de Valencia 2011 pp 171 201 Anderson Magalhaes Trouver une eaue vive et saine la cura del corpo e dell anima nell opera di Margherita di Navarra in Le salut par les eaux et par les herbes medicina e letteratura tra Italia e Francia nel Cinquecento e nel Seicento a cura di R Gorris Camos Verona Cierre Edizioni 2012 pp 227 262 Dale Hilda translated by The Prisons of Marguerite de Navarre Whiteknights Press Reading U K 1989 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Marguerite de Navarre Library resources about Marguerite de Navarre Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Marguerite de Navarre Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Marguerite de Navarre com Poet Princess and her world class Subway exit to the heart of Paris in Spanish Works by Marguerite de Navarre at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Marguerite de Navarre at Internet Archive Works by Marguerite de Navarre at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Margaret Queen of Navarre in Spanish University of Virginia s Gordon Project background page Marguerite de NavarreHouse of Valois Orleans Angouleme branchCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyBorn 11 April 1492 Died 21 December 1549 French royalty Preceded byJuana Enriquez Queen consort of Navarre1527 1549 Succeeded byMarguerite de Valois French nobility Preceded byCharles IV Duchess of AlenconCountess of Armagnacand Perche1525 1549 Reverted to theroyal domain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marguerite de Navarre amp oldid 1219282899, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.