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Odet de Coligny

Odet de Coligny (10 July 1517 – 21 March 1571) was a French aristocrat, cardinal, Bishop-elect of Beauvais, Peer of France, and member of the French Royal Council. From 1534 he was usually referred to as the Cardinal of Châtillon.

Cardinal

Odet de Coligny
Cardinal-Deacon
Portrait attributed to François Clouet, c. 1548
ChurchSs. Sergio e Bacco
Sant'Adriano al Foro
DioceseArchbishop of Toulouse (1534-1550)
Administrator of Beauvais
(1535-1563)
Orders
Ordinationnever ordained Priest
Consecrationnever consecrated Bishop
Created cardinal7 November 1533
Cardinal de Châtillon
by Pope Clement VII
Personal details
Born10 July 1517
DiedMarch 21, 1571(1571-03-21) (aged 53)
Canterbury, England
BuriedCanterbury Cathedral
NationalityFrench
ParentsGaspard I de Coligny
Louise de Montmorency
Signature

Early life edit

Odet was son of Gaspard I de Coligny and Louise de Montmorency,[1] and brother of Pierre (1515–1534), Gaspard (1519–1572), and François, Seigneur d'Andelot (1521–1569).[a] His birth at Châtillon-Coligny on 10 July 1517, his parents' second son,[3] was recorded in his mother's book of hours.[4] He and his brothers were home schooled, under the direction of Nicolas Bérauld of Orleans, a friend of Erasmus.[5]

Catholic career edit

He occupied high church offices during this initial part of his career. He became prior of Saint-Étienne in Beaume in 1530. On 10 October 1531 he was nominated by the King to be Abbot of St. Euvertius in Orleans, for which he obtained the necessary papal bulls on 13 April 1533; he resigned the benefice in 1537.[6]

Cardinal edit

At the papal consistory of 7 November 1533 (at 16 and while still a layman)[7] Odet de Coligny was created cardinal deacon, receiving the red hat and the titular church of Santi Sergio e Bacco three days later. Soon afterwards he became Abbot of the royal abbey of Nôtre-Dame de Vauluisant (1534-1553).[8] In 1534 he became a Canon of La Sainte-Chapelle in Paris.[9]

On 29 April 1534 Cardinal de Coligny's nomination to the metropolitan see of Toulouse by King Francis I was approved in Consistory by Pope Clement VII,[10] despite his never having been ordained a priest.[11] The Cardinal required a dispensation for the archbishopric, since he was only sixteen, far below the minimum canonical age. The dispensation was granted by Pope Clement on 28 August 1534. On 6 September 1534, Odet de Coligny was ordained Subdeacon, and on 13 September he was ordained Deacon.[12]

Archbishop of Toulouse, Bishop of Beauvais edit

Châtillon held the post of Administrator of the diocese of Toulouse, never having been consecrated a bishop, until his resignation from that role on 20 October 1550. At the age of seventeen, he participated in the papal conclave of 11–12 October 1534, in which Cardinal Alessandro Farnese was elected Pope Paul III. A year later, on 20 October 1535, his nomination to the See of Beauvais was approved in Consistory by Pope Paul III. He held the Administratorship of Beauvais until he was deprived of all his offices and benefices by Pope Pius IV in 1563.[13] The spiritual functions of the Bishop of Beauvais were carried out from 1535-1538 by Philibert de Beaujeu, titular Bishop of Bethlehem; from 1538 to 1546 the bishop was Antoine le Tonnelier, titular Bishop of Damascus; the Bishop of Hippo from 1546 to 1555; the Bishop of Hebron served from 1555 to 1556; the Bishop of Sebaste from 1556-1563; and from 1563 to 1569, Bishop Philippe le Musnier.[14]

The Cardinal was named Abbot of Saint-Lucien de Beauvais by the King in 1537. He was still holding the benefice in 1553, though it is not known whether he continued to hold it until his deposition on 31 March 1563.[15]

Cardinal de Châtillon took part in the Ninth Session of the Ecumenical Council of Trent, which opened on 13 December 1545.[16]

King Francis I died on 31 March 1547, and it was reported a week later by Sir Edward Wotton, the English Ambassador, that Cardinal Odet and his brother François were among the chief favorites of Henri II.[17] As a Peer of France, Cardinal de Châtillon attended the funeral of Francis I in Saint Denis, and the Coronation of Henri II at Rheims on 26 July.[18]

Henri II edit

Cardinal de Châtillon participated in the papal conclave of 29 November 1549 – 7 February 1550. He arrived late, however, on 12 December, along with Cardinals de Guise, du Bellay, Vendome, and Tournon.[19] A letter that he wrote to the Constable de Montmorency on 31 January 1550, during the Conclave, provides an intimate view of the politics of the conclave, and provides an account of the sudden death of one of the leading candidates, Cardinal Niccolò Ridolfi, a nephew of Pope Leo X.[20] Ridolfi had been greatly favored by King Henri II of France. He opted for the deaconry of S. Adriano on 25 February 1549. Cardinal de Châtillon obtained from Pope Julius III the necessary bulls for his confirmation as Abbot of Fontainejean, in the diocese of Sens, shortly after the new Pope's election. The monastery was burned and the monks slaughtered in 1562.[21] The Cardinal de Châtillon, who had apostasized in favor of Calvinism, was deprived of all of his benefices by Pope Pius IV on 31 March 1563.

The Cardinal did not stay long in Italy after the papal Coronation. He was back in France by 4 March, when he was at Orléans; on 11 March 1550, he wrote a letter from Châtillon; and on 29 May he was following the Court again and was in Boulogne, which King Henri had entered in triumph on 15 May after the city's capture from the English.[22]

On 20 October 1550 Cardinal Odet de Châtillon was appointed Abbot Commendatory of Saint Jean de Sens.[23] He also became the seventy-seventh Abbot, the fifth Abbot Commendatory, of the royal Abbey of Fleury, also known as the Abbey of St. Benoît-sur-Loire.[24] He held this benefice until he was deposed in 1563, though the abbey was sacked by the Huguenot army of the Prince de Condé in 1562.

Protector of Ronsard and Rabelais edit

As a member of the King's Council, Châtillon was placed in charge of the library of France's Royal Privy Council and, using this and his other offices, he protected his friends Ronsard and Rabelais.[25] In this he was working with Cardinal Jean du Bellay, who had been Rabelais' original protector. In 1552, after the Cardinal had obtained for the latter a ten-year monopoly on book-printing,[26] Rabelais dedicated his Quart Livre of Pantagruel to Odet in gratitude.[27] The Dedicatory Epistle is dated 28 January 1552.[28]

 
Portrait by François Clouet, c. 1553

In 1553 he succeeded Cardinal Claude de Longuy de Givry as Abbot Commendatory of Saint Bénigne de Dijon, and held the benefice until he was deposed in 1563.[29] In 1554 the Cardinal de Châtillon ordered published the Synodial Constitutions of the Diocese of Beauvais, containing some twenty-one chapters on the duties and conduct of the clergy, including the requirement that they keep their beards shaved (la barbe rase) and their hair cut short.[30] The Cardinal, according to his portraits, wore a full beard, which was becoming the fashion, and had very well trimmed hair. The statutes, in fact, were a reworking of those promulgated twenty-five years earlier.

In 1556 he became Abbot Commendatory of the Abbey of Ferrières on the appointment of King Henry II, with the confirmation of Pope Pius IV. Four years later, Pius named him grand inquisitor of France, though the French Parliament's opposition to the Inquisition prevented him from taking up the post.[2]

Sometime after 1560 Cardinal Odet also became abbot of Grandchamps, of the Cistercian abbey of Nôtre Dame de Quincy in the diocese of Langres,[31] and (from 1555, at least) of Vézelay.[32] Finally, then, he was from 1554 to 1559 Prior (and from 14 August 1559[33] the Provost) of St-Pierre de Mâcon.[34]

Colloquy of Poissy edit

Cardinal de Châtillon participated in the famous Colloquy of Poissy in the summer of 1561. When the reformer Theodore de Beze arrived in Poissy on 23 August he was met with great ceremony and obvious pleasure by the King of Navarre, the Prince de Condé and the Cardinal de Châtillon, almost with more honor (wrote Claude Haton) than the Pope of Rome would have received had he come.[35]

Protestant career edit

 
Odet de Coligny as a Protestant general

On 22 May 1558 Giovanni Michiel, the Venetian Ambassador to the French Court, which was at Monceau at the time, wrote that François d'Andelot, General of the Infantry and Cardinal de Châtillon's brother, had been arrested at Court on a charge of having participated in a meeting and procession of Protestants in the meadows beyond the Faubourg St. Germain, which was repeated day after day during the week. The Cardinal of Sens, Jean Bertrand, had been sent to investigate, and had ordered some one hundred persons in Paris arrested. When questioned François d'Andelot did not deny his affiliation with the Protestants, and he was sent under guard to Meaux, where he was confined. His wife was allowed to join him, but the King, who was very angry, also sent along several of his gentlemen to talk to him, as well as several professors from the Sorbonne, but he remained obstinate in his admitted affiliation. His brother, Cardinal de Châtillon, was also under suspicion of holding the same opinions, "and should they choose to go investigating matters farther," wrote the Ambassador, "I understand that many others of much higher grade will be discovered."[36]

In fact, under his family's influence, the Cardinal eventually went over to the Protestant camp himself, becoming a Calvinist Huguenot in April 1561.[37] He was not the only French prelate to convert to Calvinism in this period – one other example is Jean de Monluc, bishop of Valence. On Easter Monday (7 April 1561—actually 1562)[38] the Cardinal celebrated the Eucharist in the Episcopal Palace at Beauvais.[39] This was doubly offensive, first of all because he had never been ordained a priest and had no right to celebrate the Mass, and secondly because he celebrated the Eucharist in a rite similar to the Calvinist ritual used in Geneva. The result in Beauvais was rioting, which embarrassed and alarmed the Cardinal, who sent for the Governor of the Île-de-France, François de Montmorency, to put down the disorders, but the mayor of Beauvais had already taken care to inform Montmorency what was going on, and Montmorency countermanded the Cardinal's demand. He came to Beauvais alone, and discovered that the peace had already been restored. The people threw themselves on the mercy of the King, and the Queen-mother granted their supplication.[40] Catherine de' Medici was eager to retain the services of the Cardinal de Châtillon as a bridge between Catholics and Protestants, hoping to use him to keep the peace between the two and thus preserve the monarchy for her children. On several occasions, even after his apostasy, she wrote him friendly letters requesting his help. At the same time, Philippe de Lenoncourt, the Bishop of Auxerre and brother of Cardinal de Lenoncourt, was writing to the Pope, urging him to strip Cardinal de Châtillon of his red hat.[41]

On 21 May 1562, however, the Cardinal was cited to appear before the Roman Inquisition, and, having failed to appear, the sentence against him was published in Beauvais on 29 September 1562.[42] When the Constable de Montmorency himself wrote to the Pope in favor of the Cardinal, a second summons was issued, on 17 November, which was published in Beauvais on 10 January 1563. The Royal Council then attempted to intervene, on the grounds that the summons was a violation of the royal prerogative. But the apostasy of a cardinal could not be overlooked by the Papacy. This intervention failed and brought about the Cardinal de Châtillon's excommunication and deposition on 31 March 1563.[43] The sentence was not carried out in France, however, where it was claimed that the law required that a bishop be judged by his fellow bishops.[44]

Gathering a faction around himself, he greatly helped those of the Huguenot party. He participated with his brother in the religious wars and acted as a mediator between the Protestants and Queen Catherine de' Medici.

In 1562, he escaped the Inquisition to Lyon, relinquished his title of cardinal and called himself the count of Beauvais (comte de Beauvais), after his old bishopric. In the secret consistory of 31 March 1563, Pope Pius IV and the French parliament excommunicated him as a heretic and deprived him of all his offices.

Marriage edit

 
Clouet, Jean, Isabelle Hauteville, Odet's mistress and wife

In December 1564, probably on 1 December, the Cardinal married his mistress Ysabel de Hauteville (Isabeau or Isabelle de Hauteville, also known as Elizabeth de Kanteville or Mme. la Cardinale) at Montataire, in a ceremony conducted by a Huguenot minister, Pierre Melet. The Cardinal appeared with his wife, wearing his cardinal's robes, at the Coming of Age ceremony of King Charles IX.[45]

He fought at the Battle of Saint-Denis and in 1568 fled to England. On 5 September 1568 the Cardinal wrote a letter to King Charles IX from the village of Sénarpont,[46] informing him that he had discovered a plan of his enemies to seize him in his house, and therefore he was fleeing from his house and from the kingdom. On 8 September he wrote to Queen Elizabeth, seeking asylum in England.[47] On 14 September the Cardinal wrote to King Charles again, and also to Catherine de' Medici, this time from London, begging the King to continue to hold him in his favor, and stating that he was not in England for any purpose, and that he had only decided to go to England some three hours before he left his house.[48] In London, he requested monetary support for the French Protestants from Queen Elizabeth, who favoured him and his wife. He took up residence at Shene, from which he frequently wrote letters to Sir William Cecil, the Secretary of State, on behalf of Protestants, whether soldiers, merchants or refugees from the Civil War which was going on in France. In November 1568, Châtillon obtained permission to return to France, intending to sail to Rochelle, which was in Protestant hands and where he was expected, but bad winds at Portsmouth prevented his crossing.[49] On 10 January 1569, Cardinal de Châtillon was commissioned by the Queen of Navarre, the Princes of Navarre, the Prince of Condé, and the other Protestant leaders, to seek aid from the Queen of England in the Third War of Religion.[50] In February 1569, the Cardinal was in Canterbury.[51]

In 1568, his former abbacy of Ferrières was besieged by the troops of Louis de Condé, friend of the Coligny family and fellow Protestant. The abbey was pillaged and profaned and, although no monks were killed, the reliquaires and treasures of the abbey were dispersed, the tombs of Louis III, Carloman and Louis de Blanchefort heavily damaged and the monks' stalls removed. Cardinal Odet, though abroad by then, intervened to stop this. On 19 and 23 May 1569, the Parliament of Paris deprived the Cardinal de Châtillon of all of his honours, offices, and estates, his dignity as Peer of the Realm, and the income of all of his benefices.[52] The Cardinal's brother François also died, on 27 May 1569.

Death edit

On 9 October 1570, having taken leave of Queen Elizabeth and his other friends at Court, Châtillon set off for Southampton, intending to cross to France. He was preparing to go from England to La Rochelle to join his brother. Bad weather, however, prevented him from embarking, and in the meantime, on 29 October, he was granted the Freedom of Southampton by the burgesses.[53] On November 10 he was still prevented from crossing, a fire having broken out in the ship he was to use, and he decided therefore to change his plans and to go to Picardy instead of La Rochelle, though at that point he was impeded by the very bad health of his wife. He returned to London, where he joined the French Ambassador de la Mothe Fénelon in discussions on the subject of the proposed marriage of the 19 year old Francis, Duke of Anjou and Alençon, to the thirty-seven year old Elizabeth. On 6 December the Cardinal left London for Canterbury, though in mid-January 1571 he was back at the English Court and discussions on the Anjou marriage continued.

On 25 January he left London again, and not in good health. He grew worse, and at the end of February he was suffering from 'fits'.[54] On 2 March, Henry Killibrew wrote to his employer, William Cecil, the queen's secretary, that he had just tried to see the Cardinal, who at first could not receive him, but later in the day he was sent for and found the Cardinal 'weak and faint'. On 13 March Lord Cobham in London wrote to Dover Castle that the Cardinal was attempting to arrange a stay in an execution there, until he could plead at Court, which, the Cardinal said, would be very soon. But on the evening of 21 March 1571, the Cardinal lost the ability to speak, and shortly thereafter died. He died at the former pilgrims' lodge at Canterbury under mysterious circumstances (possibly poisoned by his servant, perhaps on the orders of the French government).

 
Odet de Coligny's tomb at Canterbury Cathedral

Queen Elizabeth ordered a Commission of Inquiry into the cause of his death. The Cardinal's wife gave testimony that she believed that he had been given slow poison, and that the proof was in his perforated stomach, discovered at the autopsy. This, however, was most definitely not the opinion of the Cardinal's physicians. The doctors pointed out that when the body was opened, the lungs and liver were also damaged; the stomach, however, was 'raw'. But the Commission could find no evidence of a poisoner, and would not have considered poisoning, had it not been for the insistence of Lady Châtillon.[55]

The Cardinal was therefore buried in a temporary and very plain tomb covered in hessian and plaster in the Trinity Chapel in the east end of Canterbury Cathedral. It was meant to have been a temporary solution pending his body's return to France, but the transfer never occurred, and he still rests there.

Family tree edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ François was the first of the brothers to become a Protestant, as early as 1556.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Holt 1999, p. 219.
  2. ^ a b Shimizu 1970, p. 23-24.
  3. ^ Delaborde, I, p. 22.
  4. ^ "10 juillet 1517", Journal du seizième siècle [Journal of the XVI Century] (in French), FR: Free.[failed verification][unreliable source?]
  5. ^ Christol, p. 2. Tilley, Arthur (1900). "Humanism under Francis I". English Historical Review. 15: 456–478, at 459. doi:10.1093/ehr/XV.LIX.456. Peter G. Bietenholz; Thomas Brian Deutscher (2003). Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 127–128. ISBN 978-0-8020-8577-1.
  6. ^ Gallia christiana 8 (Paris: Typographia regia 1744), p. 1577-1578.
  7. ^ "Consistory of 7 November 1533", The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church (biographical dictionary), FIU.
  8. ^ Corinne Marchal, "Les liens des artistes et artisans troyens avec Vauluisant, abbaye cistercienne (1465-1534)," Jacky Theurot and Nicole Brocard, ed. (2008). La ville et l'Eglise du XIIIe siècle à la veille du Concile de Trente: regards croisés entre comté de Bourgogne et autres principautés : actes du colloque des 18 et 19 novembre 2005 (in French). Besancon: Presses Univ. Franche-Comté. pp. 191–208. ISBN 978-2-84867-195-6. at 201-202. Gallia christiana 12 (Paris 1770), p. 235; Pope Clement VII's bulls were dated 10 April 1534.
  9. ^ Anselme de Sainte-Marie; Ange de Sainte-Rosalie (1726). Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la Maison Royale de France, des pairs, des grands officiers de la Couronne & de la Maison du Roy : & des anciens barons du Royaume... Par le P. Anselme,... continuée par M. Du Fourny. Troisième édition, revûë, corrigée & augmentée par les soins du P. Ange & du P. Simplicien... (in French). Vol. Tome second. Paris: par la compagnie des libraires associez. pp. 300–302.
  10. ^ Gulik and Eubel, p. 315.
  11. ^ Christol, p. 3: N'ayant jamais reçu la prétrise, il resta diacre tout sa vie. "Never having been ordained a priest, he remained a deacon his entire life."
  12. ^ Delettre, pp. 200.
  13. ^ Gulik and Eubel, p. 131.
  14. ^ Delettre, pp. 202.
  15. ^ Gallia christiana 9 (Paris 1751), p. 786.
  16. ^ Delettre, pp. 213.
  17. ^ Atkinson, p. 174.
  18. ^ Delettre, pp. 213.
  19. ^ J. P. Adams, Sede Vacante of 1549-1550. Retrieved: 2016-04-30.
  20. ^ Odet de Coligny Châtillon (1885). Léon Marlet (ed.). Correspondance d'Odet de Coligny, cardinal de Châtillon (1537-1568) (in French). Paris: A. Picard. pp. 4–8.
  21. ^ Gallia christiana 12 (Paris: Typographia regia 1770), p. 230.
  22. ^ Marlet (ed.), Correspondance d'Odet de Coligny, p. 8, note 2 and p. 11.
  23. ^ L. Marlet (ed.), Correspondance d'Odet de Coligny, p. 12 n. 2. Cf. Gallia christiana 12, p. 199.
  24. ^ Abbe Rocher (1865). Histoire de l'abbaye royale de Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire. Orleans: Georges Jacob. pp. 377–382. puts the acquisition in 1551. L. Marlet (ed.), Correspondance d'Odet de Coligny, p. 10, note 2, places the date of the grant on 20 October 1550.
  25. ^ Christol, pp. 7-12.
  26. ^ Elizabeth A. Chesney Zegura (2004). The Rabelais Encyclopedia. Westport CT USA: Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 195–196. ISBN 978-0-313-31034-8.
  27. ^ William Francis Smith (1918). Rabelais in His Writings. Cambridge: At the University Press. pp. 132, 147–148.
  28. ^ François Rabelais (1893). W.F. Smith, tr. (ed.). Rabelais: Pantagruel, book 4-5. Vol. II. London: Watt. pp. 13–18. The first edition, without the Cardinal's letter, was printed anonymously in 1548.
  29. ^ Gallia christiana 4, pp. 693-694.
  30. ^ Delettre, pp. 216-217.
  31. ^ Gallia christiana 4, p. 833.
  32. ^ Aimé Chérest (1868). Vézelay. Etude historique (in French). Vol. Tome troisième. Auxerre: Imprimerie de Perriquet et Rouillé. p. 7.
  33. ^ Leonce Raffin (1926). Saint-Julien de Balleure: Historien bourguignon, 1519 ? -1593 (in French). Paris: Honore Champion. pp. 62, 66. GGKEY:352DRZZT017.
  34. ^ Claude Dumonet (1760). Histoire des révolutions de Mâcon sur le fait de la religion par M. D*** [abbé Claude Dumonet]. Avignon: chez Domergue. pp. 37–38.
  35. ^ Alphonse baron de Ruble (1889). Le colloque de Poissy (septembre-octobre 1561). Paris: H. Champion. p. 7.
  36. ^ Atkinson, p. 175. Rawdon Brown, ed. (1884). Calendar of State Papers and Manuscripts, Relating to English Affairs, Existing in the Archives and Collections of Venice (Vol. VI - Part III (1557-1558) ed.). London: Longman Green. pp. 1501, 1505–1506.
  37. ^ "Abb ferr 2", Perso (in French), FR: Orange, archived from the original on 2012-07-12.
  38. ^ Delettre, p. 228, places the event in 1562. The discrepancy is probably calendrical, with Delettre more likely correct. The calendar, according to the old style, changed on Easter from 1561 to 1562.
  39. ^ Atkinson, p. 175.
  40. ^ Delettre, pp. 231-232.
  41. ^ Joseph Stevenson, ed. (1867). Calendar of State Papers, Foreign Series, of the Reign of Elizabeth. Vol. V (1562). London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, & Green. p. 297 no. 623.
  42. ^ Atkinson, p. 175.
  43. ^ Atkinson, p. 176. Bullarum diplomatum et privilegiorum sanctorum Romanorum Pontificum, Taurinensis editio, Volume 7 (Turin: Dalmazzo 1862), pp. 247-249.
  44. ^ Delettre, p. 237.
  45. ^ Atkinson, p. 179.
  46. ^ Correspondence d'Odet de Coligny, pp. 89-90. A similar letter was sent to Queen Catherine de' Medici, pp. 90-92.
  47. ^ Crosby (1871), p. 541, no. 2500; and p. 544, no. 2512. Atkinson, p. 182
  48. ^ Crosby (1871), p. 547, no. 2526.
  49. ^ Crosby (1874), p. 368, no. 1389.
  50. ^ Crosby (1874), p. 10, no. 37.
  51. ^ Crosby (1874), p. 400, no. 1539-1540.
  52. ^ Atkinson, p. 222.
  53. ^ Atkinson, p. 245.
  54. ^ Atkinson, p. 247-248, 250.
  55. ^ Atkinson, p. 252-254. Atkinson, who is strongly in favor of the poisoning theory, and frames his judgment in despite of the facts he enumerates, chooses to blame the Guises and Catherine de' Medici. Marlet (p. 209) blames a valet of the Cardinal, one Vuillin.

Bibliography edit

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  • Sainte-Marthe, Denis de, ed. (1751). Gallia christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa... opera et studio Domini Dionysii Sammarthani (in Latin). Vol. Tomus nonus (Volume 9). Paris: Typographia regia. [Christian France, distributed into ecclesiastical provinces, by the work of Dom Denis de Sainte-Marthe]
  • Sainte-Marthe, Denis de, ed. (1728). Gallia Christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa: qua series et historia archiepiscoporum, episcoporum, et abbatum franciae vicinarumque ditionum... (in Latin). Vol. Tomus quartus (Volume 4). Paris: ex typographia regia.
  • Shimizu, J. (1970). Conflict of Loyalties, Politics and Religion in the Career of Gaspard de Coligny: Admiral of France, 1519-1572. Librairie Droz. pp. 23–24. ISBN 978-2-600-03033-5.

External links edit

  • Schaff, Biography, CCEL.
  • Biography, FIU.
  • (biography) (in French), archived from the original on 2006-12-03.
  • Another biography
  • An image of him as Neptune

odet, coligny, july, 1517, march, 1571, french, aristocrat, cardinal, bishop, elect, beauvais, peer, france, member, french, royal, council, from, 1534, usually, referred, cardinal, châtillon, cardinalcardinal, deaconportrait, attributed, françois, clouet, 154. Odet de Coligny 10 July 1517 21 March 1571 was a French aristocrat cardinal Bishop elect of Beauvais Peer of France and member of the French Royal Council From 1534 he was usually referred to as the Cardinal of Chatillon CardinalOdet de ColignyCardinal DeaconPortrait attributed to Francois Clouet c 1548ChurchSs Sergio e BaccoSant Adriano al ForoDioceseArchbishop of Toulouse 1534 1550 Administrator of Beauvais 1535 1563 OrdersOrdinationnever ordained PriestConsecrationnever consecrated BishopCreated cardinal7 November 1533Cardinal de Chatillonby Pope Clement VIIPersonal detailsBorn10 July 1517Chatillon Coligny FranceDiedMarch 21 1571 1571 03 21 aged 53 Canterbury EnglandBuriedCanterbury CathedralNationalityFrenchParentsGaspard I de ColignyLouise de MontmorencySignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Catholic career 2 1 Cardinal 2 2 Archbishop of Toulouse Bishop of Beauvais 3 Henri II 3 1 Protector of Ronsard and Rabelais 3 2 Colloquy of Poissy 4 Protestant career 5 Marriage 6 Death 7 Family tree 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEarly life editOdet was son of Gaspard I de Coligny and Louise de Montmorency 1 and brother of Pierre 1515 1534 Gaspard 1519 1572 and Francois Seigneur d Andelot 1521 1569 a His birth at Chatillon Coligny on 10 July 1517 his parents second son 3 was recorded in his mother s book of hours 4 He and his brothers were home schooled under the direction of Nicolas Berauld of Orleans a friend of Erasmus 5 Catholic career editHe occupied high church offices during this initial part of his career He became prior of Saint Etienne in Beaume in 1530 On 10 October 1531 he was nominated by the King to be Abbot of St Euvertius in Orleans for which he obtained the necessary papal bulls on 13 April 1533 he resigned the benefice in 1537 6 Cardinal edit At the papal consistory of 7 November 1533 at 16 and while still a layman 7 Odet de Coligny was created cardinal deacon receiving the red hat and the titular church of Santi Sergio e Bacco three days later Soon afterwards he became Abbot of the royal abbey of Notre Dame de Vauluisant 1534 1553 8 In 1534 he became a Canon of La Sainte Chapelle in Paris 9 On 29 April 1534 Cardinal de Coligny s nomination to the metropolitan see of Toulouse by King Francis I was approved in Consistory by Pope Clement VII 10 despite his never having been ordained a priest 11 The Cardinal required a dispensation for the archbishopric since he was only sixteen far below the minimum canonical age The dispensation was granted by Pope Clement on 28 August 1534 On 6 September 1534 Odet de Coligny was ordained Subdeacon and on 13 September he was ordained Deacon 12 Archbishop of Toulouse Bishop of Beauvais edit Chatillon held the post of Administrator of the diocese of Toulouse never having been consecrated a bishop until his resignation from that role on 20 October 1550 At the age of seventeen he participated in the papal conclave of 11 12 October 1534 in which Cardinal Alessandro Farnese was elected Pope Paul III A year later on 20 October 1535 his nomination to the See of Beauvais was approved in Consistory by Pope Paul III He held the Administratorship of Beauvais until he was deprived of all his offices and benefices by Pope Pius IV in 1563 13 The spiritual functions of the Bishop of Beauvais were carried out from 1535 1538 by Philibert de Beaujeu titular Bishop of Bethlehem from 1538 to 1546 the bishop was Antoine le Tonnelier titular Bishop of Damascus the Bishop of Hippo from 1546 to 1555 the Bishop of Hebron served from 1555 to 1556 the Bishop of Sebaste from 1556 1563 and from 1563 to 1569 Bishop Philippe le Musnier 14 The Cardinal was named Abbot of Saint Lucien de Beauvais by the King in 1537 He was still holding the benefice in 1553 though it is not known whether he continued to hold it until his deposition on 31 March 1563 15 Cardinal de Chatillon took part in the Ninth Session of the Ecumenical Council of Trent which opened on 13 December 1545 16 King Francis I died on 31 March 1547 and it was reported a week later by Sir Edward Wotton the English Ambassador that Cardinal Odet and his brother Francois were among the chief favorites of Henri II 17 As a Peer of France Cardinal de Chatillon attended the funeral of Francis I in Saint Denis and the Coronation of Henri II at Rheims on 26 July 18 Henri II editCardinal de Chatillon participated in the papal conclave of 29 November 1549 7 February 1550 He arrived late however on 12 December along with Cardinals de Guise du Bellay Vendome and Tournon 19 A letter that he wrote to the Constable de Montmorency on 31 January 1550 during the Conclave provides an intimate view of the politics of the conclave and provides an account of the sudden death of one of the leading candidates Cardinal Niccolo Ridolfi a nephew of Pope Leo X 20 Ridolfi had been greatly favored by King Henri II of France He opted for the deaconry of S Adriano on 25 February 1549 Cardinal de Chatillon obtained from Pope Julius III the necessary bulls for his confirmation as Abbot of Fontainejean in the diocese of Sens shortly after the new Pope s election The monastery was burned and the monks slaughtered in 1562 21 The Cardinal de Chatillon who had apostasized in favor of Calvinism was deprived of all of his benefices by Pope Pius IV on 31 March 1563 The Cardinal did not stay long in Italy after the papal Coronation He was back in France by 4 March when he was at Orleans on 11 March 1550 he wrote a letter from Chatillon and on 29 May he was following the Court again and was in Boulogne which King Henri had entered in triumph on 15 May after the city s capture from the English 22 On 20 October 1550 Cardinal Odet de Chatillon was appointed Abbot Commendatory of Saint Jean de Sens 23 He also became the seventy seventh Abbot the fifth Abbot Commendatory of the royal Abbey of Fleury also known as the Abbey of St Benoit sur Loire 24 He held this benefice until he was deposed in 1563 though the abbey was sacked by the Huguenot army of the Prince de Conde in 1562 Protector of Ronsard and Rabelais edit As a member of the King s Council Chatillon was placed in charge of the library of France s Royal Privy Council and using this and his other offices he protected his friends Ronsard and Rabelais 25 In this he was working with Cardinal Jean du Bellay who had been Rabelais original protector In 1552 after the Cardinal had obtained for the latter a ten year monopoly on book printing 26 Rabelais dedicated his Quart Livre of Pantagruel to Odet in gratitude 27 The Dedicatory Epistle is dated 28 January 1552 28 nbsp Portrait by Francois Clouet c 1553In 1553 he succeeded Cardinal Claude de Longuy de Givry as Abbot Commendatory of Saint Benigne de Dijon and held the benefice until he was deposed in 1563 29 In 1554 the Cardinal de Chatillon ordered published the Synodial Constitutions of the Diocese of Beauvais containing some twenty one chapters on the duties and conduct of the clergy including the requirement that they keep their beards shaved la barbe rase and their hair cut short 30 The Cardinal according to his portraits wore a full beard which was becoming the fashion and had very well trimmed hair The statutes in fact were a reworking of those promulgated twenty five years earlier In 1556 he became Abbot Commendatory of the Abbey of Ferrieres on the appointment of King Henry II with the confirmation of Pope Pius IV Four years later Pius named him grand inquisitor of France though the French Parliament s opposition to the Inquisition prevented him from taking up the post 2 Sometime after 1560 Cardinal Odet also became abbot of Grandchamps of the Cistercian abbey of Notre Dame de Quincy in the diocese of Langres 31 and from 1555 at least of Vezelay 32 Finally then he was from 1554 to 1559 Prior and from 14 August 1559 33 the Provost of St Pierre de Macon 34 Colloquy of Poissy edit Cardinal de Chatillon participated in the famous Colloquy of Poissy in the summer of 1561 When the reformer Theodore de Beze arrived in Poissy on 23 August he was met with great ceremony and obvious pleasure by the King of Navarre the Prince de Conde and the Cardinal de Chatillon almost with more honor wrote Claude Haton than the Pope of Rome would have received had he come 35 Protestant career edit nbsp Odet de Coligny as a Protestant generalOn 22 May 1558 Giovanni Michiel the Venetian Ambassador to the French Court which was at Monceau at the time wrote that Francois d Andelot General of the Infantry and Cardinal de Chatillon s brother had been arrested at Court on a charge of having participated in a meeting and procession of Protestants in the meadows beyond the Faubourg St Germain which was repeated day after day during the week The Cardinal of Sens Jean Bertrand had been sent to investigate and had ordered some one hundred persons in Paris arrested When questioned Francois d Andelot did not deny his affiliation with the Protestants and he was sent under guard to Meaux where he was confined His wife was allowed to join him but the King who was very angry also sent along several of his gentlemen to talk to him as well as several professors from the Sorbonne but he remained obstinate in his admitted affiliation His brother Cardinal de Chatillon was also under suspicion of holding the same opinions and should they choose to go investigating matters farther wrote the Ambassador I understand that many others of much higher grade will be discovered 36 In fact under his family s influence the Cardinal eventually went over to the Protestant camp himself becoming a Calvinist Huguenot in April 1561 37 He was not the only French prelate to convert to Calvinism in this period one other example is Jean de Monluc bishop of Valence On Easter Monday 7 April 1561 actually 1562 38 the Cardinal celebrated the Eucharist in the Episcopal Palace at Beauvais 39 This was doubly offensive first of all because he had never been ordained a priest and had no right to celebrate the Mass and secondly because he celebrated the Eucharist in a rite similar to the Calvinist ritual used in Geneva The result in Beauvais was rioting which embarrassed and alarmed the Cardinal who sent for the Governor of the Ile de France Francois de Montmorency to put down the disorders but the mayor of Beauvais had already taken care to inform Montmorency what was going on and Montmorency countermanded the Cardinal s demand He came to Beauvais alone and discovered that the peace had already been restored The people threw themselves on the mercy of the King and the Queen mother granted their supplication 40 Catherine de Medici was eager to retain the services of the Cardinal de Chatillon as a bridge between Catholics and Protestants hoping to use him to keep the peace between the two and thus preserve the monarchy for her children On several occasions even after his apostasy she wrote him friendly letters requesting his help At the same time Philippe de Lenoncourt the Bishop of Auxerre and brother of Cardinal de Lenoncourt was writing to the Pope urging him to strip Cardinal de Chatillon of his red hat 41 On 21 May 1562 however the Cardinal was cited to appear before the Roman Inquisition and having failed to appear the sentence against him was published in Beauvais on 29 September 1562 42 When the Constable de Montmorency himself wrote to the Pope in favor of the Cardinal a second summons was issued on 17 November which was published in Beauvais on 10 January 1563 The Royal Council then attempted to intervene on the grounds that the summons was a violation of the royal prerogative But the apostasy of a cardinal could not be overlooked by the Papacy This intervention failed and brought about the Cardinal de Chatillon s excommunication and deposition on 31 March 1563 43 The sentence was not carried out in France however where it was claimed that the law required that a bishop be judged by his fellow bishops 44 Gathering a faction around himself he greatly helped those of the Huguenot party He participated with his brother in the religious wars and acted as a mediator between the Protestants and Queen Catherine de Medici In 1562 he escaped the Inquisition to Lyon relinquished his title of cardinal and called himself the count of Beauvais comte de Beauvais after his old bishopric In the secret consistory of 31 March 1563 Pope Pius IV and the French parliament excommunicated him as a heretic and deprived him of all his offices Marriage edit nbsp Clouet Jean Isabelle Hauteville Odet s mistress and wifeIn December 1564 probably on 1 December the Cardinal married his mistress Ysabel de Hauteville Isabeau or Isabelle de Hauteville also known as Elizabeth de Kanteville or Mme la Cardinale at Montataire in a ceremony conducted by a Huguenot minister Pierre Melet The Cardinal appeared with his wife wearing his cardinal s robes at the Coming of Age ceremony of King Charles IX 45 He fought at the Battle of Saint Denis and in 1568 fled to England On 5 September 1568 the Cardinal wrote a letter to King Charles IX from the village of Senarpont 46 informing him that he had discovered a plan of his enemies to seize him in his house and therefore he was fleeing from his house and from the kingdom On 8 September he wrote to Queen Elizabeth seeking asylum in England 47 On 14 September the Cardinal wrote to King Charles again and also to Catherine de Medici this time from London begging the King to continue to hold him in his favor and stating that he was not in England for any purpose and that he had only decided to go to England some three hours before he left his house 48 In London he requested monetary support for the French Protestants from Queen Elizabeth who favoured him and his wife He took up residence at Shene from which he frequently wrote letters to Sir William Cecil the Secretary of State on behalf of Protestants whether soldiers merchants or refugees from the Civil War which was going on in France In November 1568 Chatillon obtained permission to return to France intending to sail to Rochelle which was in Protestant hands and where he was expected but bad winds at Portsmouth prevented his crossing 49 On 10 January 1569 Cardinal de Chatillon was commissioned by the Queen of Navarre the Princes of Navarre the Prince of Conde and the other Protestant leaders to seek aid from the Queen of England in the Third War of Religion 50 In February 1569 the Cardinal was in Canterbury 51 In 1568 his former abbacy of Ferrieres was besieged by the troops of Louis de Conde friend of the Coligny family and fellow Protestant The abbey was pillaged and profaned and although no monks were killed the reliquaires and treasures of the abbey were dispersed the tombs of Louis III Carloman and Louis de Blanchefort heavily damaged and the monks stalls removed Cardinal Odet though abroad by then intervened to stop this On 19 and 23 May 1569 the Parliament of Paris deprived the Cardinal de Chatillon of all of his honours offices and estates his dignity as Peer of the Realm and the income of all of his benefices 52 The Cardinal s brother Francois also died on 27 May 1569 Death editOn 9 October 1570 having taken leave of Queen Elizabeth and his other friends at Court Chatillon set off for Southampton intending to cross to France He was preparing to go from England to La Rochelle to join his brother Bad weather however prevented him from embarking and in the meantime on 29 October he was granted the Freedom of Southampton by the burgesses 53 On November 10 he was still prevented from crossing a fire having broken out in the ship he was to use and he decided therefore to change his plans and to go to Picardy instead of La Rochelle though at that point he was impeded by the very bad health of his wife He returned to London where he joined the French Ambassador de la Mothe Fenelon in discussions on the subject of the proposed marriage of the 19 year old Francis Duke of Anjou and Alencon to the thirty seven year old Elizabeth On 6 December the Cardinal left London for Canterbury though in mid January 1571 he was back at the English Court and discussions on the Anjou marriage continued On 25 January he left London again and not in good health He grew worse and at the end of February he was suffering from fits 54 On 2 March Henry Killibrew wrote to his employer William Cecil the queen s secretary that he had just tried to see the Cardinal who at first could not receive him but later in the day he was sent for and found the Cardinal weak and faint On 13 March Lord Cobham in London wrote to Dover Castle that the Cardinal was attempting to arrange a stay in an execution there until he could plead at Court which the Cardinal said would be very soon But on the evening of 21 March 1571 the Cardinal lost the ability to speak and shortly thereafter died He died at the former pilgrims lodge at Canterbury under mysterious circumstances possibly poisoned by his servant perhaps on the orders of the French government nbsp Odet de Coligny s tomb at Canterbury CathedralQueen Elizabeth ordered a Commission of Inquiry into the cause of his death The Cardinal s wife gave testimony that she believed that he had been given slow poison and that the proof was in his perforated stomach discovered at the autopsy This however was most definitely not the opinion of the Cardinal s physicians The doctors pointed out that when the body was opened the lungs and liver were also damaged the stomach however was raw But the Commission could find no evidence of a poisoner and would not have considered poisoning had it not been for the insistence of Lady Chatillon 55 The Cardinal was therefore buried in a temporary and very plain tomb covered in hessian and plaster in the Trinity Chapel in the east end of Canterbury Cathedral It was meant to have been a temporary solution pending his body s return to France but the transfer never occurred and he still rests there Family tree editvteColigny family treeThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Guillaume de MontmorencyAnne PotGaspard ILouise de MontmorencyAnne de MontmorencyMadeleine of SavoyCharlotte de LavalGaspard IIOdetFrancoisFrancois de MontmorencyHenriCharles de Montmorency DamvilleLouiseFrancoisCharlesPaul de Coligny fr Frederick Henry Prince of OrangeGaspard IIIGuy XX de LavalWilliam II of OrangeGaspard IV de Coligny fr HenrietteAnneGeorge II of Wurttemberg MontbeliardWilliam III of EnglandEleonoreLeopoldNotes Notes edit Francois was the first of the brothers to become a Protestant as early as 1556 2 References edit Holt 1999 p 219 a b Shimizu 1970 p 23 24 Delaborde I p 22 10 juillet 1517 Journal du seizieme siecle Journal of the XVI Century in French FR Free failed verification unreliable source Christol p 2 Tilley Arthur 1900 Humanism under Francis I English Historical Review 15 456 478 at 459 doi 10 1093 ehr XV LIX 456 Peter G Bietenholz Thomas Brian Deutscher 2003 Contemporaries of Erasmus A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 127 128 ISBN 978 0 8020 8577 1 Gallia christiana 8 Paris Typographia regia 1744 p 1577 1578 Consistory of 7 November 1533 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church biographical dictionary FIU Corinne Marchal Les liens des artistes et artisans troyens avec Vauluisant abbaye cistercienne 1465 1534 Jacky Theurot and Nicole Brocard ed 2008 La ville et l Eglise du XIIIe siecle a la veille du Concile de Trente regards croises entre comte de Bourgogne et autres principautes actes du colloque des 18 et 19 novembre 2005 in French Besancon Presses Univ Franche Comte pp 191 208 ISBN 978 2 84867 195 6 at 201 202 Gallia christiana 12 Paris 1770 p 235 Pope Clement VII s bulls were dated 10 April 1534 Anselme de Sainte Marie Ange de Sainte Rosalie 1726 Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la Maison Royale de France des pairs des grands officiers de la Couronne amp de la Maison du Roy amp des anciens barons du Royaume Par le P Anselme continuee par M Du Fourny Troisieme edition revue corrigee amp augmentee par les soins du P Ange amp du P Simplicien in French Vol Tome second Paris par la compagnie des libraires associez pp 300 302 Gulik and Eubel p 315 Christol p 3 N ayant jamais recu la pretrise il resta diacre tout sa vie Never having been ordained a priest he remained a deacon his entire life Delettre pp 200 Gulik and Eubel p 131 Delettre pp 202 Gallia christiana 9 Paris 1751 p 786 Delettre pp 213 Atkinson p 174 Delettre pp 213 J P Adams Sede Vacante of 1549 1550 Retrieved 2016 04 30 Odet de Coligny Chatillon 1885 Leon Marlet ed Correspondance d Odet de Coligny cardinal de Chatillon 1537 1568 in French Paris A Picard pp 4 8 Gallia christiana 12 Paris Typographia regia 1770 p 230 Marlet ed Correspondance d Odet de Coligny p 8 note 2 and p 11 L Marlet ed Correspondance d Odet de Coligny p 12 n 2 Cf Gallia christiana 12 p 199 Abbe Rocher 1865 Histoire de l abbaye royale de Saint Benoit sur Loire Orleans Georges Jacob pp 377 382 puts the acquisition in 1551 L Marlet ed Correspondance d Odet de Coligny p 10 note 2 places the date of the grant on 20 October 1550 Christol pp 7 12 Elizabeth A Chesney Zegura 2004 The Rabelais Encyclopedia Westport CT USA Greenwood Publishing Group pp 195 196 ISBN 978 0 313 31034 8 William Francis Smith 1918 Rabelais in His Writings Cambridge At the University Press pp 132 147 148 Francois Rabelais 1893 W F Smith tr ed Rabelais Pantagruel book 4 5 Vol II London Watt pp 13 18 The first edition without the Cardinal s letter was printed anonymously in 1548 Gallia christiana 4 pp 693 694 Delettre pp 216 217 Gallia christiana 4 p 833 Aime Cherest 1868 Vezelay Etude historique in French Vol Tome troisieme Auxerre Imprimerie de Perriquet et Rouille p 7 Leonce Raffin 1926 Saint Julien de Balleure Historien bourguignon 1519 1593 in French Paris Honore Champion pp 62 66 GGKEY 352DRZZT017 Claude Dumonet 1760 Histoire des revolutions de Macon sur le fait de la religion par M D abbe Claude Dumonet Avignon chez Domergue pp 37 38 Alphonse baron de Ruble 1889 Le colloque de Poissy septembre octobre 1561 Paris H Champion p 7 Atkinson p 175 Rawdon Brown ed 1884 Calendar of State Papers and Manuscripts Relating to English Affairs Existing in the Archives and Collections of Venice Vol VI Part III 1557 1558 ed London Longman Green pp 1501 1505 1506 Abb ferr 2 Perso in French FR Orange archived from the original on 2012 07 12 Delettre p 228 places the event in 1562 The discrepancy is probably calendrical with Delettre more likely correct The calendar according to the old style changed on Easter from 1561 to 1562 Atkinson p 175 Delettre pp 231 232 Joseph Stevenson ed 1867 Calendar of State Papers Foreign Series of the Reign of Elizabeth Vol V 1562 London Longman Green Longman Roberts amp Green p 297 no 623 Atkinson p 175 Atkinson p 176 Bullarum diplomatum et privilegiorum sanctorum Romanorum Pontificum Taurinensis editio Volume 7 Turin Dalmazzo 1862 pp 247 249 Delettre p 237 Atkinson p 179 Correspondence d Odet de Coligny pp 89 90 A similar letter was sent to Queen Catherine de Medici pp 90 92 Crosby 1871 p 541 no 2500 and p 544 no 2512 Atkinson p 182 Crosby 1871 p 547 no 2526 Crosby 1874 p 368 no 1389 Crosby 1874 p 10 no 37 Crosby 1874 p 400 no 1539 1540 Atkinson p 222 Atkinson p 245 Atkinson p 247 248 250 Atkinson p 252 254 Atkinson who is strongly in favor of the poisoning theory and frames his judgment in despite of the facts he enumerates chooses to blame the Guises and Catherine de Medici Marlet p 209 blames a valet of the Cardinal one Vuillin Bibliography editAtkinson Ernest G 1890 The Cardinal of Chatillon in England 1568 1571 a paper read on 13 November 1889 before the Huguenot society of London Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London in English and French Vol 3 London Huguenot Society of London 1892 pp 172 285 Becquerel Antoine Cesar 1876 Souvenirs historiques sur l amiral Coligny sa famille et sa seigneurie de Chatillon Sur Loing Historical memories of the Admiral Coligny his family and his estate at Chatillon sur Loing in French 2d ed Paris Firmin Didot Berton Charles 1857 Dictionnaire des cardinaux contenant des notions generales sur le cardinalat la nomenclature complete des cardinaux de tous les temps et de tous les pays les details biographiques essentiels sur tous les cardinaux de longues etudes sur les cardinaux celebres Dictionary of Cardinals containing general notions on the cardinalship the complete nomenclature of the Cardinals from all times and countries the essential biographic details on all Cardinals long studies on the famous Cardinals in French Paris J P Migne facsimile edition Farnborough Cardella Lorenzo 1969 1793 Gregg ed Memorie storiche de cardinali della Santa Romana Chiesa Historical notes of the Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church vol IV Rome Stamperia Pagliarini pp 134 35 cols 692 93 Christol Marguerite 1961 Odet de Coligny Cardinal de Chatillon Bulletin de la Societe de l Histoire du Protestantisme Francais 107 1 12 JSTOR 24292166 Chacon Alfonso 1630 Vitae et res gestae Pontificvm Romanorum et S R E Cardinalivm ab initio nascentis Ecclesiae vsque ad Vrbanvm VIII Pont Max Lives and the exploits of the Roman Popes and of the Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church from the very beginning of the Church until Pope Urban VIII in Latin vol II Roma Typis Vaticanis cols 1480 81 2 volumes Coligny Odet de cardinal de Chatillon 1515 71 1885 Marlet M Leon ed Correspondance d Odet de Coligny cardinal de Chatillon 1537 1568 Correspondence of Odet de Coligny Cardinal of Chatillon 1537 68 in French Paris A Picard a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Documents publ par la Societe historique amp archeologique du Gatinais I Crosby Allan James ed 1871 Calendar of State Papers Foreign Series of the Reign of Elizabeth Vol VIII 1566 1568 London Longman Green Longman Roberts amp Green Crosby Allen James ed 1874 Calendar of State Papers Foreign Series of the Reign of Elizabeth Preserved in the Public Record Office 1569 71 London H M Stationery Office Delaborde Jules 1879 Gaspard de Coligny amiral de France in French Vol Tome premier Paris Sandoz et Fischbacher G Fischbacher successeur Delettre Andre 1843 Histoire du diocese de Beauvais in French Beauvais Desjardin pp 196 255 Eubel Conradus Gulik Guglielmus van 1935 Hierarchia Catholica Medii et Recientoris Aevi The Catholic hierarchy of mediaeval amp recent times in Latin Munster Sumptibus et Typis Librariae Regensbergianae Holt Mack P 1999 The French Wars of Religion 1562 1629 Cambridge University Press Marlet Leon 1883 Le Cardinal de Chatillon 1517 1571 Paris H Menu Annales de la Societe Historique et Archeologique du Gatinais in French Vol 1 Fontainebleau 1883 pp 153 168 193 213 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Michon Cedric Cardinals at the Court of Francis I Martin Heale ed 2014 The Prelate in England and Europe 1300 1560 Woodbridge Suffolk UK Boydell amp Brewer Ltd pp 76 98 ISBN 978 1 903153 58 1 Sainte Marthe Denis de ed 1751 Gallia christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa opera et studio Domini Dionysii Sammarthani in Latin Vol Tomus nonus Volume 9 Paris Typographia regia Christian France distributed into ecclesiastical provinces by the work of Dom Denis de Sainte Marthe Sainte Marthe Denis de ed 1728 Gallia Christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa qua series et historia archiepiscoporum episcoporum et abbatum franciae vicinarumque ditionum in Latin Vol Tomus quartus Volume 4 Paris ex typographia regia Shimizu J 1970 Conflict of Loyalties Politics and Religion in the Career of Gaspard de Coligny Admiral of France 1519 1572 Librairie Droz pp 23 24 ISBN 978 2 600 03033 5 External links editSchaff Biography CCEL Article and image of his tomb Biography FIU Coligny biography in French archived from the original on 2006 12 03 Another biography An image of him as NeptunePortals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Odet de Coligny amp oldid 1181101173, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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