500: Catherine de’ Medici – Dauphine and Queen of France




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To celebrate the 500th birthday of the formidable Catherine de’ Medici, we will be posting seven articles over the next seven days about her. This is the second, and it will focus on her time as Dauphine and Queen consort of France.

Read part one here.

The new Dauphine almost immediately found her new position under threat as she had still not given birth to an heir. In 1537, Henry fathered a child with Filippa Duci, and he clearly faulted Catherine for their childlessness. The baby was named Diane and was raised by Diane de Poitiers, who was now very much Henry’s mistress. A secret plan to have Catherine repudiated was put in motion. Catherine threw herself at her father-in-law’s feet and Francis, moved by her tears, declared, “My child, it is God’s will that you should be my daughter and the wife of the Dauphin. So be it.” Support then came from the most unexpected corner, from Diane de Poitiers. Diane offered Catherine advice and often sent Henry to Catherine to do his duty. However, no child appeared, and a physician was called in to examine hem. He found that their reproductive organs both carried slight physical abnormalities and counselled a method to overcome them. In the summer of 1543, Catherine finally fell pregnant. She wrote, “Mon Compère, as I know well that you desire children for me as much as I do, I wished to write to tell you of my great hopes that I am with child.”

On 19 January 1544, Catherine gave birth to a son named Francis for the King, who had been present for the delivery. Over the following years, Catherine would give birth to nine more children, of which seven would survive to adulthood: Elisabeth (born 1545), Claude (born 1547), Louis (born 1549 – died young), Charles (born 1550), Henry (born 1551), Margaret (born 1553), Hercules (later renamed Francis) (born 1555) and twins Victoire and Joan (born 1556 – Joan died during birth, and Victoire died a few weeks later). Catherine’s children did not inherit her sturdy constitution, and almost all were considered sickly. The birth of sons made Catherine a celebrated woman but Diane took over the mothering role, and Catherine could only accept that there were three people in her marriage. Catherine sent a constant stream of letters to inform after her children. In 1548, the young Mary, Queen of Scots joined the royal nursery – having been sent to France for her safety.

In early 1547, it became clear that King Francis was dying. Francis spent his dying days warning Henry about the dangers of being influenced by a woman and advising him on how to act as King. He asked him to take good care of Queen Eleanor and admitted that he had been a poor husband. On 31 March 1547, King Francis I died, and Henry became King Henry II and Catherine his Queen consort. Catherine must have been sad to see her protector go. Catherine still remained powerless when it came to Diane de Poitiers, who reaped the full benefits as the King’s mistress. Years later she wrote, “If I made good cheers for Madame de Valentinois (Diane), it was the King that I was really entertaining, and besides I always let him know that I was acting sorely against the grain; for never did a woman who loved her husband succeed in loving his whore. For one cannot call her otherwise, although the word is a horrid one to us.”

In 1548, Henry finally gave Catherine an important sign of his respect for her; he made her regent in his absence, though her actual political powers were limited. Shortly after the birth of Louis, Catherine would finally be crowned as Queen of France. On 10 June 1549, Catherine rose at dawn, and by 11 o’clock she was ready. She wore a robe of green-blue velvet embroidered with the fleur-de-lys in gold thread, and it was edged with ermine. Her bodice glimmered with diamonds, rubies, emeralds and pearls. She was anointed with holy oil, a ring was placed on her finger, and a sceptre was placed in one hand and the “main de justice” in the other. The great crown was placed on her head by Antoine de Bourbon, and it was almost immediately replaced by a lighter and smaller crown.

In 1556, Catherine nearly died giving birth to twin daughters. The first baby was born safely but the second did not want to come, and Catherine quickly became weaker. Eventually, the second baby had its legs broken to remove it, and little Joan was stillborn. The surviving daughter was Victoire, but she too died only weeks later. They would be her last children.

In 1558, the marriage between her eldest son and Mary, Queen of Scots took place. They would be known as the King-Dauphin and the Queen-Dauphine to remind everyone that Francis was now also King of Scotland. Catherine’s eldest daughter married King Philip II of Spain the following year and Henry’s sister Margaret – already 36 years old – married Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy also in 1559.

On 29 June 1559, Catherine woke from a nightmare – she dreamt that her husband lay wounded and bleeding from his face. He was due to joust the next day, and she begged him not to take part. She could only watch as he was mortally injured and for the next ten days, she kept vigil by her husband’s bed. He died on 10 July 1559 and Catherine was determined that her son should win the following power struggle – she would help him do it.1

Read part three here.

  1. Read more: Leonie Frieda – Catherine de Medici






About Moniek Bloks 2680 Articles
My name is Moniek and I am from the Netherlands. I began this website in 2013 because I wanted to share these women's amazing stories.

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