Louis XII | |
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Reign | 7 April 1498 – 1 January 1515 ( 16 years, 269 days) |
Coronation | 27 May 1498 (Reims) |
Predecessor | Charles VIII |
Successor | Francis I |
Consort | Joan of France Anne, Duchess of Brittany Mary of England |
Issue | |
Claude, Queen of France Renée, Duchess of Ferrara |
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House | House of Valois |
Father | Charles, Duke of Orléans |
Mother | Marie of Cleves |
Born | 27 June 1462 Château de Blois |
Died | 1 January 1515 Hôtel des Tournelles |
(aged 52)
Burial | Saint Denis Basilica |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Louis XII (27 June 1462 – 1 January 1515), called "the Father of the People" (French: Le Père du Peuple), was king of France and the sole monarch from the Valois-Orléans branch of the House of Valois. He reigned from 1498 to 1515 and pursued a very active foreign policy.
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Louis was born on 27 June 1462, in the Château de Blois, Blois, Touraine (in the contemporary Loir-et-Cher département). The son of Charles, duc d'Orléans and Marie of Cleves, he succeeded his father as Duke of Orléans in the year 1465.[1]
In the 1480s Louis was involved in the so-called Mad War against royal authority. Allied with Francis II, Duke of Brittany he confronted the royal army at the Battle of Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier, but was defeated and captured.[2] Pardoned three years later, Louis joined his cousin King Charles VIII in campaigns in Italy.
All four of Charles VIII's children died in infancy. The French interpretation of the Salic Law permitted claims to the French throne only by male agnatic descendants of French kings. This made Louis, the great-grandson of King Charles V, the most senior claimant as heir of Charles VIII. Louis thus succeeded to the throne on the king's death.
Although he came late (and unexpectedly) to power, Louis acted with vigour, reforming the French legal system, reducing taxes and improving government, much like his contemporary Henry VII did in England. He was also skilled in managing his nobility, including the powerful Bourbon faction, by which he greatly contributed to the stability of French government. In the Ordinance of Blois of 1499 and the Ordinance of Lyon of 1510, he extended the powers of royal judges and made efforts to curb corruption in the law. Highly complex French customary law was to be codified and ratified by royal proclamation.
In an attempt to take control of the Duchy of Milan, to which he had a claim in right of his paternal grandmother Valentina Visconti,[3] Louis embarked on several campaigns in Italy. In the Italian War of 1499–1504, he successfully secured Milan itself in the year 1499 from his enemy, Ludovico Sforza, and it remained a French stronghold for twelve years. His greatest success came in his war with Venice, with the victory at the Battle of Agnadello in 1509. Things became much more difficult for him from 1510 onwards, especially after Julius II, the great warrior Pope, took control of the Vatican and formed the "Holy League" to oppose the ambitions of the French in Italy. The French were eventually driven from Milan by the Swiss in the year 1513.
Louis also pursued the claim of his immediate predecessor to the Kingdom of Naples with Ferdinand II, the King of Aragon from the House of Trastámara. They agreed to partition the Neapolitan realm in the Treaty of Granada (1500), but were eventually at war over the terms of partition, and by the year 1504 France had lost its share of Naples.
Louis's failure to hold on to Naples prompted a commentary by Niccolò Machiavelli in his famous opus The Prince:
King Louis was brought into Italy by the ambition of the Venetians, who expected by his coming to get control of half the state of Lombardy. I don't mean to blame the king for his part in the scheme; he wanted a foothold in Italy, and not only had no friends in the province, but found all doors barred against him because of King Charles's behavior. Hence he had to take what friendships he could get; and if he had made no further mistakes in his other arrangements, he might have carried things off very successfully. By taking Lombardy, the king quickly regained the reputation lost by Charles. Genoa yielded, and the Florentines turned friendly, the Marquis of Mantua, the Duke of Ferrara, the Bentivogli (of Bologna), the countess Forlì, the lords of Faenza, Pesaro, Rimini, Camerino, Piombino, and the people of Lucca, Pisa, and Siena all sought him out with professions of friendship. At this point the Venetians began to see the folly of what they had done, since in order to gain for themselves a couple of districts in Lombardy, they had now made the king master of a third of Italy.
Consider how easy it would have been for the king to maintain his position in Italy if he had observed the rules [of not worrying about weaker powers, decreasing the strength of a major power, not introducing a very powerful foreigner in the midst of his new subjects and taking up residence among his new subjects and/or setting up colonies], and become the protector and defender of his new friends. They were many, they were weak, some of them were afraid of the Venetians, others of the Church, hence they were bound to stick by him; and with their help, he could easily have protected himself against the remaining great powers. But no sooner was he established in Milan than he took exactly the wrong tack, helping Pope Alexander to occupy the Romagna. And he never realized that by this decision he was weakening himself, driving away his friends and those who had flocked to him, while strengthening the Church by adding vast temporal power to the spiritual power which gives it so much authority. Having made this first mistake, he was forced into others. To limit the ambition of Alexander and keep him from becoming master of Tuscany, he was forced to come to Italy himself [in 1502]. Not satisfied with having made the Church powerful and deprived himself of his friends, he went after the kingdom of Naples and divided it with the king of Spain (Ferdinand II). And where before he alone had been the arbiter of Italy, he brought in a rival to whom everyone in the kingdom who was ambitious on his own account or dissatisfied with Louis could have recourse. He could have left in Naples a caretaker king of his own, but he threw him out, and substituted a man capable of driving out Louis himself.
If France could have taken Naples with her own power, she should have done so; if she could not, she should not have split the kingdom with the Spaniards. The division of Lombardy that she made with the Venetians was excusable, since it gave Louis a foothold in Italy; the division of Naples with Spain was an error, since there was no such necessity for it. [When Louis made the final mistake of] depriving the Venetians of their power (who never would have let anyone else into Lombardy unless they were in control), he thus lost Lombardy.
Louis proved to be a popular king. At the end of his reign the crown deficit was no greater than it had been when he succeeded Charles VIII in 1498, despite several expensive military campaigns in Italy. His fiscal reforms of 1504 and 1508 tightened and improved procedures for the collection of taxes. He had duly earned the title of Father of the People ("Le Père du Peuple"), conferred upon him by the Estates in 1506.
In 1476, Louis XI (the "Spider King") forced Louis (his second cousin) to marry his pious daughter Joan of France (1464–1505).
Louis XI was succeeded by Charles VIII, who died childless in 1498, and was succeeded by Louis XII. Charles had been married to Anne, Duchess of Brittany (1477–1514), to unite the quasi-sovereign Duchy of Brittany with the Kingdom of France. To sustain this union, Louis had his marriage to Joan annulled so that he could marry Anne, now a widow.
The annulment, described as "one of the seamiest lawsuits of the age", was not simple, however. Louis did not, as might be expected, argue the marriage to be void due to consanguinity (the general allowance for the dissolution of a marriage at that time). Though he could produce witnesses to claim that the two were closely related due to various linking marriages, there was no documentary proof, merely the opinions of courtiers. Likewise, Louis could not argue that he had been below the legal age of consent (fourteen) to marry: no one was certain when he had been born, with Louis claiming to have been twelve at the time, and others ranging in their estimates between eleven and thirteen. As there was no real proof, however, he was forced to make other arguments.
Accordingly, Louis (much to the horror of his wife) claimed that she was physically malformed, providing a rich variety of detail precisely how, and that he had therefore been unable to consummate the marriage. Joan, unsurprisingly, fought this uncertain charge fiercely, producing witnesses to Louis' boast of having "mounted my wife three or four times during the night." Louis also claimed that his sexual performance had been inhibited by witchcraft; Joan responded by asking how he was able to know what it was like to try to make love to her.
Had the Papacy been a neutral party, Joan would likely have won, for Louis' case was exceedingly weak. Unfortunately for the Queen, Pope Alexander VI (Roderigo Borgia) was committed for political reasons to grant the divorce, and accordingly he ruled against Joan. He granted the annulment on the grounds that Louis did not freely marry but was forced to marry by Joan's father Louis XI. Outraged, Joan reluctantly submitted, saying that she would pray for her former husband. She became a nun and was canonized as a saint in 1950.
Louis married the equally reluctant queen dowager, Anne, in 1499. They had four stillborn sons, and two daughters. The elder daughter, Claude (1499-1524), was betrothed by her mother's arrangement to the future Emperor Charles V in 1501. But after Anne failed to produce a living son, Louis dissolved the betrothal and betrothed Claude to his heir presumptive, Francis of Angoulême, thereby insuring Brittany would remain united with France. Anne opposed this marriage, which took place only after her death in 1514. Claude succeeded her mother in Brittany, and became queen consort to Francis. The younger daughter, Renée (1510–1575), married Duke Ercole II of Ferrara.
After the death of Anne, Louis married Mary Tudor (1496–1533), the sister of King Henry VIII of England, in Abbeville, France, on 9 October 1514. This was a final attempt to produce an heir to his throne; despite two previous marriages, the king had no living sons. Louis died on 1 January 1515, less than three months after he married Mary, reputedly worn out by his exertions in the bedchamber. Their union produced no children.
Louis died on 1 January 1515, and was interred in Saint Denis Basilica. Due to the tradition of Salic Law, which did not allow women to inherit the throne of France, he was succeeded by his first cousin's son, Francis I (who was also his son-in-law), who founded his own line of French kings.
Ancestors of Louis XII of France | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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By Anne of Brittany | |||
Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
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Claude of France | 14 October 1499 | 20 July 1524 | married Francis I of France on 18 May 1514; had issue |
Unnamed son | 1500 | 1500 | stillborn |
Unnamed son | 21 January 1503 | 21 January 1503 | stillborn |
miscarriage | by the end of 1503 | by the end on 1503 | some sources cited |
miscarriage | 1505 | 1505 | |
Unnamed son | 21 January 1508 | 21 January 1508 | stillborn; some sources cited this was a miscarriage |
miscarriage | 1509 | 1509 | some sources cited |
Renée of France | 25 October 1510 | 12 June 1574 | married Ercole II d'Este in April 1528; had issue |
Unnamed son | 21 January 1512 | 21 January 1512 | stillborn |
Louis XII had an illegitimate son, Michel de Bucy, Archbishop of Bourges from 1505, died in 1511 and was buried in Bourges.[5][6]
Louis XII of France
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 27 June 1462 Died: 1 January 1515 |
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Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded by Charles VIII |
King of France 7 April 1498 – 1 January 1515 |
Succeeded by Francis I |
Preceded by Frederick IV |
King of Naples August 1501–31 March 1504 |
Succeeded by Ferdinand III |
Preceded by Anne |
Duke of Brittany 8 January 1499 – 9 January 1514 with Anne |
Succeeded by Claude |
Preceded by Louis I |
Duke of Milan 1499–1512 |
Succeeded by Maximilian |
Preceded by Charles I |
Duke of Orléans 5 January 1465 – 7 April 1498 |
Vacant
Merged into royal domain
Title next held by
Henry |
Duke of Valois 5 January 1465 – 7 April 1498 |
Vacant
Merged into royal domain
Title next held by
Francis |
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Count of Blois 5 January 1465 – 7 April 1498 |
Vacant
Merged into royal domain
Title next held by
Gaston |
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