Claude de Bectoz
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Claude de Bectoz was a French writer and philosopher of the Renaissance.
Life
Both her mother, Michelette de Salvaing, and father, Jacques de Bactoz, were from well-known families in the Dauphiné.[1] Denys Fauchier taught her to write Latin and verse.[2] Claude would later write prose and verse in both French and Italian.[3]
Claude became famous as a writer and intellectual and corresponded with many learned people, as well as with Queen Marguerite of Navarre and King Francis I of France. After she became abbess of the Monastery Saint Honorat in Tarascon in 1542, Marguerite and Francis visited her there. Francis carried her letters around with him and would show them to ladies of his court.[4]
Notes
References
- Cholakian, Patricia Francis; Cholakian, Rouben Charles (1826). Marguerite de Navarre: Mother of the Renaissance. Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper.
- Platts, John (1826). A New Universal Biography: Forming the First Volume of Series III. Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper.
- Robin, Diana Maury; Larsen, Anne R; Levin, Carole (2007). Encyclopedia of Women in the Renaissance: Italy, France, and England. ABC-CLIO.
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