Diane de Poitiers

Diane de Poitiers
Born (1499-09-03)3 September 1499[1]
Château de Saint-Vallier, Saint-Vallier, Drôme
Died 25 April 1566(1566-04-25) (aged 66)
Anet, Eure-et-Loir
Burial place Château d'Anet, Anet, Eure-et-Loir
Title The Grand Senechal(e) of Normandy
Countess of Saint-Vallier
Duchess of Étampes
Duchess of Valentinois
Spouse(s) Louis de Brézé, Seigneur d'Anet
Children Françoise de Brézé
Louise de Brézé
Parent(s) Jean de Poitiers, Seigneur de Saint Vallier
Jeanne de Batarnay

Diane de Poitiers (3 September 1499 – 25 April 1566) was a French noblewoman and a prominent courtier at the courts of king Francis I and his son, King Henry II of France. She became notorious as King Henry's mistress and so she wielded much influence and power at the French Court, which continued until Henry was mortally wounded in a tournament accident. It was during that tournament that his lance wore her favour (ribbon) rather than his wife's.

The subject of paintings by François Clouet as well other anonymous painters, Diane was also immortalised in a statue by Jean Goujon.

Early life

She was born the daughter of Jean de Poitiers, Seigneur de Saint Vallier and Jeanne de Batarnay.[1] When still a girl, she was briefly in the retinue of Anne de Beaujeu,[2] eldest sister of King Charles VIII, a capable and highly intelligent woman who held the regency of France during his minority.[2]

Diane was educated according to the principles of Renaissance humanism, in music, hunting, manners, languages, the art of conversation, and dancing. She learned how to read Latin and Greek, and became a keen hunter and sportswoman,[2] remaining in good physical condition well into middle age.

Marriage

At the age of 15, she married Louis de Brézé, seigneur d'Anet, who was 39 years her senior.[2] He was a grandson of King Charles VII[3] who served as a courtier of King Francis I. She bore him two daughters, Françoise de Brézé (1518–1574) and Louise de Brézé (1521–1577).[4][5]

In 1524, her father, Jean, was accused of treason as an accomplice of the rebellious Connétable de Bourbon.[4] His death sentence was commuted, but he would be confined to prison until the Treaty of Madrid in 1526.[4]

When her husband died in 1531 in Anet,[4] Diane adopted the habit of wearing the colours of black and white, her personal trademark for the rest of her life.[6] They were among the permitted colours of mourning, which, as a widow, she was required to wear, but they were also the symbolic colours of the bright and dark sides of the moon. They played on her name, Diane, which derived from Diana, the name of the Roman moon goddess.

Her keen interest in financial matters and legal shrewdness became apparent for the first time during this period. She retained her late husband's emoluments as governor and grand-sénéchal of Normandy, assuming herself the title of "sénéchale de Normandie". She challenged in court the obligation to return her husband's appanages to the royal domain. The king allowed her to enjoy the appanage's income "until the status of those lands has been totally clarified".

When Louis de Brézé was still alive, she became lady-in-waiting to Queen Claude of France. After the queen died, she served in the same capacity to Louise of Savoy, then Eleanor of Austria.[7]

Royal favourite

Anonymous sketch of Diane de Poitiers wearing a French hood, after a 1525 original.

After the capture of Francis I by Charles V's troops during the battle of Pavia (1525), the two eldest princes, Francis and Henry, were retained as hostages in Spain in exchange for their father. Because the ransom was not paid in time, the two boys (eight and seven at the time) had to spend nearly four years isolated in a bleak castle, facing an uncertain future. Henry found solace by reading the knight-errantry tale Amadis de Gaula. The experience may account for the strong impression that Diane made on him, as the very embodiment of the ideal gentlewomen he read about in Amadis. As his mother was already dead, Diane gave him the farewell kiss when he was sent to Spain.[8] At the tournament held for the coronation of Francis's new wife, Eleanor of Austria, in 1531, while the Dauphin of France saluted the new queen as expected, Henry addressed his salute to Diane.[8]

In 1533, Henry married Catherine de' Medici.[9] There had been opposition to the alliance, the Medicis being no more than upstarts in the eyes of many in the French court. Diane, however, approved of the choice of bride.[10] Diane and Catherine were actually[11] both descendants of the La Tour d'Auvergne family. As the future royal couple remained childless, concerned by rumours of a possible repudiation of a queen that she had in control, Diane made sure that Henry's visits to his wife's bedroom would be frequent.[11] In another act of preservation of the royal family, Diane helped nurse Catherine back to health when she was ill.[12] Diane was in charge of the education of her and Henry's children until 1551; her daughter Françoise managed the queen's servants. While Henry and Catherine would eventually produce 10 children together, and despite the occasional affair with such as Philippa Duci, Janet Fleming, and Nicole de Savigny, Diane de Poitiers would remain Henry's lifelong companion. For the next 25 years, she would be the most powerful influence in his life and the most powerful woman in France.[13] Based on allusions in their correspondence, it is generally believed that she became his mistress in 1534, when she was 35 years old and Henry was 16.[14]

The painting A Lady in Her Bath by François Clouet possibly depicts Diane de Poitiers

Remembered as a beautiful woman, she maintained her good looks well into her fifties, and her appearance was immortalized in sculpture and paintings.[15] Only two signed paintings by François Clouet are known to exist, one being a painting of Diane. The subject of that painting shows her seated nude in her bath. She sat for other paintings of the time, often topless or nude, other times in traditional poses.

In about 1549, sculptor Jean Goujon designed a statue especially for her in which she represented the goddess Diana. It features her reclining nude body together with her two dogs and a stag and was entitled "Diana with a Stag". It is displayed in the Louvre.

When Francis I was still alive, Diane had to compete at the court with Anne de Pisseleu, the king's favourite. She had the latter exiled and imprisoned by her husband on his lands upon Francis I's death in 1547.

Diane possessed a sharp intellect and was so politically astute that King Henry II trusted her to write many of his official letters, and they even signed them jointly with the one name HenriDiane. Her confident maturity and loyalty to Henry made her his most dependable ally in the court. Her position in the Court was such that when Pope Paul III sent the new Queen Catherine the "Golden Rose", he did not forget to present the royal mistress, Diane, with a pearl necklace. Within a very short stretch of time she wielded considerable power within the realm. In 1548, she received the prestigious title of Duchess of Valentinois, and in 1553, she was made Duchesse d'Étampes. The king's adoration for Diane caused a great deal of jealousy on the part of Queen Catherine, particularly when Henry entrusted Diane with the Crown Jewels of France, had the Château d'Anet remodelled for her, and gave her the Château de Chenonceau, a piece of royal property that Catherine had wanted for herself. However, as long as the king lived, the Queen was powerless to change that.

Henry's death and her downfall

Portrait of Diane de Poitiers as Diana goddess of the hunt on display in the bedroom of Francis I at the Château de Chenonceau.
The emblem of Diane de Poitiers, three interlaced crescents.

Despite wielding such power over the king, Diane's status depended on the king's welfare and remaining in power. In 1559, when Henry was critically wounded in a jousting tournament, Queen Catherine assumed control, restricting access to him. Although the king was alleged to have called out repeatedly for Diane, she was never summoned or admitted, and after his death, she was also not invited to the funeral. Immediately thereafter, Diane was obliged to give to Catherine the Château de Chenonceau, the jewel of the Loire Renaissance palaces, in exchange for Catherine's Château de Chaumont, which Catherine used for her sorcery prior to her widowhood. Diane stayed there only a short time, and she lived out her remaining years in her château in Anet, Eure-et-Loir, where she lived in comfortable obscurity as a virtual exile.[16].

At the age of 64, Diane suffered a fall during a ride.[15] Never fully recovering, she died at the age of 66.[15] In accordance with her wishes and to provide a resting place for her, her daughter completed the funeral chapel, built near the castle. During the French Revolution, her tomb was opened, her corpse desecrated, and her remains thrown into a mass grave.

In 1866, Georges Guiffrey published her correspondence.

When French experts dug up the remains of Diane de Poitiers in 2009, they found high levels of gold in her hair. It is suggested that the "drinkable gold" that she "reportedly" regularly took, believed to preserve youth, may have ultimately killed her.[17][18][19]

Ancestry

In fiction and film

A simple crescent emblem of Diane de Poitiers on a cannon of Henri II.

Diane de Poitiers has been featured in many novels and films.

Novels

Films

TV Shows

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Wellman 2013, p. 189.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Wellman 2013, p. 190.
  3. Wellman 2013, p. 191.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Wellman 2013, p. 192.
  5. Katharina M. Wilson, (1991). An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers, p. 994. Garland Publishing, Inc. ISBN 0-8240-8547-7.
  6. Wellman 2013, p. 193.
  7. "Diane De Poitiers". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  8. 1 2 Wellman 2013, p. 197.
  9. Baumgartner 1988, p. 28.
  10. Wellman 2013, p. 198.
  11. 1 2 Wellman 2013, p. 200.
  12. Baumgartner 1988, p. 98.
  13. Wellman 2013, p. 203.
  14. Wellman 2013, p. 199.
  15. 1 2 3 Wellman 2013, p. 214.
  16. Wellman 2013, p. 213.
  17. "Henry II’s mistress returned to rightful resting place", May 31, 2010, The Sunday Times
  18. Charlier, Philippe; Poupon, Joel (2009), "Fatal Alchemy" (PDF), British Medical Journal, 339: 1402–1403, retrieved 29 May 2016
  19. Charlier P; Poupon J; Huynh-Charlier I; Saliège JF; Favier D; Keyser C; Ludes B (2009), "A gold elixir of youth in the 16th century French court", British Medical Journal, 339: b5311, PMID 20015897, doi:10.1136/bmj.b5311
  20. It is interesting to note that Princess Michael is a remote descendant of Diane de Poitiers; Diane is Princess Michael's great14-grandmother.
  21. "Nostradamus". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 31 July 2012.

References

Further reading

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