In the previous post Charles II found AITA:
Look, I, m, believe in live and let live. (And in not going on my travels again. Had enough of that to last a life time.) Why can't everyone else around me be more chill? Instead, my wife refuses to employ my girlfriend, my girlfriend won't budge and accept another office, my brother is set on a course to piss off everyone (he WILL go on his travels again), and my oldest kid shows signs of wanting my job which is just not on, sorry to say. And don't get me started about Mom (thank God she's living abroad). What am I doing wrong? AITA?
Look, I, m, believe in live and let live. (And in not going on my travels again. Had enough of that to last a life time.) Why can't everyone else around me be more chill? Instead, my wife refuses to employ my girlfriend, my girlfriend won't budge and accept another office, my brother is set on a course to piss off everyone (he WILL go on his travels again), and my oldest kid shows signs of wanting my job which is just not on, sorry to say. And don't get me started about Mom (thank God she's living abroad). What am I doing wrong? AITA?
no subject
Date: 2022-04-03 03:51 pm (UTC)...well, maybe they did get the mediterranian coloring from Grandma, but the Alte Pinakothek harbors all of Rubens small scale oil paintings of the Maria de' Medici cycle (the large scale final executions of are in the Louvre), and these paintings consistently depict Maria de' Medici as a blonde. The paintings showing her as a child, too. And Rubens knew her in person. Sure, she probably wore a wig in public more often than not as did everyone, but I would trust Peter Paul Rubens to know whether a woman is a blonde or not.
(Yes, that doesn't mean she can't have transmitted some genetic material prone to produce dark hair and black eyes, which the earlier Medici certainly displayed.)
Medici coloring
Date: 2022-04-04 12:09 am (UTC)Im Louvre ging es wie in einem orientalischen Harem zu, denn Heinrich IV quartierte dort Gemahlin und Geliebte Tür an Tür ein--aus reiner Bequemlichkeit, um schnell von dem einen Bett in dasandere wechseln zu können. So kamen beide Frauen zeitgleich nieder, Maria von Medici mit dem Dauphin am 27. September 1601, Henriette d'Entragues ebenfalls mit einem Sohn am 4. November. Wie l'Estoile berichtet, hielt es der Vert galant in seiner eigenwilligen Galanterie für taktvoll, nicht nur seiner Geliebten zu sagen, daß ihr Sohn «viel schöner sei als der seiner Frau, den er als den Medici ähnlich bezeichnete, schwarz und fett wie jene» , sondern auch seine Gemahlin davon nicht ohne Kenntnis zu lassen, was zur Folge hatte, daß «die Königin sehr weinte»
Re: Medici coloring
Date: 2022-04-04 07:34 am (UTC)(Re: "fat", no Rubens dispute there. Also no problem - he was famously into women with a few pounds more.)
Also, poor Louis XIII. Since his mother so clearly prefered his younger brother Gaston, I was hoping he'd have had at least a memory of an early childhood as his father's fave, but evidently not.
Re: Medici coloring
Date: 2022-04-04 01:02 pm (UTC)This is all reminding me that Elizaveta of Russia was a blonde who dyed her hair black (in contrast to the Ekaterina show, which made her a redhead).
Since his mother so clearly prefered his younger brother Gaston, I was hoping he'd have had at least a memory of an early childhood as his father's fave, but evidently not.
Schultz says Henri IV was very affectionate with his kids, Louis XIII included. But since Henri had had the whip used on him a lot as a kid, he made sure the kids' caretakers used the whip on them. And since Louis XIII was *very* stubborn, he got the whip *a lot*, because Henri said there was no better tool for child-raising.
But he let little Louis accompany him on hunting trips (bring your kid to work day, apparently) and apparently their relationship was warm and close, whipping notwithstanding, until Henri's assassination. Mom, not so much.
Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-12 01:53 pm (UTC)Henri had 14 legitimate, legitimated, and illegitimate children between 1601 and 1609 (not counting the earlier ones!) that he decided should all be raised together.
In particular [Henri] turned to the Dauphin, in whose features he recognized himself and in whom his political work was to outlive him. He had good times with the child Louis, brought him sweets, lifted him onto his shoulders, "let him grab his beard with both hands," threw him up, once "so high that he slipped out of his hands and, if the nurse had not caught him skillfully, he might have been killed--she demanded that [Henri] not do this any more with the child." A few years later the king allowed his heir to come to his bed early in the morning, where they both tussled naked, or he let him sit down at his table, gave him a melon, quince jelly, a small spoonful of wine and "let him beat the march with his spoon." In Fontainebleau, where he took the boy on his walks, he showed him the trout, carp, ducks and swans in the canal, which they fed together. Both paths also led to the aviaries, and eventually the father taught his son how to draw a bow--the first stage in the introduction to the passion for hunting that the later Louis XIII inherited from Henri IV.
And which all the Bourbon kings down to the Revolution inherited, I might add.
Also this:
The Spanish ambassador, who had appeared for an audience with Henri IV, saw him crawling around his study on all fours, with young Louis on his back. [Henri] asked the ambassador whether he also had children, and when he answered in the affirmative, [Henri] was satisfied: "In that case, I can complete the round of the room."
But then this:
His order to the children's governess, Madame de Montglat, in 1607 [when Louis was 5-6] was without the slightest scruple: "I'm complaining about you, because you have not reported to me that you have whipped my son, for I demand and command you to whip him every time he disobeys or does something bad, knowing full well that there is nothing in the world that is more beneficial to him."
And little Louis has osmosed that he is superior to his illegitimate half-siblings:
At the age of three he distanced himself from his half-brothers, with whom he was supposed to sit at table together: "But no, it is not appropriate for lords to dine with their servants." Only a year later he was able to correctly distinguish biologically and dynastically between the children of the queen and those of the royal mistress and at the age of seven refused to regard another half-sister, who appeared among the children of Saint-Germain en-Laye, as equal: "She has not been in Mama's womb." In the same year, he became abusive towards his half-brother Antoine, the son of Jacqueline de Bueil, the only one with whom he was otherwise friendly, refused him the title Count and distanced himself from him with drastic words: "Ha, that's a different breed of dog...That one, he comes after the shit I just shat out." The Dauphin gave Madame de Montglat plenty of reason to take up the whip.
I mean, I kind of feel sorry for him. The lesson he's clearly learning here is "If you have power over someone, use it to punch down: to your social inferiors, and to small children who are repeating what they've been told."
Anyway, in conclusion, little future Louis XIII seems to have an abusive childhood coupled with memories of a loving father, which is unfortunately not an uncommon experience (and generally makes it harder to recognize the abuse as abuse later on).
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-12 02:18 pm (UTC)a) use a whipping boy in order to teach them responsibility without hurting them
b) whipping them, not someomeone else
which would you as a royal parent of the era have used?
c) Neither is also allowed, if you think you'd have been like Louise of Orange, wife of the Great Elector who as you may recall wasn't just against spanking but also against verbal abuse. (Much rarer!) It wasn't impossible to be anti physical punishment, but it was very rare.
Anyway: the tales of Henri IV, active loving Dad who still thinks regular physical punishment is the right thing to do is a right mixture of "aw" and "argh". I'm glad Louis had those memories regardless, because I do know how his life went after Dad died. BTW, am no longer surprised the second most famous and most famous authentic anecdote involving Louis XIII and his own oldest son (the most famous anecdote of all being apocryphal) went like this:
Background: Louis 13 and Anne of Austria have a terrible marriage. After some early miscarriages, no children... until they produce Louis XIV after 23 years without kids - which is why he got the additional name Dieudonné, and then Philippe the Gay. Does the miracle kid engineer marital harmony at last? Well:
Louis XIII: visits nursery with male favourite Cinq Mars (young, dashing, stupid, arrogant)
Future Louis XIV: *cries*
Louis XIII (to Anne, also present): My son cries when he sees me?!? What kind of education is he getting from you, Madame?!!!!!!! *storms off*
(How do we know about this? Because he wrote his PM, Richelieu, an angry letter about it. Richelieu at that point was long past his own feud with the Queen and actually made fair weather between them.)
(The most famous and definitely not authentic anecdote goes:
L13: Who am I?
L14: My father the King.
L13: And who are you?
L14: Louis Quatorze.
L13: Not yet, my son, not yet.)
Kid Louis XIII giving his illegitimate half siblings a hard time might als be connected to the fact his legitimate brother Gaston was Mom's favourite, which became ever more relevant once Dad was dead and Mom was Regent, but presumably started earlier than that? I mean, what you said abouto punching down, and if he figured out the differences in rank, he could also have concluded he couldn't do that with his legitimate siblings?
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-12 03:56 pm (UTC)b) whipping them, not someomeone else
which would you as a royal parent of the era have used?
Ooof. Me personally? If I didn't live in an era where I could read up on psychology, neuroscience and child development, I would never in a million years have independently arrived at anti-corporal punishment. I am innately a downward puncher. So (b) for my past AU self, alas. I don't think I would have gone for a whipping boy unless there was a long tradition of doing so and the decision had in effect been made for me. I'm pretty sure I would go straight for hitting the person I was mad at, "for their own good."
Poor kids.
Louis XIII (to Anne, also present): My son cries when he sees me?!? What kind of education is he getting from you, Madame?!!!!!!! *storms off*
Schultz talks a fair bit about how she was worried about having her kids taken away from her for this reason, and that was why she was willing to hobnob with anti-Louis conspirators.
Kid Louis XIII giving his illegitimate half siblings a hard time might als be connected to the fact his legitimate brother Gaston was Mom's favourite, which became ever more relevant once Dad was dead and Mom was Regent, but presumably started earlier than that?
It must have! Gaston was only born in 1608, and if Louis was 3-7 when Schultz's anecdotes took place, that would have been 1604-1608. Gaston wasn't even born yet/was barely born!
ETA: I think I may have misread your question. I read it as you speculating that Louis giving his siblings a hard time started earlier than Gaston being Mom's favorite, but upon rereading, I think you were speculating that Gaston being Mom's favorite started before Mom was regent? It may well have, but my point about the chronology stands: Louis was a class snob long before there was a Gaston. My guess is that one or more of the adults around Louis thought it was a travesty that he was being raised alongside his illegitimate siblings.
Other things I didn't know until I read this book: Henri IV had promised his most recent mistress, in writing, to marry her, and as a result, she didn't consider his marriage to Marie de Medici valid or future Louis legitimate. In her opinion, she was the Queen, and her son (the one Henri thought was better looking than the black and fat Medici-looking one) was the real heir to the throne.
...I can easily imagine that, what with the Queen and mistress each having her own party at court, future Louis XIII was surrounded by adults vocally resenting the illegitimate children being raised alongside him. And then he mimicked what he heard, starting age 3, and Dad had him whipped for it. :/
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-13 06:47 am (UTC)Ah, yes, that does make sense. As does Louis imitating his elders for this reason. I vaguely remembered this particular mistress because she was involved in a conspiracy against the King which Henri forgave her for and took her back, but not that he'd promised in writing to marry her.
Countess Cosel, thinking of her own contrasting fate in similar cirucmtances: ....Clearly, my mistake was not trying to kill August.
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-13 06:08 pm (UTC)Actually, if you study primatology, you can see this pattern in monkey species that have a strict hierarchical structure: the kids start off not knowing who's in what rank and being willing to play with any kids their own age. It's Mom monkey who drags her kid away from playing from someone who's too high ranked or too low ranked. And then the kids grow up convinced that hierarchy is THE most important thing, and they enforce the rules when it comes time to raise their own kids.
Countess Cosel, thinking of her own contrasting fate in similar cirucmtances: ....Clearly, my mistake was not trying to kill August.
Clearly!
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-14 09:24 pm (UTC)That personality trait led to this anecdote I had to share: Once upon a time, there was a duke who had waged war against Henri for years.Once he surrendered, Henri summoned him to court, where he took the guy walking in the gardens. Henri was a hardened warrior and a king who liked to consult with his ministers while walking fast in his gardens. The duke was so fat and out of shape he needed help mounting his horse.
After a while, Henri looks back to see the guy red-faced and puffing as he tries to keep up. Fake-sweet, he asks, "Tell me the truth, am I going a little too fast for you?" When the duke admits that he is and pleads for mercy, Henri says cheerfully, "By god, that is the only revenge I mean to take on you." Then he sends the duke back to one of the ministers, where he gets a couple flasks of royal wine to revive himself.
So this is the same Henri who was like, "Yeah, my mistress conspired against me...but I'm sure she's sorry."
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-16 04:36 pm (UTC)(I haven't yet read a non fictional biography of his myself, but I am familiar with Heinrich Mann's magnum opus, the two part Henri Quatre novel, which he wrote in exile.)
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-17 07:29 pm (UTC)Unless you're one of his supporters. In which case you might be left going, "But if we risk life and limb for you and you ignore us, and the people who wage war on you get off scot-free, what even was the point of siding with you?!"
He lost a certain amount of support on his own side from this magnamimous behavior, is what I'm saying.
"Yeah, my mistress conspired against me...but I'm sure she's sorry."
To be clear, this is my summary of his attitude towards her, not a quote or anything.
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-21 05:21 am (UTC)"Yeah, my mistress conspired against me...but I'm sure she's sorry."
Lol, it's a great story but that would be an awesome quote. (Maybe one day it will appear on Wikipedia and it will be traced back here...)
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-21 09:00 pm (UTC)Or his wife. Did you run the first anecdote through Google translate, where he was dissing her (family) and her baby for being "dark and fat"? Sorry I never got around to translating that, but I figured your browser could handle it.
Lol, it's a great story but that would be an awesome quote. (Maybe one day it will appear on Wikipedia and it will be traced back here...)
ROFL! I can't stop imagining this now and laughing. It's funny cause it's true!
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-23 06:06 pm (UTC)Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-23 07:21 pm (UTC)Maybe she had light skin and dark hair. Maybe she had olive-colored Mediterranean skin. (Judging by the apparently olive-colored skin of some of her descendants, like Charles II, I'm guessing the latter.) But either way, he was using "schwarz und fett" as an insult to mean "unattractive", and making her cry, which means he was being AN ASSHOLE.
(I did, from the beginning, entertain the possibility that he could be saying that, while she was a light-skinned blonde, she had passed on the dark coloring of her Mediterranean Medici family. That was Selena's first theory based on Rubens, and it does grammatically fit "wie jene" (like them) but--how many Medici has Henri met? And if you thought your wife's coloring was attractive, would you insult her and make her cry by talking about how the baby looks darker and resembles a family you've never seen? Maybe, but I think it's much more internally consistent to suppose that he went for blondes, that he equated "Medici" with "dark" because he saw his darker Medici wife every day, and that her dark coloring was part of the reason he preferred his mistress(es) to his wife and insulted her and her kid for their appearance.)
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-23 07:58 pm (UTC)(Actually Henri was way nicer about Catherine than about Maria, it seems, proving your point about him and his enemies vs him and his supporters, in a way. He famously said re: Catherine when people called her a monster years after her death: "I ask you, what could a woman do, left by the death of her husband with five little children on her arms, and two families of France who were thinking of grasping the crown - our own [the Bourbons] and the Guises? (Meaning you win or you die at the game of thrones, I suppose.)
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-23 08:01 pm (UTC)Right you are! You'd think I hadn't just read an entire bio of Catherine and how she was always trying to keep Henri at court where she could keep an eye on him/try to convert him to Catholicism/use him as a hostage. That, and her coloring, would have influenced his impression of Medici coloring.
Actually Henri was way nicer about Catherine than about Maria
Indeed, this emerged from my reading as well.
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-24 06:26 am (UTC)Incidentally, speaking of Medici genes coming through, Antonia Fraser always claimed Charles II resembles Lorenzo the Magnificent (despite, may I had, Charles' grandmother Maria de' Medici coming from the younger branch of the Medici, which departed ways from Lorenzo's branch with the brother of Lorenzo's grandfather). Judge for yourself:
She's not entirely wrong.
However, now look at Maria de' Medici, and I don't just mean the Rubens portraits:
Maria as Regent:
And to prove it's not just Rubens, this is Maria as a girl in Florence:
Now, I don't know about you, and maybe everyone who ever painted Maria was explicitly told to use the hair color she wanted rather than the one they saw. But the thing is, her mother was a Habsburg. (Johanna von Österreich.) (Niece of Charles V.) And this is how Johanna looked like:
Conclusion, especially by comparison to Lorenzo and Charles: Maria inherited her looks from the Habsburgs rather than the Medici. Doesn't mean she can't have forwarded the dark Medici looks, she most probably did. And of course Henri was being an asshole with that "black and fat" remark either way, but methinks his idea of Medici looks really must have come from his mother in law rather than his wife. Catherine de' Medici when young Henri knew her:
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
From:Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
From:Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-28 04:28 am (UTC)Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
From:Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
From:Re: Henri IV and conversion
Date: 2022-04-30 05:51 pm (UTC)To paraphrase loosely from memory, the official proclamation was along these lines:
I, Henri, totally said a long time ago that I wanted to sit down with some priests and ask them questions and learn more about the Catholic faith, so I could make an informed decision about the salvation of my soul. But it was never a good time, because the country was at war, so I was too busy campaigning
and wooing my mistresses. But now that my subjects seem inclined to peace, [translation: the Catholic League, led by the Guises, are about to elect a king that isn't me] I have the leisure to learn more about this faith that I've always been extremely interested in.And apparently he kept a straight face while saying all this, and everyone pretended to believe him, except for the people who didn't, and he gained Paris for the price of a mass, and eventually lost his life.
Because those people who didn't? We apparently have multiple accounts of diehard Catholics asking their confessors if regicide could ever be justified, and the priests either giving a noncommittal answer like "I'm sure God's forgiveness is infinite," or straight up rationalizing it as, "Well, one of the Ten Commandments is 'thou shalt not kill,' true, but that's like commandment number 5, but commandment number ONE is 'thou shalt have no other gods before me,' and a Protestant king who's only pretending to be Catholic for the sake of power clearly has gods before the one true God. And one comes before five. So in conclusion, my son, God will not only forgive you for regicide, but he fully expects you to commit regicide in his name. P.S. Don't forget this is a holy war and your soul is at stake. Godspeed."
So Henri survived something like 16 assassination attempts (depending on what you count as an "attempt"), and the seventeenth was fatal.
Btw, just before his conversion, I was struck by the phrasing of one of his Catholic supporters, who said to him, "Sire, the Catholic party in France as well as our Catholic neighbors are against you, and all you've got is a miserable few Huguenots. Now, I wouldn't dare say this to you if you were the sincerely religious type. But you live in good fellowship with us Catholics, which means we can't suspect that you're driven strictly by your conscience."
I was impressed by the Catholic saying he wouldn't have tried to convert a sincerely religious Protestant, but then it was, after all, the moderate Catholics who were on Henri's side in the first place.
Re: Henri IV and conversion - Richelieu Footnote
Date: 2022-05-01 06:11 am (UTC)When young Armand du Plessis (future Richelieu the Cardinal) went to Rome to get an dispensation for becoming a bishop while still way below the newly raised by the Council of Trent age, he was questioned by the Pope as to the sincerity of his monarch's Catholicism, which was a challenge and one of those in theory no good answer situations - remember, he's supposed to get the Pope to make him bishop (which is family's entire income depends on right then), so he can't afford to piss off the Pope, but if he agrees that Henri is a heretic in disguise, he's a disloyal subject and also can kiss any chance of a French career goodbye. However, apparantly young Armand was up to the task, and the Pope commented approvingly "Henricus Magnus Armandus Armando" and licensed him becoming a bishop.
(The irony is that he hadn't even wanted to be, at first. Young Armand was never meant for the church. He was a third son. His oldest brother, Henri, was the one who got the (modest - the du Plessis were a deeply provincial nobility on Dad's side, and Mom wasn't even that, she was from Beamtenadel) title, and brother No.2, Alphonse, was the one meant for the church. Alphonse actually loved his faith too much, i.e. he was all for becoming a priest, but he absolutely refused to make a career in it, he became a monk. This was a big problem for the family, because Dad was dead (another duel - did I mention Richelieu really had good reason to loathe duels?), and the family income partly came from the bishopry of Lucon, which they had a lockhold on, but when Uncle previous bishop died and Alphonse absolutely refused to become more than a monk, Mom, Suzanne, who was one tough lady, drafted teenage Armand out of his Parisian cadet school (where he was supposed to make a military career) and into the church, where he had to study theology in record time, and then go to Rome to convince the Pope that despite the recent reforms of the Council of Trent, which were designed to prevent among so many other things young men without any experience becoming bishops in name only, reaping the cash but not doing the work, he should be granted the office. Young Armand did just that by managing to defend Henri IV without insulting the Pope. Presto, Armand du Plessis, Bishop of Lucon at 21.
However, young Armand wasn't done. He also was one of life's workoholics. He did take the office seriously and put the fear of God into the sleepy Lucon administration which wasn't used to a Plessis actually showing up for work instead of appointing a local to do it, completely reorganized it, guilt tripped and scared the local nobility into contributing, too - this was an uphill battle, because Lucon, which happens to be not THAT far from La Rochelle, was surrounded by more Protestants than Catholics at this point, and the Catholic nobles weren't invested in doing something for Lucon since the Plessis family - not locals - had had that lockhold on the bishop seat -, all of which meant that at age 30, when Henri IV got murdered and a general assembly for France was called for the last time before the French Revolution, Armand du Plessis, Bishop of Lucon, was the guy voted for as one of the representatives. He went to Paris, spoke in front of the General Assembly and the new Regent Maria de' Medici, and the rest is history.
Decades later, when he was Cardinal Richelieu and thus the most powerful church official in France, with the corresponding clout in Rome, he forced brother Alphonse to leave his monastery, and had him appointed a cardinal by the Pope, too. Alphonse still absolutely did not want to, and Richelieu had to lean hard on his abbot to make that happen, but he did, and Alphonse had a nervous breakdown. To be fair, that was another family problem. An uncle, Alphonse and Armand's younger sister Nicole would all end up deemed insane. When Nicole had her final breakdown, and her husband just wanted to leave her in that state, Richelieu put the fear of God into him, too, and gave strict (and in terms of Nicole, very tender) instructions of how she could be cared for, which were very atypical for a time not known to deal well with people suffering from mental illness. But if he was a good brother to Nicole, he definitely triggered Alphone's breakdown by forcing him out of the monastery and into a Cardinal title, and if there is another explanation for this than "payback for destroying teenage Armand's dreams by refusing an ecclesiastical career", I haven't come across it yet.
Re: Henri IV and conversion - Richelieu Footnote
Date: 2022-05-05 05:14 am (UTC)Man, this seems... super in character.
Suzanne, who was one tough lady, drafted teenage Armand out of his Parisian cadet school (where he was supposed to make a military career) and into the church, where he had to study theology in record time, and then go to Rome to convince the Pope that despite the recent reforms of the Council of Trent, which were designed to prevent among so many other things young men without any experience becoming bishops in name only, reaping the cash but not doing the work, he should be granted the office.
Wooooow. That's awesome.
he forced brother Alphonse to leave his monastery,
Me: Omg, I am absolutely going to ask whether this was Richelieu's revenge on his brother --
and if there is another explanation for this than "payback for destroying teenage Armand's dreams by refusing an ecclesiastical career", I haven't come across it yet.
Me: Orrrrr I guess I don't have to! :)
Richelieu put the fear of God into him, too, and gave strict (and in terms of Nicole, very tender) instructions of how she could be cared for, which were very atypical for a time not known to deal well with people suffering from mental illness.
Now this is great. (And as usual I really like hearing about people who could be really nice and also really ruthless.)
Re: Henri IV and conversion
Date: 2022-05-05 05:07 am (UTC)Lol!
but commandment number ONE is 'thou shalt have no other gods before me,' and a Protestant king who's only pretending to be Catholic for the sake of power clearly has gods before the one true God. And one comes before five. So in conclusion, my son, God will not only forgive you for regicide, but he fully expects you to commit regicide in his name. P.S. Don't forget this is a holy war and your soul is at stake. Godspeed."
Wow, that is... impressive.
"Sire, the Catholic party in France as well as our Catholic neighbors are against you, and all you've got is a miserable few Huguenots. Now, I wouldn't dare say this to you if you were the sincerely religious type. But you live in good fellowship with us Catholics, which means we can't suspect that you're driven strictly by your conscience."
Heh. I like that.
Re: Henri IV and Louis XIII
Date: 2022-04-14 04:59 am (UTC)b) whipping them, not someomeone else
which would you as a royal parent of the era have used?
I would 100% not have been self-aware enough to be like Louise of Orange. I think I probably would have felt some sort of noblesse oblige towards the whipping boy and thus whipped my own children to teach them responsibility and that they couldn't get away with whipping some other poor kid -- well, I suppose it depends on exactly what kinds of things I ended up reading (I'm sure I got some of this viewpoint from 19th C and early 20th C lit).
(How do we know about this? Because he wrote his PM, Richelieu, an angry letter about it. Richelieu at that point was long past his own feud with the Queen and actually made fair weather between them.) /
Actually, this part is kinda cool! :)
L14: Louis Quatorze.
L13: Not yet, my son, not yet.)
Hee, I can see why it's famous!