- Charles, Duke of Mayenne
-
- For information on the regent of the Netherlands, see Charles of Lorraine.
Charles of Lorraine Duke of Mayenne Spouse Henriette of Savoy Issue Renée, Duchess of Ognano
Henri, Duke of Mayenne
Charles Emanuel, Count of Sommerive
Catherine, Duchess of MantuaFull name Charles de Lorraine House House of Lorraine Father Francis, Duke of Guise Mother Anna d'Este Born 26 March 1554
AlençonDied 3 October 1611 (aged 57)
SoissonsCharles of Lorraine, Duke of Mayenne (26 March 1554 – 3 October 1611), or Charles de Guise, was a French nobleman of the house of Guise and a military leader of the Catholic League, which he headed during the French Wars of Religion, following the assassination of his brothers at Blois in 1588. In 1596, when he made peace with Henri of Navarre, the wars were essentially at an end. He was the second son of Francis of Lorraine, Duke of Guise and Anna d'Este, the daughter of Ercole d'Este II, Duke of Ferrara and Renée of France.
Contents
Lieutenant to the Duke of Guise
Charles was absent from France at the time of the massacre of St Bartholomew, but took part in the siege of La Rochelle in the following year, when he was created duke and peer of France. He went with Henry of Valois, Duke of Anjou (later Henry III of France), on his election as king of Poland, but soon returned to France to become the energetic supporter and lieutenant of his brother, Henry I, Duke of Guise.
In 1577 he gained conspicuous successes over the Huguenot forces in Poitou. As governor of Burgundy he raised his province in the cause of the Catholic League in 1585. The assassination of his brothers at Blois on December 23–24, 1588, left him at the head of the Catholic party.
Head of the Catholic League
The ambassador of the Republic of Venice, Giovanni Mocenigo, states that Mayenne had warned Henry III that there was a plot afoot to seize his person and to send him by force to Paris. At the time of the murder he was at Lyon, where he received a letter from the king saying that he had acted on his warning, and ordering him to retire to his government.
Mayenne professed obedience, but immediately made preparations for marching on Paris. After a vain attempt to recover those of his relatives who had been arrested at Blois, he proceeded to recruit troops in his government of Burgundy and in Champagne. Paris was devoted to the house of Guise and had been roused to fury by the news of the murder. When Mayenne entered the city in February 1589 he found it dominated by representatives of the sixteen quarters of Paris, all staunch supporters of the League.
He formed a council general to direct the affairs of the city and to maintain relations with the other towns faithful to the League. Each quarter sent four representatives, and Mayenne added representatives of the various trades and professions of Paris in order to counterbalance this revolutionary element. He constituted himself "lieutenant-general of the state and crown of France," taking his oath before the parlement of Paris.
In April he advanced on Tours. Henry III in his extremity sought an alliance with the Huguenot, Henry of Navarre (the future Henry IV of France), and the allied forces drove the leaguers back, and had laid siege to Paris when the assassination of Henry III by a Dominican monk changed the face of affairs and gave new strength to the Catholic party.
King-maker
Mayenne was urged to claim the crown for himself, but he was faithful to the official programme of the League and proclaimed Charles, Cardinal de Bourbon, at that time a prisoner in the hands of Henry IV, as Charles X of France, although this numbering is not accepted by historians. Henry IV retired to Dieppe, followed by Mayenne, who joined his forces with those of his cousin Charles, Duke of Aumale, and Charles II de Cossé, comte de Brissac, and engaged the forces of the League in a succession of fights in the neighbourhood of Arques (September 1589). He was defeated and out-marched by Henry IV, who moved on Paris, but retreated before Mayenne's forces.
In 1590 Mayenne received additions to his army from the Spanish Netherlands, and took the field again, only to suffer complete defeat at Ivry (14 March 1590). He then escaped to Mantes and in September collected a fresh army at Meaux, and with the assistance of Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma, sent by Philip II of Spain, raised the siege of Paris, which was about to surrender to Henry IV. Mayenne feared with reason the designs of Philip II, and his difficulties were increased by the death of the Cardinal, the "king of the league."
Peacemaker
The extreme section of the party, represented by the radical "Paris Sixteen", urged him to proceed to the election of a Catholic king and to accept the help and the claims of their Spanish Habsburg allies. Mayenne lacked the popular gifts of his brother, the Duke of Guise, and had no sympathy with the urban demagogues, inclining to the moderate side of his party, which began to urge reconciliation with Henry IV. He maintained the ancient forms of the constitution against the revolutionary policy of the Sixteen, who during his absence from Paris took the law into their own hands and in November 1591 executed one of the leaders of the more moderate party, Barnabé Brisson, president of the parlement. He returned to Paris and executed four of the chief malcontents. The power of the Sixteen diminished from that time, and with it the strength of the League.
Mayenne entered into negotiations with Henri IV while he was still appearing to consider with Philip II the succession to the French crown of the Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain, daughter of Elizabeth of Valois and granddaughter of Henri II. He demanded that Henri IV complete his conversion to Catholicism before he was recognized by the adherents of the League. He also desired the continuation to himself of the high offices which had accumulated in his family and the reservation of their provinces to his relatives among the Leaguers.
In 1593 he summoned the States-General to Paris and placed before them the claims of the Infanta, but they protested against foreign intervention (these proceedings are the subject of the satirical work, the Satire Ménippée). Mayenne signed a truce at La Villette on 31 July 1593. The internal dissensions of the league continued to increase, and the principal chiefs submitted. Mayenne finally made his peace only in October 1595. Henri IV allowed him the possession of Chalon-sur-Saône, of Seurre and Soissons for three years, made his son Henry governor of the Île-de-France and paid a large indemnity.
Marriage and children
On 6 August 1576, Charles married Henriette of Savoy, Marquise of Villars. Her paternal grandfather was René of Savoy, called le Grand Bâtard de Savoie (the Grand Bastard of Savoy), an illegitimate son of Philip II, Duke of Savoy.
They had four children:
- Renée de Lorraine (d.1638) married Mario Sforza and had issue;
- Henri, Duke of Mayenne (1578–1621) married Henriette Gonzaga, daughter of Louis Gonzaga, Duke of Nevers, no issue;
- Charles Emanuel, Count of Sommerive (1581–1609) never married;
- Catherine of Lorraine (1585–1618) married Charles Gonzaga and had issue (Marie Louise, Queen of Poland and the Countess Palatine of Simmern).
See also
- Duc de Mayenne
References
- An Histoire de la vie et de la mort du duc de Mayenne appeared at Lyon in 1618.
- See also JBH Capefigue, Histoire de la Reforme, de la ligue et du regne de Henri IV (8 vols., 1834–1835) and the literature dealing with the house of Guise.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
French nobility New creation Duc de Mayenne
1572–1611Succeeded by
HenryComte du Maine
died 1611Princes of Lorraine The generations start from the children of Réné II 1st Generation Prince Charles* · Prince François* · Antoine, Duke of Lorraine · Prince Nicolas* · Claude, Duke of Guise · Jean, Cardinal of Lorraine* · Louis, Count of Vaudémont · Prince François*2nd Generation François I · Nicolas, Duke of Mercœur · Prince Jean · Prince Antoine · Francis, Duke of Guise · Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine* · Claude, Duke of Aumale · Louis, Cardinal of Guise* · René, Marquis of Elbeuf3rd Generation Charles III · Philippe Emmanuel, Duke of Mercœur · Henri, Duke of Guise · Charles, Duke of Aumale · Charles, Duke of Elbeuf4th Generation Henri II · Prince Charles* · François II · Charles, Duke of Mayenne · Prince Philippe Louis* · Charles, Duke of Guise · Charles, Duke of Elbeuf · Louis, Cardinal of Guise · Claude, Duke of Chevreuse · Prince François Alexandre5th Generation Prince Henri* · Charles IV · Nicolas François, Duke of Lorraine · Henri, Duke of Guise* · Louis, Duke of Joyeuse* · Henri, Count of Harcourt · Charles, Duke of Elbeuf* · Henri, Abbot of Hombliéres* · François Marie, Prince of Lillebonne* · François Louis, Count of Harcourt* · Louis, Count of Armagnac · Philippe, Chevalier de Lorraine6th Generation Ferdinand, Hereditary Prince* · Charles V · Charles Henri, Prince of Commercy* · Louis Joseph, Duke of Guise* · Alfonse Louis, Abbot of Royaumont* · Raimond Bérenger, Abbot of Faron de Meaux* · Henri, Duke of Elbeuf* · Emmanuel Maurice, Duke of Elbeuf* · Henri, Count of Brionne · Alphonse Henri, Count of Harcourt · Charles, Count of Marsan7th Generation Léopold I · Charles Joseph, Bishop of Olomouc* · Prince Charles Ferdinand* · Prince Joseph Innocent* · François Antoine, Abbot of Malmedy* · Charles Thomas, Prince of Vaudémont · François Joseph, Duke of Guise* · Henri, Count of Brionne · Charles, Count of Armagnac · Louis, Prince of Lambesc · Joseph, Count of Harcourt · Charles Louis, Count of Marsan8th Generation Louis, Hereditary Prince* · Louis, Hereditary Prince* · Léopold Clément, Hereditary Prince* · Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor · Prince Charles Alexandre* · Louis, Prince of Brionne · Gaston, Count of Marsan* · Camille, Prince of Marsan*9th Generation Charles Eugene, Prince of Lambesc, Duke of Elbeuf* · Joseph, Prince of Vaudémont*- died without surviving issue
Categories:- 1554 births
- 1611 deaths
- House of Lorraine
- House of Guise
- Dukes of Mayenne
- Dukes of Aiguillon
- People of the French Wars of Religion
- Recipients of the Order of the Holy Spirit
- Grand Chamberlains of France
- Admirals of France
- People from Alençon
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.