- The forty-five guards
The Forty-five guards were forty-five guards recruited by the Duke of Épernon to provide
Henri III of France with trusted protection in the midst of theWar of the Three Henrys .The Forty-five were noblemen of lesser nobility (many from
Gascony ) with little more than a horse, a sword, and a few acres to starve on. In the king's service, they were paid a lavish wage (by their standards). In return, 15 of them were to be on duty, day or night, ready at the king's call.After the Catholic League revolt in
Paris , King Henri the III was forced to flee toBlois , there, he staged a coup, regaining control of the Estates-General by employing the Forty-five to killHenry I, Duke of Guise when he came to meet the king at theChâteau de Blois on23 December 1588 , and his brother,Louis II, Cardinal of Guise , the following day.After the king was assassinated by
Jacques Clément , the crown of France passed to Henry de Navarre; the Forty-five also passed to him and served him faithfully until his death, which was also by assassination - ironically in a conspiracy in which Épernon seems to have been involved. Allegedly, Dumas drew his inspiration for the character of D'Artagnan in "The Three Musketeers " from Épernon.
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