Marguerite De Navarre: A Literary Queen
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Rouben Cholakian
The author, whose specialty is early French Literature, has devoted much of his writing to this important sixteenth-century writer. The literary biography, “Marguerite de Navarre: Mother of the Renaissance” (Columbia University Press, 2006) has received enthusiastic reviews, variously called “gripping. . . well-written. . . engrossing. . . and a welcome addition.” See too as companion pieces: “Marguerite de Navarre: Selected Writings (2008),” and “Marguerite de Navarre: A Literary Queen” (2016).
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Marguerite De Navarre - Rouben Cholakian
Copyright © 2016 by Rouben Cholakian.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2016916629
ISBN: Hardcover 978-1-5245-4914-5
Softcover 978-1-5245-4913-8
eBook 978-1-5245-4912-1
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system,
without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
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Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
Rev. date: 12/07/2016
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CONTENTS
I
The Political Figure
The Court
The Church
II
The Writer
Theater
Poetry
Religious
Secular
The Heptameron
The Stories
The Storytellers
III
Legacy
For
Kathryn
I
The Political Figure
At about the same time that Christopher Columbus set out to discover the world, a noteworthy princess and queen was born –noteworthy,
not only because she was a queen, but because she was a queen who wrote books. There are not many royal lives that turn out to be literary ones as well. That is why this particular royal life is so fascinating.
THE COURT
Although born into the poor side of the royal family, Marguerite de Navarre never knew anything but court life. She was born on April 12, 1492 at the minor court at Romorantin. Two years later, the family moved to her father, Charles’s other court in Cognac. It was here that Marguerite’s younger brother François was born, a fact that made the king, Louis XII, very uneasy since he had not yet produced a male heir.
From that moment, for all intents and purposes, the Angoulême family lived under house arrest. When in 1515 Louis XII died without producing a successor, against all odds, François mounted the French throne. Rejoicing, the Angoulêmes moved from their own court to the royal one at Amboise. The new king was twenty-five, his delighted sister Marguerite was twenty-seven, and together they were to change the world.
They were fully prepared to do so because of a powerful, single-minded, and intelligent mother who had carefully nurtured them in court manners and book learning. In many ways, Louise de Savoie is the real heroine of this story. She was by any standards, of any age, a remarkable woman. She endured the humiliation of her husband’s live-in mistress, Antoinette de Polignac. She bore the mortifying and shameful interferences into her private life of the king’s peering spy, Gié. But most significantly, she defied the conventions of the time by insisting that both of her children receive a thorough education in language and literature. In good measure, Marguerite became the intellectual and writing queen we now admire because of this strong-willed woman.
There was already an intellectual tradition to fall back on. Louise had inherited from her husband’s side an impressive library of manuscripts and books which she encouraged her children to read, most particularly her daughter who shared her mother’s love of books.
It is no wonder therefore that when François became his country’s monarch, he quickly transformed his predecessor’s dull and uninspired court into one of the most brilliant and active of the century. And surely one of the brightest stars in that new artistic constellation was the king’s clever and quick-witted older sibling, Marguerite.
She was not just an entertaining and colorful presence. She was a true participant in the royal court life, in both its pleasures as well as its intrigues.
The king valued his sister’s diplomatic skills and often turned to her for advice and counsel. Many of the foreign ambassadors who visited the French court remembered her for her political acumen and wise perceptions.
Years later, those skills stood Marguerite in good stead as she effectively negotiated her brother’s release from the clutches of his archenemy Charles V. The French army had been decisively defeated at the 1524 battle at Pavia, and François was embarrassingly taken away to Spain as Charles’s prisoner. Louise, secure in her daughter’s competence, sent Marguerite to Spain to do the bargaining, and everyone came away admiring this adroit young woman who stood her ground.
Marguerite’s experiences in her development as a sexual creature were to prove far from