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Neither Politique nor Patriot? Henri, duc de Montmorency and Philip II, 1582–1589*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
In 1581 Antoinette de La Marck, the devout duchesse de Montmorency made a pilgrimage to the shrine of the Virgin at Montserrat in Catalonia. The next year her husband Henri de Montmorency, the governor of Languedoc, corresponded with the viceroy of Catalonia about the problem of banditry which was rife on both sides of the frontier. In 1583, Montmorency's servant carried letters to Charles Emmanuel, duke of Savoy, hidden in the soles of his shoes. During the festivities for the wedding of Charles Emmanuel to the infanta Catalina in 1585, Giuseppe Lercaro, Montmorency's Genoese-born intendant desfinances, spent some ten days in Barcelona concealed in the lodgings of Savoy's ambassador and had several clandestine interviews with both the duke and his new father-in-law Philip II. In 1588 Philip offered 100,000 francs towards the dowry of Montmorency's daughter Charlotte, provided that she married the son of the due de Guise and thus reconciled the two families whose rivalry had dominated the French political scene since the 1540s. These incidents, unremarkable as they may individually appear, formed part of the negotiations between Henri due de Montmorency and Philip II which, in notable contrast to those of the Spanish king with the Guise family, have been little studied by historians. Consequently, Montmorency's reputation now is generally that of a politique and patriot. This paper offers a rather different appraisal of him.
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References
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75 Instructions to Constantino, 18 Sept. 1586.
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96 Guise had similar problems: Jensen, , Diplomacy and dogmatism, pp. 87–8Google Scholar.
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98 Secret memorandum of Hautefort, March 1584, A.N., AB XIX, 3623; Hautefort to Villeroy, March 1584, B.N., MS Fr. 15568, fo. 226; Longlée, to Henri, III, 7 July 1584, 23 May 1585, 9 July 1586, 29 10 1586, Dépêches diplomatiques, pp. 91, 146, 282, 325Google Scholar.
99 Longlée to Henri III, 12 Apr. 1584, ibid. p. 50; Revol to Villeroy, 24 Apr. 1584, B.N., MS Fr. 16911, fo. 221.
100 ‘Journal de Charbonneau’, p. 449; ‘Mémoires de Batailler’, p. 44; Braudel, F., The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean world in the age of Philip II (2 vols., London, 1975), II, 1206–7Google Scholar.
101 L'Épinois, , La ligue et lespapes, p. 32Google Scholar. The offers made to Navarre were also more generous: 300,000 écus in advance and 100,000 a month while in arms, according to Duplessis-Mornay; 200,000 in advance and 200,000 during campaigns, according to Sully; 200,000 in advance, 400,000 when four towns had been taken, and 600,000 a year during campaigns, according to d'Aubigné, A., Histoire universelle (10 vols., Paris, 1886–1909), VI, 286–8Google Scholar.
102 Sfondrato to Philip II, 13 Dec. 1582, A.G.S.E. 1255, fo. 189. Henri further alienated Montmorency by supporting his brother Méru in a lawsuit over their inheritance: Newsletter from France, Mar. 1583, C.S.P.F., XVII, 235–6. I hope to examine Montmorency's fortune in detail elsewhere.
103 Settlement with Jacques Poyanne, brother and heir of Janin, 6 Apr. 1602, A.N., M.C. Etude LIV, 458. Greengrass, M., ‘Noble affinities in early modern France: the case of Henri I de Montmorency, constable of France’, European History Quarterly, XVI (1986), 275–311CrossRefGoogle Scholar confuses the Poyano family with the Paganos and mistakenly claims that the debt was cancelled.
104 Preliminary surveys by Greengrass, ‘Noble affinities’;, and Davies, J., ‘Family service and family strategies: the household of Henri, due de Montmorency, ca. 1590–1610’, Bulletin of the Society for Renaissance Studies, III (1985), 27–43Google Scholar.
105 Sfondrato to Philip II, 21 Nov. 1581, A.G.S.E. 1253, fo. 172; Revol to Villeroy, 26 June 1584, B.N., MS Fr. 16911, fo. 274. Montmorency could speak if not write Italian: Ritter, R., Lettres du cardinal de Florence sur Henri IV et sur la France 1596–1598 (Paris, 1955), pp. 148–9Google Scholar.
106 A helpful survey of the French context is Kettering, S., Patrons, brokers and clients in seventeenth-century France (New York and Oxford, 1986)Google Scholar.
107 Ranum, O., ‘The French ritual of tyrannicide in the late sixteenth century’, Sixteenth Century Journal, XI (1980), 63–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
108 Sfondrato to Philip II, 18 Oct. 1582, B.L., Add. MS 28418, fo. 103; same to same, 27 Dec. 1582, A.G.S.E. 1257, fo. 150; ‘Journal de Charbonneau’, p. 422. Cobham, to Walsingham, , 21 06 1583, C.S.P.F., XVII, 410Google Scholar; Stafford, to Walsingham, , 7 11 1583, C.S.P.F., XVIII, 197Google Scholar. Montmorency asked for an auditor of the Rote to investigate an alleged assassination attempt: Pisany to Henri III, 13 July 1587, B.L., Add. MS 30627, fo. 273.
109 This view is presented by Palm, Politics and religion, and by Yardeni, La conscience nationale en France. For a recent discussion of the politiques: Holt, M. P., The duke of Anjou and the politique struggle during the wars of religion (Cambridge, 1986)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
110 See n. 4 above.
111 Jouanna, , ‘Protection des fideles’, pp. 288–9Google Scholar. His servants were catholics, although some had protestant relatives, and he refused to attend protestant services even in the company of Navarre.
112 The tone of their relationship may be gauged from his replies to overtures from Henri. In 1585 he referred to the ‘roy double’ and the ‘sales esbatz qu'il prend en ses amours desréglées’; in 1586 he asked ‘que me peult-il arriver de bon sur mes afayres puisque mes ennemis possédent It Roy?’, Lucinge, to Emmanuel, Charles, 28 Sept. 1585, Lettres sur les débuts de la ligue, ed. Dufour, A. (Geneva, 1964), p. 194Google Scholar; same to same, 14 May 1586, Lettres sur la cour, p. 185.
113 James, M. E., Society, politics and culture: studies in early modern England (Cambridge, 1986), p. 432CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
114 ‘relación de lo que Avancino ha tratado’, May 1582, B.L., Add. MS 28421, fo. 103V; Sfondrato to Philip II, 21 Jan. 1584, B.L., Add. MS 28418, fo. 251V. The perceptive Lucinge believed he had no other intention than to secure himself in Languedoc as governor, and as he grew older his main concern would be for his children and their inheritance: Dufour, A. (ed.), ‘Le miroir des princes ou grands de la France’, Annuaire-bulletin de la Société de l'Histoire de Frame (1954–1955), PP. 121–3Google Scholar.
115 Forcadel, E., Montmorency-Gaulois (Toulouse, 1571)Google Scholar; Arnauld, A., Presentation des lettres de l'office de monsieur le connestable faicte en parlement le xxi novembre 1595 (Paris, 1595)Google Scholar. Arnauld, Antoine, a member of Montmorency's administrative council from 1596, was ironically the author of a critique of Savoy's policies, Première Savoysiene (Paris, 1600)Google Scholar.
116 de Gardoqui, J. Cano, Tensiones hispano-francesas en el siglo XVII: la conspiración de Biron, 1602 (Valladolid, 1970)Google Scholar. Suspicions about Montmorency's loyalty reported by English agents in 1591–1592: List and analysis of State Papers Foreign, III, 299, 305, 308. Charles Emmanuel was reported, by a cleric in Venice, to hate him because of their failed negotiations: frère Antoine Girart to Montmorency, 1 May 1597, Musée Condé, series, L. xxxii, fo. 315.
117 Henri's suggestions for Chantilly: Girard and Duplessis to Montmorency, 21 Mar. 1607, Musée Condė, series, L. lxxxvii, fo. 51. Henri wanted Montmorency's son for his daughter by Gabrielle d'Estrées and compelled the annulment of his marriage to an heiress in 1609. In the same year he arranged for Condé's marriage to Montmorency's fifteen-year-old daughter with the intention of enjoying her favours himself, Samaran, C., ‘Henri IV et Charlotte de Montmorency’, Amuaire-Bulletin de la Société de l'Histoire de France (1951), pp. 53–109Google Scholar.
118 Greengrass, , ‘Noble affinities’, pp. 276–7Google Scholar.
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