Catherine de Medici


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Born in Florence, Italy, Catherine de Medici went from a prisoner of war as a young child, to the “deadly queen” of France between 1547 and 1559.

Catherine was the first and only child of the young couple, who was ecstatic to welcome their daughter into their royal world.

Madeleine died on 28th April of puerperal fever, and Lorenzo died on 4 May.
For most of her childhood, the Medici heiress would live with different relatives, in several convents, with people who mostly did their best to protect the young girl from different enemies of the family.

In 1527, the Medici power was threatened once more.
Pope Clement was overthrown by Cardinal Silvio Passerini and the peaceful childhood that Catherine seemed to be having, came crashing down in a matter of days.

Just like that, she had to say goodbye to the comfortable and sheltered life she had, and was now a prisoner living in captivity.

A few soldiers began feeling like as a form of retaliation, they should perhaps do something about Catherine.
Some soldiers apparently felt that her prisoner status was too comfortable and that chaining her, exposing her, or even killing her would be a much more effective response to the situation.

In 1530, when anti-Medici armies broke through the nunnery where the young duchess was being held hostage, they debated whether the heiress, who was only 11-years-old at the time should be killed there and then, or instead, should be set to a brothel that would mess up the Pope’s plans of marrying her to a potential royal suitor.

Catherine was taken to Rome and reunited with her uncle Pope Clement, who was thrilled to see her again.
While she was now safe, her adventurous life was about to take a turn, because her uncle was already looking for a husband for his niece.

When she was younger, she was described as “small of stature, and thin, and without delicate features, but having the protruding eyes peculiar to the Medici family.”

Needless to say that these descriptions were for the most part shared by men, who were rushing to get a child married away.

When Francis I, the King of France, offered a marriage between his second son with the young Catherine, the Pope was ecstatic.
While the king’s son wasn’t quite on the run to be king, at that point, the orphaned Catherine was almost considered a commoner.

The outrageously fancy ceremony took place at the Ćglise Saint-FerrĆ©ol les Augustins in Marseille, and included every extravagant thing one can think of ~ exotic foods, crazy gifts, expensive utilities, and more.

Of course, they would learn soon enough that that wasn’t the case.
The fourteen-year-old couple left their wedding ball at midnight, to perform their nuptial duties.
At the time, there was no way to know that Catherine would grow up to become the Serpent Queen in the French court, a decision that Francis I would regret for a long time to come.......
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