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Catherine de' Medici
The Life and Times of the Serpent Queen
Catherine de' Medici
The Life and Times of the Serpent Queen
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Description
<b>The life and times of Catherine de' Medici, by renowned scholar of the Italian Renaissance Mary Hollingsworth.</b> Catherine de' Medici lived her life at the storm centre of European and French politics in an age of religious conflict. Born to Lorenzo II, the Medici ruler of Florence, and married to a French prince by papal connivance at the age of fourteen, Catherine was successively queen consort of France and mother to three French kings (Francis II, Charles IX and Henry III) who reigned in an era of almost continuous civil and religious strife. A spendthrift promoter of the arts, Catherine patronised poets, painters and sculptors, lavished ruinous sums on the building and embellishment of monuments and palaces, and masterminded spectacular entertainments and tournaments that prefigure the splendour and ritual of the court of Versailles. Posterity has anathematised her as the epitome of the scheming royal matriarch, her reputation tainted forever by her role in instigating the St Bartholomew's Day massacre of Protestants. Legend has it that Catherine maintained eighty ladies-in-waiting at court, whom she used as bait to seduce courtiers for political ends; while her admiration for the reputed seer Nostradamus fuelled claims of an interest in the occult and the dark arts. <i>The Serpent Queen</i> is Mary Hollingsworth's well-balanced account of the life of Catherine de' Medici – perhaps the most powerful woman in sixteenth-century Europe, and certainly the most extraordinary and influential.
Product details
| Published | 01 Oct 2024 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 480 |
| ISBN | 9781800244764 |
| Imprint | Apollo |
| Dimensions | 234 x 153 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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At last an authoritative English biography of this most powerful and fascinating of queens of France. Mary Hollingsworth uses her unique knowledge of the Medici and Italian sources to illuminate this queen torn between rival dynasties and religions, tolerance and fanaticism, ballets and massacres. To be devoured.
Philip Mansel, author of King of the World: The Life of Louis XIV
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Thoroughly engaging, a tour de force of scholarship that tells the story of Catherine de' Medici as it should be told.
Josephine Wilkinson, author of Louis XIV
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Mary Hollingsworth exhibits her trademark blend of meticulous scholarship and narrative verve – this time incorporating some fascinating new material to reinforce her skilful re-reading of Catherine's character. Highly recommended, and highly readable.
Paul Strathern, author of The Medici
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A nuanced and sympathetic portrait that does much to unpick the black legend woven by Catherine's detractors and reveals how she used all her tenacity, resourcefulness and guile to try and bring peace to a nation torn apart by sectarian hatred and vicious rivalries.
Anne Somerset, author of The Affair of the Poisons
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Thoroughly researched ... Hollingsworth [makes] a compelling case that Catherine was not just a leading light of the French Renaissance but an unfairly maligned figure, whose foreignness and femininity made her an easy scapegoat
Katherine Harvey, Sunday Times
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Hollingsworth's knowledge of Catherine's life, as well as her mastery of Italian history, enables her to portray Catherine as the true European Renaissance queen she was ... This expert biography reveals Catherine as a woman of virtue, loyalty and, ultimately, power ... Hollingsworth's eloquent prose and fine research sheds light on a Renaissance queen who truly deserves to be remembered as such.
Estelle Peranque, BBC History Magazine




















