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Birth Louise de Lorraine Birth, Marriage, Death in the UK Louise de Lorraine
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Louise de Lorraine-Vaudémont
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Louise de Lorraine-Vaudémont, 1580
Louise de Lorraine-Vaudémont (30 April 1553 – 29 January 1601) was a member of the House of Lorraine who became Queen consort of France from 1575 until 1589. Born in Nomeny in the Lorraine region of France, she was the daughter of Nicholas, Duke of Mercoeur and Margaret of Egmont.
Her childhood was unhappy; unloved by her father and step-mother, she was expected to keep out of the way of her family. This upbringing would result in her being quiet and dutiful as an adult. She was also very pious.
She first caught the eye of her future husband, Henry, Duke of Anjou, in 1574. Recently elected King of Poland, he was paying a visit to her uncle, the Duke of Lorraine (married to Henry's sister, Claude) on his way to his new kingdom, and caught sight of Louise whilst he was there. Henry was attracted to Louise, who was not only blonde, attractive, and sweet-natured, but who also resembled the Princess of Condé, Marie de Clèves, with whom Henry III was infatuated. He remembered Louise long after he left France.
Upon the death of Charles IX of France, and Henry's accession as Henry III, Louise was not initially considered to be a candidate for Queen - Henry intended to procure Marie a divorce from her husband and marry her himself. Marie died of a lung infection, however, and after a period of deep mourning, Henry III decided - against the advice of his mother and his councillors - to marry Louise, sending his mignon, Cheverney, to inform the girl and her family (who responded to the news by bowing and curtsying to her with embarrassment).
Portrait of Louise de Lorraine-Vaudémont by François Clouet
The wedding took place on 13 February 1575, two days after Henry's coronation. It was marked, typically for her husband, by a strong element of farce; the King not only designing her dresses and costumes himself, but delaying the wedding – scheduled for the morning – until the evening because he had spent several hours personally dressing her hair. The couple were finally married at the Cathedral of Reims by Cardinal Charles de Bourbon that evening.
Although Louise worshipped her husband, who in response fussed over her, the marriage failed to produce children (she is believed to have suffered a miscarriage in the Spring of 1576; if so, it would possibly have prevented the couple from producing further children), and as a result - the heir-presumptive being by the end of the reign the controversial Henry III of Navarre - it became more unhappy because of this pressure. The Queen as a result became thin, suffered fits of depression, and with her husband made pious offerings and pilgrimages to plead for sons.
In 1589 Queen Louise inherited Château de Chenonceau and was staying there at the time her husband was assassinated on 2 August. She fell into a state of depression and spent the remainder of her days in mourning clothes amidst somber tapestries.
Queen Louise died in Moulins, Allier in 1601 and was buried at the Convent of the Capuchins. In 1817 her remains were reinterred next to her husband in the Saint Denis Basilica.
Frieda, Leonie, Catherine de Medici
| French royalty |
Preceded by
Elizabeth of Austria |
Queen consort of France
February 13, 1575 – August 2, 1589 |
Succeeded by
Marguerite de Valois |
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Chronology of French Queens and Empresses |
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Medieval France (987–1328)
House of Capet |
Adelaide of Aquitaine (987–996) • Susanna of Italy (996) • Constance of Arles (1003-1031) • Matilda of Frisia (1034–1044) • Anne of Kiev (1051–1060) • Bertha of Holland (1071–1092) • Bertrade de Montfort (1092–1108) • Adélaide de Maurienne (1115–1137) • Eleanor of Aquitaine (1137–1152) • Constance of Castile (1154–1160) • Adèle of Champagne (1164–1180) • Isabelle of Hainaut (1180–1190) • Ingeborg of Denmark (1193-1193) • Agnes of Merania (1196–1200) • Ingeborg of Denmark (1200–1223) • Blanche of Castile (1223 – 1226) • Marguerite of Provence (1234-1270) • Isabella of Aragon (1270-1271) • Maria of Brabant (1274-1285) • Joan I of Navarre (1285-1305) • Margaret of Burgundy (1314-1315) • Clementia of Hungary (1315-1316) • Joan II of Burgundy (1316-1322) • Blanche of Burgundy (1322) • Maria of Luxembourg (1322-1324) • Jeanne d'Évreux (1325-1371)
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Medieval France (1328–1498)
House of Valois |
Joan the Lame (1328–1348) • Blanche d'Évreux (1350) • Joanna I of Auvergne (1350–1360) • Joanna of Bourbon (1364–1378) • Isabeau of Bavaria (1385–1422) • Marie of Anjou (1422–1461) • Charlotte of Savoy (1461–1483) • Anne of Brittany (1691-1498)
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Early Modern France (1498–1515)
House of Valois-Orléans |
Joan of Valois (1498) • Anne of Brittany (1498-1514) • Mary of England
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Early Modern France (1515–1589)
House of Valois-Angoulême |
Claude of France (1515–1524) • Eleanor of Habsburg (1530–1547) • Catherine de' Medici (1547–1559) • Mary I of Scotland (1559–1560) • Elisabeth of Austria (1570–1574) • Louise de Lorraine-Vaudémont (1575-1589)
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Early Modern France (1589–1792)
House of Bourbon |
Marguerite de Valois (1589–1599) • Marie de' Medici (1600–1610) • Anne of Austria (1615–1643) • Maria Theresa of Spain (1660–1683) • Françoise d'Aubigné (1685–1715) • Maria Leszczyńska (1725–1768) • Marie Antoinette of Austria (1774-1792) • Marie Josephine Louise of Savoy (1795-1810)
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First Empire (1804–1814)
House of Bonaparte |
Josephine de Beauharnais (1804–1810) • Marie Louise of Austria (1810-1814)
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Bourbon Restoration (1814, 1815–1830)
House of Bourbon |
Marie-Thérèse-Charlotte of France (1830) (disputed)
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July Monarchy (1830–1848)
House of Orléans |
Maria Amalia of the Two Sicilies (1830–1848)
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Second Empire (1852–1870)
House of Bonaparte |
Eugénie de Montijo (1853–1870)
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