Henriette Marie de France, the youngest daughter …
Years: 1624 - 1624
July
Henriette Marie de France, the youngest daughter of King Henry IV of France (Henry III of Navarre) and his second wife, Marie de' Medici, had been brought up as a Catholic.
As daughter of the Bourbon king of France, she is a Fille de France, a member of the House of Bourbon, and the youngest sister of the King Louis XIII.
After her older sister, Christine Marie, married Victor Amadeus I, Duke of Savoy, in 1619, Henriette had taken the highly prestigious style of Madame Royale; this is used by the most senior royal princess at the French court.
Henrietta had been trained, along with her sisters, in riding, dancing and singing, and takes part in French court plays.
Although tutored in reading and writing, she is not known for her academic skills the princess has been heavily influenced by the Carmelites at French court.
Henrietta was by 1622 living in Paris with a household of some two hundred staff, and marriage plans were being discussed.
Henrietta had first met Prince Charles of England, her future husband, in Paris, in 1623, while he was traveling to Spain with the Duke of Buckingham to discuss a possible marriage with the Infanta Maria Anna of Spain—Charles first saw her at a French court entertainment.
The Spanish negotiations having failed, Charles looks to France instead.
The English agent Kensington is sent to Paris in 1624 to examine the potential French match, and the marriage is finally negotiated in Paris by James Hay and Henry Rich.
Locations
People
Groups
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Protestantism
- Huguenots (the “Reformed”)
- Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
- England, (Stuart) Kingdom of
- Habsburg Monarchy, or Empire
Topics
- Protestant Reformation
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- England: Famine of 1623-24
