Jules Mazarin, as papal vice-legate at Avignon…
December 1636 CE
Jules Mazarin, as papal vice-legate at Avignon (1632), and nuncio extraordinary in France (1634), had been perceived as an extension of the policy of King Louis XIII's chief minister, Cardinal Richelieu.
Under Habsburg pressure, Mazarin had been sent back to Avignon, where on January 17, 1636, he had been dismissed by Urban VIII.
Mazarin now enters the service of France and makes himself valuable to Richelieu, who brings him into the council of state.
Richelieu, who feels the weight of his fifty-one years, though he is as assiduous in the King's service as ever, detects in Mazarin a likely aide in carrying on government.
He confides to the young man several sensitive missions, in which Mazarin acquits himself well, then presents him to the King, who is well pleased with Mazarin.
Ever as deft at the gaming table as with diplomacy, one evening his winnings are so great that a crowd gathers to see the stacks of gold écus, attracting the attention of the Quee, in whose presence Mazarin risks all, and wins.
Attributing his winnings to the Queen's presence, he offers her fifty thousand écus in thanks.
The Queen demurs, Mazarin presses, and she accepts.
Several days later, Mazarin quietly receives a great deal more than he had given.
Thus he is affirmed in the favor of the King, the court and above all of Anne of Austria, who will soon be regent.
Mazarin sends to his father in Rome a great sum of money and a casket of jewels, for which he has always had a great fondness, as dowry for his three sisters.
Service to the King of France seems to him the easiest route to a cardinal's hat, his constant ambition.
Richelieu, in spite of his fondness and admiration for Mazarin, is loath to crown his career so early; he offers a bishopric worth thirty thousand écus a year.
Mazarin, who aspires to more, for his part, turns it aside amiably.
He returns in 1636 to Rome, with the thought of attaching himself to Cardinal Antonio, nephew of the pope, with an eye to preferment by that route.