Charles IX of France dies of tuberculosis…
May 1574 CE
Charles IX of France dies of tuberculosis at twenty-three on May 30, 1574, sweating blood and reputedly tormented with guilt for his role in the infamous St. Bartholomew’s Day massacre.
Charles leaves no children by his consort, Elizabeth of Austria, whom he had married in 1570, but one son, Charles (later duc d'Angoulême), by his mistress Marie Touchet.
French Catholic partisans look to the late king’s younger brother Henri, duc d’Anjou, remembered as the "young eagle" of Jarnac and Moncontour, to settle the long and bitter Catholic-Huguenot conflict with a strong hand.
On hearing of his succession to the French throne, Henri immediately abandons his new elective crown of Poland and, after a leisurely tour of Italy, arrives in France to ascend the throne as Henri III.
In this year also, French poet Pierre de Ronsard publishes his verse collection Sonnets pour Helene.
Ronsard has devoted his career to the call of the late Joachim du Bellay to French poets to cultivate the resources of their native language.
Equally skilled at writing love poems, pastorals, sonnets, philosophical poems, and political verse, his assimilation of classical and native idiom and verse forms has expanded the range of French poetry.