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Madeleine de La Tour d'Auvergne

French noblewoman (1498–1519)


Summary

French noblewoman (1498–1519)

FieldValue
nameMadeleine de La Tour d'Auvergne
titleDuchess of Urbino, Countess of Boulogne, Lady of St Saturnin
imageRitratto di gentildonna (Madeleine de la Tour d'Auvergne ?) - Uffizi.jpg
captionPortrait of Madeleine de la Tour d'Auvergne attributed to Jean Perréal
spouse
issueCatherine, Queen of France
noble familyLa Tour d'Auvergne
fatherJohn III, Count of Auvergne
motherJeanne de Bourbon-Vendôme
birth_date1498
death_date28 April
death_placeFlorence
birth_placeAuvergne, France

Madeleine de La Tour d'Auvergne (1498 – 28 April 1519), was the penultimate representative of the senior branch of a French House of La Tour d'Auvergne. She is best known for being the mother of Catherine de' Medici, the future Queen of France.

Biography

Madeleine was a younger daughter of Jean III de La Tour (1467– 28 March 1501), Count of Auvergne and Lauraguais, and Jeanne de Bourbon, Duchess of Bourbon (1465–1511).

Madeleine was betrothed to Lorenzo II de' Medici as part of a French alliance between Francis I of France and Pope Leo X. She and her family, they were delighted to be tied into the sphere of the Pope himself.

Inheritance

As both of their parents were deceased, Madeleine and her elder sister Anne shared extensive properties in Auvergne, Clermont, Berry, Castres, and Louraguais. Anne inherited Auvergne and married John Stewart, 2nd Duke of Albany in 1505. She outlived Madeleine by five years but died childless, after which the Counties of Auvergne and Boulogne as well as the barony of La Tour passed to Madeleine's daughter Catherine de' Medici and were then absorbed into the French Crown.

Marriage and issue

Madeleine married Duke Lorenzo II de' Medici in Château d'Amboise on 5 May 1518. Their wedding was a sumptuous festival that marked not only their union, but also the birth of a dauphin for Francis I. As with the other festivities Francis put on throughout his life, dancing figured very prominently. Dancing was done mostly in the Italian style. Seventy-two ladies were disguised in Italian, German, and other fashionable costumes, making for quite a rich display of silk and color. Francis gave Madeleine 10,000 gold coins, while Lorenzo offered rich gifts to France's nobility.

On 13 April 1519 Madeleine gave birth to a daughter, Catherine de' Medici, the future Queen of France and consort of Henry II. Both she and her husband were said to have been delighted at the birth of Catherine as if she were a boy.

Death

Madeleine died in Italy shortly before her husband on 28 April 1519, of what is believed to have been the plague (some speculate that she may have been infected by syphilis from her husband).

Notes

References

Sources

Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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