Christina, raised to follow the Lutheran Church …

Years: 1652 - 1652
May

Christina, raised to follow the Lutheran Church of Sweden, had secretly adopted Roman Catholicism as a young adult.

She remains very tolerant towards the beliefs of others all her life.

As a young queen, Christina feels enormous pressure, ruling a Protestant country while she herself is secretly a Catholic.

She had asked the Council in August 1651 forpermission to abdicate, but gave in to their pleas for her continuation.

She has had long conversations with Antonio Macedo, interpreter for Portugal's ambassador.

He is a Jesuit, and in August 1651 had smuggled with him a letter from Christina to the Jesuit general in Rome.

In reply to her letter, two Jesuits come to Sweden on a secret mission in the spring of 1652, disguised as gentry and using false names.

She has more conversations with them, being interested in the Catholic views on rationality and free will.

All this secrecy has worn her out to the point that she has taken ill.

The French doctor Pierre Bourdelot had arrived in Sweden in February 1652.

Unlike most doctors of this time, he holds no faith in bloodletting; instead he orders sufficient sleep, warm baths and healthy meals, as opposed to Christina's hitherto ascetic way of life.

She is only twenty-nine and should take pleasure in life.

Plays have always interested her, especially those of Pierre Corneille, with his emphasis on heroism.

Bourdelot attaches artists to the Swedish court, which gradually becomes a center of culture.

Christina makes Sébastien Bourdon her first court painter.

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