The failure of the prince de Condé’s …

Years: 1560 - 1560
December

The failure of the prince de Condé’s so-called Conspiracy of Amboise has strengthened the power of the Guises, which has in turn frightened the Queen Mother.

Catherine attempts to balance the situation by securing the appointment of the moderate Michel de L'Hospital as chancellor, who summons the States General in the hopes of gaining peace and rehabilitating court finances.

Soon after the session begins at Orléans, Francis, a sickly and weak-willed young man, dies on December 5, 1560 after a reign of seventeen months.

His death temporarily ends the dominion of his wife’s Guise relatives, and saves Huguenot leader Condé, who had been sentenced to death for high treason.

François’ younger brother ascends the French throne as Charles IX.

Mary Stewart, widowed at eighteen and recently orphaned—her mother Marie de Guise had died at forty-five on June 11—and unwilling to stay in France and live under the domination of her mother-in-law, elects to return to Scotland and take her chances with the Protestant reformers.

Related Events

Filter results