1 00:00:00,560 --> 00:00:04,000 Speaker 1: Welcome to Stuff you missed in History Class from housetof 2 00:00:04,120 --> 00:00:14,040 Speaker 1: works dot com. Hello and welcome to the podcast. I'm 3 00:00:14,040 --> 00:00:17,119 Speaker 1: Sarah Downy and I'm doublin a Charkerboarding and this summer, 4 00:00:17,200 --> 00:00:20,760 Speaker 1: as a special treat to all of our royal loving listeners, 5 00:00:20,840 --> 00:00:23,640 Speaker 1: we're going to be focusing on some of the shenanigans 6 00:00:23,680 --> 00:00:27,400 Speaker 1: of some notable princesses in history. And last time we 7 00:00:27,480 --> 00:00:31,880 Speaker 1: discussed Sophia Dorothea of Selah, who was a pretty sympathetic 8 00:00:31,960 --> 00:00:34,680 Speaker 1: character in her story. I would say she was married 9 00:00:34,680 --> 00:00:37,760 Speaker 1: off to an incompatible cousin at a young age, was 10 00:00:37,800 --> 00:00:41,360 Speaker 1: manipulated by her father in law's mistress, who may or 11 00:00:41,400 --> 00:00:44,639 Speaker 1: may not have been responsible for the murder of her 12 00:00:44,680 --> 00:00:48,160 Speaker 1: own Swedish boyfriend, and to top all of that off, 13 00:00:48,200 --> 00:00:51,360 Speaker 1: she spent nearly half of her life held prisoner in 14 00:00:51,400 --> 00:00:53,400 Speaker 1: a castle. I mean that really does top it off, 15 00:00:53,479 --> 00:00:56,520 Speaker 1: isn't it. So we can definitely feel sorry for her. Yeah, 16 00:00:56,560 --> 00:01:00,200 Speaker 1: even her husband's own subjects, both in Hanover and or 17 00:01:00,200 --> 00:01:03,200 Speaker 1: in England felt kind of sorry for her. But today's 18 00:01:03,240 --> 00:01:08,160 Speaker 1: subject is going to be a little more divisive. I think. Yeah, 19 00:01:08,200 --> 00:01:11,319 Speaker 1: we're gonna be talking about Marguerite Louise dor Leon, who 20 00:01:11,400 --> 00:01:14,640 Speaker 1: was a near contemporary of Sophia Dorothea, and she was 21 00:01:14,680 --> 00:01:18,679 Speaker 1: also a dynastic pond for her powerful family. She also 22 00:01:18,800 --> 00:01:21,720 Speaker 1: made an unsuitable match in her mid teens and was 23 00:01:21,760 --> 00:01:26,200 Speaker 1: held prisoner by her in laws. But whereas Sophia Dorothea 24 00:01:26,319 --> 00:01:31,080 Speaker 1: comes across as unlucky and maybe somewhat naive, Marguerite Louise 25 00:01:31,200 --> 00:01:33,640 Speaker 1: seems like she would have been hell on wheel. He 26 00:01:33,720 --> 00:01:36,520 Speaker 1: really does. She was a firecracker. Just to give you 27 00:01:36,600 --> 00:01:39,640 Speaker 1: a sense of what other people have said about her, 28 00:01:39,720 --> 00:01:42,880 Speaker 1: eleanor Herman, who wrote Sex with the Queen, said she 29 00:01:42,959 --> 00:01:46,959 Speaker 1: was quote born with an uncontrollable temperament, ill suited to 30 00:01:47,000 --> 00:01:49,360 Speaker 1: her royal position, you know, a position where you kind 31 00:01:49,360 --> 00:01:51,920 Speaker 1: of need to keep your mouth shut most of the time. 32 00:01:52,200 --> 00:01:57,080 Speaker 1: She also said she had a fearless, toxic nastiness. Encyclopedia 33 00:01:57,120 --> 00:02:00,880 Speaker 1: Britannica called her a frivolous consort, and the Women in 34 00:02:00,920 --> 00:02:05,240 Speaker 1: World History Encyclopedia notes that quote she showered invective on 35 00:02:05,400 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 1: all within reach. So fun times here. But best of all, 36 00:02:10,320 --> 00:02:13,120 Speaker 1: I think discussing Marguerite Louise is going to allow us 37 00:02:13,160 --> 00:02:16,800 Speaker 1: to revisit our old friends. The Medici family and her 38 00:02:16,880 --> 00:02:20,120 Speaker 1: popular people love the Medici family, and we're going to 39 00:02:20,200 --> 00:02:23,960 Speaker 1: get to find out how exactly that illustrious line finally 40 00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:27,079 Speaker 1: died out. Since way back when the Medici series began 41 00:02:27,560 --> 00:02:30,600 Speaker 1: so long ago, we did discuss how they started so 42 00:02:31,040 --> 00:02:33,040 Speaker 1: full circle. But before we get to that, we're going 43 00:02:33,080 --> 00:02:36,560 Speaker 1: to talk a little bit about Marguerite Louise's early life. 44 00:02:36,600 --> 00:02:39,799 Speaker 1: So she was born in sixteen forty five, or they're 45 00:02:39,840 --> 00:02:43,040 Speaker 1: about to Gaston, Duke do Leon and his wife Marguerite 46 00:02:43,040 --> 00:02:47,200 Speaker 1: de Lorraine, and Gaston was the son of King Henry 47 00:02:47,240 --> 00:02:49,800 Speaker 1: the fourth of France and Marie de Medici, and the 48 00:02:49,919 --> 00:02:52,639 Speaker 1: younger brother of Louis the thirteenth, and because he ended 49 00:02:52,720 --> 00:02:55,840 Speaker 1: up being the only surviving younger brother, he was called 50 00:02:55,880 --> 00:02:59,280 Speaker 1: monsieur from a very young age. But it seems like 51 00:02:59,320 --> 00:03:02,799 Speaker 1: Marguerite Loui He's is daring and her impulsiveness that we're 52 00:03:02,800 --> 00:03:07,320 Speaker 1: going to discuss later weren't exactly unique to her her alone, 53 00:03:07,320 --> 00:03:10,200 Speaker 1: and it wasn't a unique family trait. No, her father 54 00:03:10,400 --> 00:03:13,960 Speaker 1: started participating in plots against his brother the king at 55 00:03:14,000 --> 00:03:17,640 Speaker 1: a pretty young age, including one to assassinate our old 56 00:03:17,760 --> 00:03:20,840 Speaker 1: friend Cardinal Rishi lou We talked about him during the 57 00:03:20,840 --> 00:03:24,639 Speaker 1: Bourbon series. Being the heir to the throne, however, usually 58 00:03:24,680 --> 00:03:27,079 Speaker 1: got him out of trouble, got him out of losing 59 00:03:27,080 --> 00:03:29,960 Speaker 1: his head at least right. I remember, Louis the thirteenth 60 00:03:30,000 --> 00:03:33,000 Speaker 1: and his wife didn't have children until decades into their marriage, 61 00:03:33,000 --> 00:03:37,080 Speaker 1: and their son, the eventual Louie fourteenth, was truly considered 62 00:03:37,120 --> 00:03:39,920 Speaker 1: a miracle for a long time. Will Sara was the 63 00:03:39,960 --> 00:03:42,320 Speaker 1: only option out there. You had to deal with them, right, 64 00:03:42,360 --> 00:03:45,160 Speaker 1: so we had to stick around a while. Possible treason 65 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:48,600 Speaker 1: wasn't Gaston's only business, though, After his first wife died 66 00:03:48,640 --> 00:03:51,480 Speaker 1: giving birth to their daughter, he eloped with Marguerite de 67 00:03:51,560 --> 00:03:55,240 Speaker 1: Lorraine without permission from his brother. The King and Marguerite's 68 00:03:55,240 --> 00:03:58,280 Speaker 1: father were actually enemies, and they were finally given the 69 00:03:58,360 --> 00:04:02,120 Speaker 1: King's blessing. However, as their eldest daughter together, Marguerite Louise 70 00:04:02,560 --> 00:04:04,920 Speaker 1: was groomed to be the Sunday wife of her cousin 71 00:04:05,120 --> 00:04:08,920 Speaker 1: Louis the fourteen and Queen of France, so she had 72 00:04:08,960 --> 00:04:11,160 Speaker 1: a bright future ahead of her at that point. She did, 73 00:04:11,240 --> 00:04:13,200 Speaker 1: or at least her parents were hoping she would have 74 00:04:13,320 --> 00:04:15,880 Speaker 1: that future, and she did seem well suited to the 75 00:04:15,920 --> 00:04:19,160 Speaker 1: part Herman notes that she had turquoise I she had 76 00:04:19,240 --> 00:04:23,040 Speaker 1: chestnut curls. She calls her quote voluptuous, and according to 77 00:04:23,080 --> 00:04:26,360 Speaker 1: the Women in World History Encyclopedia, she also was accomplished. 78 00:04:26,360 --> 00:04:29,080 Speaker 1: She rode well, she hunted, she was smart, she was witty, 79 00:04:29,440 --> 00:04:32,479 Speaker 1: a brilliant conversationalist. And that last point you got me 80 00:04:32,480 --> 00:04:35,200 Speaker 1: thinking a little bit. It's a label you see applied 81 00:04:35,240 --> 00:04:38,560 Speaker 1: to a lot of nobles and royals, and I always 82 00:04:38,560 --> 00:04:41,359 Speaker 1: find it it's a little hard to imagine what exactly means, 83 00:04:41,360 --> 00:04:43,760 Speaker 1: because I just dumped to somebody like Mark Twain, and 84 00:04:43,800 --> 00:04:47,680 Speaker 1: I'm sure that's not what they were talking about. Antonia Fraser, though, 85 00:04:47,680 --> 00:04:50,240 Speaker 1: writing in Love in the Life of Louis the fourteen 86 00:04:51,000 --> 00:04:54,159 Speaker 1: helped me understand a little bit why this last accomplishment 87 00:04:54,320 --> 00:04:57,960 Speaker 1: was considered so very important in this era. I mean, 88 00:04:58,000 --> 00:05:01,400 Speaker 1: of course it's still important today a but why it 89 00:05:01,520 --> 00:05:04,400 Speaker 1: was crucial in this age. Apparently, upper class women in 90 00:05:04,440 --> 00:05:07,839 Speaker 1: France in this era were very, very poorly educated in 91 00:05:07,880 --> 00:05:12,360 Speaker 1: the traditional sense. Only an estimated fourteen to thirty four 92 00:05:12,440 --> 00:05:16,720 Speaker 1: percent could even sign their own names. But conversational training 93 00:05:16,839 --> 00:05:21,320 Speaker 1: almost took the place of formal reading and writing training, 94 00:05:21,480 --> 00:05:26,279 Speaker 1: and um Frasier quoted a Madeline Discutari, who detailed the 95 00:05:26,360 --> 00:05:30,400 Speaker 1: ideal in feminine conversational ability at the time, and she said, quote, 96 00:05:30,640 --> 00:05:34,200 Speaker 1: a woman in conversation should demonstrate a marvelous rapport between 97 00:05:34,240 --> 00:05:37,000 Speaker 1: her words and her eyes. While she should, of course 98 00:05:37,040 --> 00:05:39,919 Speaker 1: be careful not to sound quote like a book talking. 99 00:05:40,440 --> 00:05:44,320 Speaker 1: She should rather speak quote worthily of everyday things and 100 00:05:44,480 --> 00:05:47,680 Speaker 1: simply of grand things. So it's a lot to live 101 00:05:47,760 --> 00:05:50,640 Speaker 1: up to, I'd say it is. And but unfortunately for 102 00:05:50,720 --> 00:05:54,080 Speaker 1: Margaret Louise, or at least for her parents ambitions for 103 00:05:54,200 --> 00:05:59,080 Speaker 1: her report, between turquoise eyes and worthy speaking wasn't enough 104 00:05:59,120 --> 00:06:02,280 Speaker 1: to make a marriage between her and Louis. Now conversation 105 00:06:02,320 --> 00:06:05,200 Speaker 1: wasn't going to cut it. He had a lot of prospects, 106 00:06:05,279 --> 00:06:08,040 Speaker 1: mostly cousins, and ended up with his double first cousin. 107 00:06:08,080 --> 00:06:11,120 Speaker 1: We've talked about this before, to Maria Theresa, since their 108 00:06:11,120 --> 00:06:15,320 Speaker 1: alliance could promise peace between Spain and France, who were 109 00:06:15,320 --> 00:06:19,240 Speaker 1: warring at the time. Marguerite Louise meanwhile, would marry Costomo 110 00:06:19,320 --> 00:06:22,880 Speaker 1: the third de Medici, heir to Ferdinand the second Grand 111 00:06:22,960 --> 00:06:26,760 Speaker 1: Duke of Tuscany. But by this point Marguerite Louise herself 112 00:06:26,800 --> 00:06:29,640 Speaker 1: had fallen in love with another cousin of hers, one 113 00:06:29,720 --> 00:06:32,760 Speaker 1: on her maternal side, Prince Charles of Lorraine. And he 114 00:06:32,839 --> 00:06:38,200 Speaker 1: was eighteen and a dashing soldier fresh out of Spanish prison. 115 00:06:38,640 --> 00:06:41,039 Speaker 1: And this was actually it would have been considered a 116 00:06:41,160 --> 00:06:43,560 Speaker 1: really good match for the two of them, and Marguerite, 117 00:06:43,600 --> 00:06:47,520 Speaker 1: Louisa's now widowed mother even approved of the idea. But 118 00:06:47,960 --> 00:06:51,240 Speaker 1: Louis just forged right ahead with the Medici alliance. He 119 00:06:51,279 --> 00:06:55,080 Speaker 1: was working, according to the Women in World History Encyclopedia, 120 00:06:55,160 --> 00:06:58,400 Speaker 1: under the advice of Cardinal Jules Mazarin, again, you know, 121 00:06:58,440 --> 00:07:01,160 Speaker 1: hoping to make some sort of a liliance here rather 122 00:07:01,240 --> 00:07:04,279 Speaker 1: than just helping the family all marry each other. And plus, 123 00:07:04,279 --> 00:07:06,920 Speaker 1: it might be worth noting to Louis had himself given 124 00:07:07,000 --> 00:07:10,680 Speaker 1: up his youthful love uh to make this dynastic marriage, 125 00:07:10,680 --> 00:07:13,080 Speaker 1: so he probably wasn't about to make concessions for his 126 00:07:13,160 --> 00:07:16,360 Speaker 1: young cousins. Wanted everyone to suffer as he had. That's 127 00:07:16,400 --> 00:07:18,280 Speaker 1: not nice. Well I don't know about that, but he 128 00:07:18,760 --> 00:07:23,000 Speaker 1: was acting as king rather than loving cousin. But anyway, 129 00:07:23,160 --> 00:07:25,840 Speaker 1: cosomo it is, that's going to be the groom. And 130 00:07:25,920 --> 00:07:30,360 Speaker 1: in sixteen sixty one, at age sixteen, Margaret Louise was 131 00:07:30,440 --> 00:07:33,600 Speaker 1: married by proxy to Costomo at the Luve Chapel, and 132 00:07:34,120 --> 00:07:36,960 Speaker 1: she had already given her engagement right away. That's how 133 00:07:37,000 --> 00:07:39,960 Speaker 1: not into this match she was. And while she was 134 00:07:40,080 --> 00:07:43,440 Speaker 1: traveling to Tuscany to meet her husband and be married 135 00:07:43,480 --> 00:07:47,360 Speaker 1: in person, she really took her sweet time, stopping too 136 00:07:47,440 --> 00:07:51,800 Speaker 1: long at every every city she went through to upset 137 00:07:51,880 --> 00:07:55,080 Speaker 1: this tightly controlled pageant schedule for her progress. We've talked 138 00:07:55,080 --> 00:07:58,600 Speaker 1: about that sort of thing before, the grand slow pace travel. 139 00:07:58,680 --> 00:08:02,240 Speaker 1: She made it too slow, and things didn't get better 140 00:08:02,280 --> 00:08:05,440 Speaker 1: when she actually met her groom too. I mean, in 141 00:08:05,480 --> 00:08:07,640 Speaker 1: case you were hoping for some sort of stunning like, 142 00:08:07,720 --> 00:08:11,960 Speaker 1: actually I do like you at all. Um, he's an 143 00:08:12,040 --> 00:08:16,800 Speaker 1: unfortunate looking fellow. He had Popeye's really oversized features and um. 144 00:08:16,960 --> 00:08:20,480 Speaker 1: The main issue, though, was just their temperaments were completely incompatible. 145 00:08:20,560 --> 00:08:24,600 Speaker 1: He was somber serious, he was extremely devout. The Papal 146 00:08:24,640 --> 00:08:29,600 Speaker 1: Nuncio described their incompatibility thank quote, the Prince is all gravity, 147 00:08:29,600 --> 00:08:34,440 Speaker 1: but the Princess loves nothing more than laughing. So not 148 00:08:34,760 --> 00:08:38,319 Speaker 1: a great couple maybe, And it was probably emphasized that 149 00:08:38,400 --> 00:08:42,240 Speaker 1: disparity between their temperaments was probably emphasized by the type 150 00:08:42,240 --> 00:08:44,960 Speaker 1: of entertainments cost most stage to try to make his 151 00:08:45,000 --> 00:08:49,000 Speaker 1: new wife happy, ballets and balls and feasts, things that 152 00:08:49,000 --> 00:08:52,600 Speaker 1: probably wouldn't show him off to his best advantage. But 153 00:08:52,800 --> 00:08:56,680 Speaker 1: despite these attempts to win her over, Costomo didn't seem 154 00:08:56,720 --> 00:08:58,560 Speaker 1: that into her at all, at least as far as 155 00:08:58,600 --> 00:09:02,520 Speaker 1: producing an air was concerned, and so probably this, combined 156 00:09:02,559 --> 00:09:05,560 Speaker 1: with her homesickness for the French court, meant that she 157 00:09:05,640 --> 00:09:08,080 Speaker 1: tried to get out of the marriage early and actually 158 00:09:08,080 --> 00:09:11,560 Speaker 1: requested permission to have it annulled and enter a convent 159 00:09:11,640 --> 00:09:15,680 Speaker 1: back home no dice, though they wouldn't allow this at all. 160 00:09:16,160 --> 00:09:19,560 Speaker 1: So unable to simply leave the situation, she took up 161 00:09:19,640 --> 00:09:22,760 Speaker 1: a more passive, aggressive way of showing her unhappiness, or 162 00:09:22,800 --> 00:09:28,400 Speaker 1: actually aggressive ways yet sometimes just not so nice. For example, 163 00:09:28,520 --> 00:09:32,720 Speaker 1: she refused to learn Italian. Okay, maybe that's not so bad. 164 00:09:33,640 --> 00:09:36,240 Speaker 1: But then sometimes she would refuse to eat, and other 165 00:09:36,320 --> 00:09:38,760 Speaker 1: times she would run a daily food bill that was 166 00:09:38,880 --> 00:09:41,720 Speaker 1: ten times that of her husband. When she was eating, 167 00:09:41,720 --> 00:09:45,199 Speaker 1: she was spending. Sometimes she would just use the silent 168 00:09:45,240 --> 00:09:49,080 Speaker 1: treatment for everybody. And that's my favorite when she started 169 00:09:49,120 --> 00:09:52,040 Speaker 1: to talk again. That especially for a brilliant conversationalist. Right 170 00:09:52,360 --> 00:09:55,559 Speaker 1: when she started to talk again, though it wasn't I 171 00:09:55,600 --> 00:09:58,320 Speaker 1: would imagine they'd almost wish she just was still violent, 172 00:09:58,400 --> 00:10:01,400 Speaker 1: because she would mock her husban been at court um, 173 00:10:01,559 --> 00:10:05,079 Speaker 1: and we've already included that quote about showering invectives though 174 00:10:05,160 --> 00:10:08,560 Speaker 1: she wasn't saying nice things when she was talking. Her 175 00:10:08,600 --> 00:10:11,280 Speaker 1: father in law, the Grand Duke, tried to rein in 176 00:10:11,400 --> 00:10:14,959 Speaker 1: her out range of spending and her behavior by dismissing 177 00:10:14,960 --> 00:10:18,720 Speaker 1: her French retinue. She sent them off smuggling the Tuscan 178 00:10:18,800 --> 00:10:21,640 Speaker 1: Crown jewels, so she kind of got back at him 179 00:10:21,679 --> 00:10:24,520 Speaker 1: and they didn't get them back ultimately, but still, I mean, 180 00:10:24,920 --> 00:10:28,679 Speaker 1: that's that's a bold move Marguerite Louise. To stop her 181 00:10:28,840 --> 00:10:31,360 Speaker 1: from coming and going as she pleased, her father in 182 00:10:31,400 --> 00:10:34,360 Speaker 1: law put bolts on her doors and only allowed her 183 00:10:34,440 --> 00:10:38,560 Speaker 1: out for promenades and court events, And she would also 184 00:10:38,960 --> 00:10:41,839 Speaker 1: spend a lot of time just away from the main court, 185 00:10:41,920 --> 00:10:44,560 Speaker 1: out of public eye, where everybody could hear her making 186 00:10:44,559 --> 00:10:47,000 Speaker 1: fun of her new family. At one point, while she 187 00:10:47,040 --> 00:10:49,920 Speaker 1: was staying at one of these medici villas, she said 188 00:10:49,960 --> 00:10:53,800 Speaker 1: her husband a note threatening to throw a missile at 189 00:10:53,840 --> 00:10:58,000 Speaker 1: his head should he attempt to follow her go bring 190 00:10:58,000 --> 00:11:01,560 Speaker 1: her home, visit her at all, probably didn't help any 191 00:11:01,640 --> 00:11:07,920 Speaker 1: whole child creating department. And when she caught malaria, she 192 00:11:08,000 --> 00:11:10,800 Speaker 1: tried to blame it on the Medici penchant for poisoning. 193 00:11:11,240 --> 00:11:14,200 Speaker 1: Louis basically told her to knock it off and asked 194 00:11:14,280 --> 00:11:18,000 Speaker 1: the Pope to threaten her with excommunication. And when her 195 00:11:18,040 --> 00:11:20,640 Speaker 1: in laws finally had her imprisoned in one of their 196 00:11:20,679 --> 00:11:24,840 Speaker 1: palaces and pizza, she tried to escape with gypsies. I mean, 197 00:11:24,880 --> 00:11:26,920 Speaker 1: if you're going to get out somehow, that's the way 198 00:11:26,960 --> 00:11:29,760 Speaker 1: to go, I guess, according to G. F. Young in 199 00:11:29,800 --> 00:11:34,040 Speaker 1: the Medici quote, finding her circumstances becoming us ever more 200 00:11:34,080 --> 00:11:36,679 Speaker 1: intolerable and that she could get no help from her 201 00:11:36,679 --> 00:11:39,920 Speaker 1: relatives in France, she evolved the idea of escape from 202 00:11:39,960 --> 00:11:44,240 Speaker 1: the contemptible Cosmo by joining a party of gypsies, with 203 00:11:44,280 --> 00:11:47,680 Speaker 1: whom she was discovered one night, settling all the arrangements 204 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:50,640 Speaker 1: from a window of the palace at pizza, whereupon that 205 00:11:50,720 --> 00:11:55,000 Speaker 1: mode of escape was made impossible. But since the couple 206 00:11:55,120 --> 00:11:58,040 Speaker 1: would reconcile occasionally, it's hard to believe with all this 207 00:11:58,160 --> 00:12:00,679 Speaker 1: going on that they ever would, but they did end 208 00:12:00,760 --> 00:12:04,920 Speaker 1: up having three children. Ferdinand was born in sixteen sixty three. 209 00:12:05,200 --> 00:12:09,720 Speaker 1: Anna Maria Louisa de Medici was born in sixteen sixty seven, 210 00:12:10,160 --> 00:12:14,480 Speaker 1: and Giovanne or gian Gaston was born in sixteen seventy one. 211 00:12:15,040 --> 00:12:17,679 Speaker 1: Marguerite Louise also found time to entertain her cousin and 212 00:12:17,760 --> 00:12:20,960 Speaker 1: old friend Charles of Lorraine, who was a frequent visitor 213 00:12:20,960 --> 00:12:26,120 Speaker 1: at court and her lover incidentally another another ranch in 214 00:12:26,200 --> 00:12:30,720 Speaker 1: this next year. But in sixteen seventy fernand the second died, 215 00:12:30,920 --> 00:12:35,080 Speaker 1: leaving Cosomo the Grand Duke of Tuscany, and Margaret Louise 216 00:12:35,160 --> 00:12:37,920 Speaker 1: I think at this point was hoping, well, maybe if 217 00:12:37,960 --> 00:12:40,920 Speaker 1: I have some little portion to govern myself, we can 218 00:12:40,920 --> 00:12:43,680 Speaker 1: work this out. She was forbidden from taking any role 219 00:12:43,679 --> 00:12:46,720 Speaker 1: in government, though by Cosomo and his mother, and so 220 00:12:46,920 --> 00:12:49,480 Speaker 1: she went back to one of the villas, and within 221 00:12:49,559 --> 00:12:52,320 Speaker 1: two years she decided that enough was enough. She was 222 00:12:52,440 --> 00:12:57,440 Speaker 1: tired of hanging around just threatening her husband, and while 223 00:12:57,480 --> 00:13:01,120 Speaker 1: she was visiting a small Tuscan town, wrote to him 224 00:13:01,200 --> 00:13:04,480 Speaker 1: saying that she considered their marriage essentially over. She wrote 225 00:13:04,480 --> 00:13:07,719 Speaker 1: to her cousin Louie, explaining that since both parties had 226 00:13:07,760 --> 00:13:10,160 Speaker 1: had multiple affairs, she really didn't stay any point in 227 00:13:10,240 --> 00:13:14,440 Speaker 1: staying in Tuscany and playing sort of prisoner slash Grand 228 00:13:14,520 --> 00:13:18,319 Speaker 1: duchess anymore, and Louie initially told her, well, okay, you're 229 00:13:18,320 --> 00:13:21,920 Speaker 1: welcome to be a prisoner in France instead, But finally 230 00:13:22,600 --> 00:13:26,640 Speaker 1: herr husband and her cousin worked things out and by 231 00:13:26,880 --> 00:13:30,880 Speaker 1: sixteen seventy five she was allowed to return to France 232 00:13:30,960 --> 00:13:33,840 Speaker 1: to a convent outside of Paris, but it was understood 233 00:13:33,880 --> 00:13:37,400 Speaker 1: that there would be certain restrictions on her. She chose 234 00:13:37,520 --> 00:13:41,880 Speaker 1: to spend her time entertaining at court, attending parties and balls, 235 00:13:42,000 --> 00:13:46,640 Speaker 1: and of course continuing to harass her husband Costomo. I 236 00:13:46,679 --> 00:13:48,719 Speaker 1: mean I shouldn't say. Of course, you would think that 237 00:13:48,760 --> 00:13:50,560 Speaker 1: she had escaped him and would just kind of leave 238 00:13:50,600 --> 00:13:54,800 Speaker 1: that life behind. But but no, she actually chose to 239 00:13:55,120 --> 00:13:58,920 Speaker 1: sort of stay in his life by by staying at 240 00:13:58,920 --> 00:14:01,480 Speaker 1: his throat a According to herman, at one point she 241 00:14:01,520 --> 00:14:04,439 Speaker 1: wrote to him, quote, no hour of the day passes 242 00:14:04,840 --> 00:14:07,600 Speaker 1: when I do not desire your death and wish that 243 00:14:07,640 --> 00:14:10,680 Speaker 1: you were hanged. What aggravates me most of all is 244 00:14:10,720 --> 00:14:13,240 Speaker 1: that we shall both go to the devil, and then 245 00:14:13,280 --> 00:14:15,839 Speaker 1: I shall have the torment of seeing you even there. 246 00:14:16,400 --> 00:14:19,920 Speaker 1: I swear by what I loathe above all else. That 247 00:14:20,080 --> 00:14:23,000 Speaker 1: is yourself that I shall make a pact with the 248 00:14:23,080 --> 00:14:27,160 Speaker 1: devil to enrage you and to escape your madness. Enough 249 00:14:27,240 --> 00:14:30,280 Speaker 1: is enough. I shall engage in any extravagance I so 250 00:14:30,480 --> 00:14:33,480 Speaker 1: wish in order to bring you unhappiness. If you think 251 00:14:33,480 --> 00:14:35,360 Speaker 1: you can get me to come back to you, this 252 00:14:35,400 --> 00:14:38,840 Speaker 1: will never happen. And if I came back to you, beware, 253 00:14:39,240 --> 00:14:43,440 Speaker 1: because you would never die. But by my hand me 254 00:14:43,560 --> 00:14:47,800 Speaker 1: and mean letter. Um. For his part, Kosmos did very 255 00:14:47,840 --> 00:14:49,920 Speaker 1: much interested in her too. I mean, not just because 256 00:14:49,960 --> 00:14:52,200 Speaker 1: he was paying a lot of her bills, but um, 257 00:14:52,280 --> 00:14:55,360 Speaker 1: they were still very much involved in each other's life. 258 00:14:55,400 --> 00:14:59,000 Speaker 1: But uh, this convent situation, we should mention one more 259 00:14:59,040 --> 00:15:01,880 Speaker 1: thing about it too. Sense she clearly wasn't living a 260 00:15:01,960 --> 00:15:05,800 Speaker 1: retired life. Is Deplana mentioned going out to parties and everything. 261 00:15:06,200 --> 00:15:10,080 Speaker 1: When the convents knew, Prioris tried to really enforce the 262 00:15:10,160 --> 00:15:12,560 Speaker 1: rules and keep her home like she was she was 263 00:15:12,600 --> 00:15:16,560 Speaker 1: supposed to be under the terms of this arrangement. She 264 00:15:16,720 --> 00:15:19,760 Speaker 1: supposedly threatened the woman with an axe and a pistol 265 00:15:19,840 --> 00:15:22,960 Speaker 1: and then threatened to set the place on fire. So, UM, 266 00:15:23,320 --> 00:15:25,920 Speaker 1: think thinking we're starting to see some signs of more 267 00:15:26,040 --> 00:15:31,520 Speaker 1: serious serious behavioral problems. But yeah, she was. She was 268 00:15:31,560 --> 00:15:35,680 Speaker 1: not about to be reined in. Eventually, though, her outrageous 269 00:15:35,720 --> 00:15:40,200 Speaker 1: behavior was too much for even all these amusing stories 270 00:15:40,200 --> 00:15:42,800 Speaker 1: about Tuscany and Cosmo to be worth it anymore, and 271 00:15:42,840 --> 00:15:46,120 Speaker 1: so Louis the fourteenth finally banned her from court, and 272 00:15:46,280 --> 00:15:49,200 Speaker 1: in seventeen twenty one she died at the age of 273 00:15:49,280 --> 00:15:52,440 Speaker 1: seventy six. I think by then actually finally living sort 274 00:15:52,480 --> 00:15:56,080 Speaker 1: of a retired life and and um, trying to take 275 00:15:56,120 --> 00:16:00,400 Speaker 1: things down a notch. Cosmo, though, was equally long lived. 276 00:16:00,440 --> 00:16:04,640 Speaker 1: I always think that's sort of that's what happened to it. 277 00:16:05,800 --> 00:16:08,680 Speaker 1: She couldn't get him in time. Um. Yeah. He died 278 00:16:08,760 --> 00:16:12,440 Speaker 1: in seventeen twenty three, after a reign of fifty three years, 279 00:16:12,480 --> 00:16:16,040 Speaker 1: which incidentally was the longest reign of any Medici, even 280 00:16:16,080 --> 00:16:19,760 Speaker 1: though during that time his duchy lost a lot of 281 00:16:19,800 --> 00:16:23,280 Speaker 1: its prestige. He was succeeded by his youngest son, Gianne, 282 00:16:23,280 --> 00:16:27,040 Speaker 1: who was already into his fifties, unhealthy and childless, and 283 00:16:27,160 --> 00:16:30,000 Speaker 1: with him the Medici line of grand dukes ended, and 284 00:16:30,040 --> 00:16:33,400 Speaker 1: he was succeeded by Francis, the grandson of Margherite Louise's 285 00:16:33,440 --> 00:16:36,400 Speaker 1: Duke of Lorraine, who we mentioned earlier in the podcast, 286 00:16:36,840 --> 00:16:40,400 Speaker 1: and the father of Marie Antoinette, so strange connections on 287 00:16:40,440 --> 00:16:43,480 Speaker 1: both sides. I feel like this episode has tied into 288 00:16:43,560 --> 00:16:46,680 Speaker 1: almost every royal person we've ever talked to, every series 289 00:16:46,760 --> 00:16:50,280 Speaker 1: that we've done, in some way one somewhat touching note 290 00:16:50,320 --> 00:16:54,120 Speaker 1: to this bizarre story. In the early twentieth century, two 291 00:16:54,160 --> 00:16:58,080 Speaker 1: silver coins belonging to Marguerite Louise were found to actually 292 00:16:58,120 --> 00:17:01,640 Speaker 1: be hollow like little gets her boxes, and one had 293 00:17:01,680 --> 00:17:04,320 Speaker 1: a miniature of Charles of Lorraine as a young man, 294 00:17:04,400 --> 00:17:06,439 Speaker 1: and something that's kind of sweet. Maybe if she just 295 00:17:06,640 --> 00:17:10,480 Speaker 1: married her cousin, none of these nasty letters had to happen. 296 00:17:11,080 --> 00:17:14,720 Speaker 1: Um And kind of a fun fact to something decidedly 297 00:17:14,800 --> 00:17:19,160 Speaker 1: good that did come out of this poor coupling. Her 298 00:17:19,240 --> 00:17:23,560 Speaker 1: eldest son with Cosmo Fernando, who was also the child 299 00:17:23,640 --> 00:17:27,600 Speaker 1: she was closest to. Um. He had died before his father, obviously, 300 00:17:27,640 --> 00:17:31,600 Speaker 1: that's why he didn't become the grand Duke himself. He 301 00:17:31,680 --> 00:17:36,400 Speaker 1: was the patron of a man called Bartolomeo Christophy and 302 00:17:36,640 --> 00:17:41,399 Speaker 1: christophery is the man who invented the piano. So you know, 303 00:17:41,760 --> 00:17:44,920 Speaker 1: it's a little connection there, some sort of some sort 304 00:17:44,960 --> 00:17:48,640 Speaker 1: of positive note for us to end on rather than um, 305 00:17:48,800 --> 00:17:51,560 Speaker 1: you won't die by any hand but mine. Maybe he 306 00:17:51,640 --> 00:17:55,560 Speaker 1: could have put music to her letters. I feel like 307 00:17:55,680 --> 00:18:00,960 Speaker 1: they were maybe the classical historical iterations of the precursors 308 00:18:00,960 --> 00:18:03,080 Speaker 1: to a lot of small sets songs or something like 309 00:18:03,160 --> 00:18:05,360 Speaker 1: breakup music. I mean, I was thinking they were kind 310 00:18:05,400 --> 00:18:08,440 Speaker 1: of an operatic seeming couple. It seems like this would 311 00:18:08,480 --> 00:18:12,960 Speaker 1: be a uh, if not an opera from from many 312 00:18:13,040 --> 00:18:16,520 Speaker 1: years ago, then I guess some sort of lifetime movie today. 313 00:18:16,760 --> 00:18:20,160 Speaker 1: It does sound like something fit for lifetime, I think, 314 00:18:20,240 --> 00:18:22,840 Speaker 1: but also fit for a good series. So it's been 315 00:18:22,880 --> 00:18:25,720 Speaker 1: fun to do these over the summer, and maybe we'll 316 00:18:25,720 --> 00:18:29,000 Speaker 1: have some more coming up soon, some more princess stories, 317 00:18:29,359 --> 00:18:31,760 Speaker 1: but if you have any suggestions for some that you'd 318 00:18:31,760 --> 00:18:33,880 Speaker 1: like for us to cover. I feel like we've covered 319 00:18:33,920 --> 00:18:36,640 Speaker 1: a lot of royalty over the years, but there are 320 00:18:36,680 --> 00:18:39,040 Speaker 1: some key figures that get suggested all the time that 321 00:18:39,080 --> 00:18:41,360 Speaker 1: we haven't gone a chance to cover yet. So if 322 00:18:41,359 --> 00:18:43,600 Speaker 1: you have any especially want to hear about, feel free 323 00:18:43,600 --> 00:18:46,440 Speaker 1: to write to us. We're at History Podcast at Discovery 324 00:18:46,480 --> 00:18:48,679 Speaker 1: dot com. You can also find us on Facebook and 325 00:18:48,680 --> 00:18:50,960 Speaker 1: we're on Twitter at Miston History and in the meantime, 326 00:18:51,040 --> 00:18:53,800 Speaker 1: if you want to learn a little bit about royalty 327 00:18:53,840 --> 00:18:55,960 Speaker 1: in a more general sense, we do have an article 328 00:18:56,040 --> 00:18:59,240 Speaker 1: called how Royalty Works. You can check it out by 329 00:18:59,280 --> 00:19:02,439 Speaker 1: searching on our on page www dot how stuff works 330 00:19:02,440 --> 00:19:09,280 Speaker 1: dot com for more on this and thousands of other topics. 331 00:19:09,520 --> 00:19:14,720 Speaker 1: Is it how stuff works dot com. M