The Children of Adam and Eve

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Wikigenealogy

Marie Medici, 15731642 (aged 69 years)

Name
Marie /Medici/
Surname
Medici
Given names
Marie
Married name
Marie /de Bourbon/
Family with parents
father
mother
herself
Family with King of France (1589-1610) and Navarre (1572-1610) Henry IV de Bourbon
husband
King of France (1589-1610) and Navarre (1572-1610), Henry IV de Bourbon
15531610
Birth: 13 December 1553 Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Death: 14 May 1610Paris, Île-de-France, France
herself
Marriage Marriage1600
daughter
son
16011643
Birth: 1601 47 28 Fontainebleau, Seine-et-Marne, Île-de-France, France
Death: 1643
2 years
daughter
5 years
daughter
3 years
son
King of France (1589-1610) and Navarre (1572-1610) Henry IV de Bourbon + Margaret of Valois
husband
King of France (1589-1610) and Navarre (1572-1610), Henry IV de Bourbon
15531610
Birth: 13 December 1553 Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Death: 14 May 1610Paris, Île-de-France, France
husband’s ex-wife
Marriage MarriageAugust 1573
Annulment Annulment
Birth
Death of a father
Marriage
Birth of a son
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
Death of a husband
Address: Louvre Palace, Paris,, Île-de-France, France.
Marriage of a son
Death of a mother
Death
1642 (aged 69 years)
Unique identifier
125DDF764A98634FA491D70D034FF6773026
Last change
26 January 201221:19:31
Author of last change: Danny
Note

She was active in French politics during the reign of her son, Louis XIII.
In 1600 she became the second wife of Henry IV. They had six Children,
the eldest of whom became King as Louis XIII when his father was
assassinated in 1610. As regent during her son's minority, Marie was
dominated by her Italian advisers and, unlike her husband, followed a
pro-Spanish policy; she arranged to marry both Louis and his sister
Elizabeth into the Spanish royal family. At home, she proved unable to
control the turbulent French nobles. She was excluded from power by her
son in 1617, but was Readmitted to the royal council five years later.
Marie promoted the advancement of Armand Du Plessis de Richelieu, using
her influence to have him made a cardinal in 1622 and Louis's prime
minister in 1624. When Richelieu reversed her policy of alliance with
Spain, she turned against him. After failing in a plot to remove him in
1630, she went into permanent exile.

Marie de M?cis was a patron of the Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens,
who illustrated her life in a brilliant series of 21 paintings (1622-24).