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Rozsa Gaston – Author

~ Anne of Brittany Series & other works

Rozsa Gaston – Author

Tag Archives: French Queens

2020 Advent Calendar for Tudor History Lovers

10 Thursday Dec 2020

Posted by rozsagaston in 15th century, age of chivalry, Anne and Charles, Anne and Louis, Anne of Brittany, Anne of Brittany series, arranged marriage, Charles VIII, childbirth, Christine de Pizan, Claude of France, Duchess of Brittany, female rulers, feudal era, French culture, French history, historical fiction, historical romance, History, Machiavelli, Marie de France, Medieval, medieval France, medieval women authors, Queens of France, Renaissance France, Renaissance history, Salic Law, Salic Law laws of inheritance, Uncategorized, Women in history, women of influence, women's empowerment

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Anne de Beaujeu, Anne of Brittany, Charles VIII, Christine de Pizan, female ruler, feudal age, French history, French Queens, historical fiction, Italian campaigns, Louis XII, Louise of Savoy, Machiavelli, Renaissance, Renaissance queen, Salic Law, Tudor history readers, Uk tudor history readers

https://www.theanneboleynfiles.com/advent2020/page10.php

2020 Anne Boleyn Files Advent Calendar

December 10: Excerpt from Anne and Louis Forever Bound, Book Four of the Anne of Brittany Series

A big thank you to historical novelist Rozsa Gaston for sharing with us this wonderful excerpt from her forthcoming novel, Anne and Louis Forever Bound, Book Four of the Anne of Brittany Series. — Claire Ridgway, Founder UK Tudor Society, author of The Anne Boleyn Files

http://lrd.to/anneofbrittanyseries


In the second week of February 1511, sad news arrived. Germaine wrote from Spain that England’s queen-consort, King Ferdinand’s daughter, Catherine of Aragon, had given birth to her first child by Henry VIII. A daughter, the babe had been stillborn.

“Your Grace, I hope news from Spain is not bad?” Madame de Dampierre asked as she took in the stricken look on her sovereign’s face.

“Not bad from Spain, but sad news from England.”

Madame de Dampierre looked surprised. For the most part, relations between France and England were chilly. “I am all ears, Your Grace, if you care to share with me.”

Anne sighed and put down the letter. “The English king’s wife has just delivered her first child.”

“I’m sure the new king must be happy.”

“A stillborn daughter.” Anne turned her head to the tapestry on the wall where a stag’s face stared back at her reproachfully. Queens everywhere who delivered only daughters were censured. It was a perilous job to be queen, one fraught with fear of failure and too frequent pregnancies that imperiled their health. Well did she know, still weak from Renée’s birth. She was just beginning to get around, but tired easily. At age thirty-four, after fifteen pregnancies, she was not feeling her usual resilience after childbirth.

“Ah, Your Grace, that is sad indeed. But Queen Catherine is young and has many years ahead to try again,” Madame de Dampierre remarked.

“How old is she?”

“Your Grace, I am not sure, but a few years older than the king, I believe.”

“Get Sire Lemaire here to fill us in.”

“Oh, Madame, what a sparkling idea. I will see if I can find him.” The lady-in-waiting curtsied then bustled to the door.

“Have a pot of mulled wine brought and three goblets,” Anne called after her. Lemaire was good fun and an incurable gossip. He would have something to tell them, and not from the English perspective, either.

Within moments, Jean Lemaire of Belgium appeared in the doorway. Four years older than the queen, he had served at the court of Margaret of Austria in Flanders for many years. Some said that he had held his patron in such high regard that it had been best for him to find an appointment elsewhere. Anne had offered the cultured humanist a position at her court as her historiographer. His immersion in the new learning was renowned, yet within the bounds of adherence to Church teachings, to her approval. Above all, Lemaire was a boon to her as a conduit to the court of Margaret of Austria, Governor of the Netherlands, and a valuable Habsburg connection.

“Come,” she greeted him.

“I am at Your Grace’s pleasure,” Sire Lemaire offered a graceful bow.

“What can you tell us of the young Queen and King of England?” Anne asked.

“Your Grace, I have heard news of the new queen and it is—”

“Sad, but not unusual,” she finished for him. For once, it was another queen who had lost a newborn and not her. She would send a condolence note that day, but she would not allude to the depths of darkness she herself had felt at such losses over the years. No fellow queen would wish to walk the path she had traveled in childbearing.

“Quite right, Your Grace. She has many years before her to try again.”

“How old is she?”

“I have heard that she is six years older than her husband the king,” Lemaire answered.

“And he is …?”

“Twenty this year, Your Grace.”

“And what do you know of the years she spent as widow of the young king’s older brother?”

“Ah, Arthur…” Lemaire’s voice drifted off.

“Yes, Arthur, a noble but doomed name for Brittany,” Anne filled in, referring to the late 12th century Duke of Brittany from the House of Plantagenet. He had disappeared at the tender age of thirteen, rumored to have been murdered by his uncle, the vicious King John of England.

“Your Grace, I would say that the name Arthur has not flourished in the annals of history after the great King Arthur of the Round Table,” Lemaire said heavily.

“Did not Catherine’s first husband die of the sweat?” Anne directed him back to present affairs.

“He did indeed, Madame; only five months after his marrage to the young Spanish princess,” Lemaire rerouted to the topic at hand.

“I heard she had it, too,” Madame de Ddampierre remarked.

“It has been said that the sweat takes more healthy young males than it does females,” Lemaire observed.

“Mostly from the upper classes, they say,” Madame de Dampierre tutted.

Anne shuddered. “I hope it does not make its way to the Continent.” Poor Isabella’s daughter, sent to England to become a queen only to have her husband die after a few months of marriage.

“It is dormant now, and let us hope it will remain so forever,” Lemaire exclaimed.

“What is forever in this vale of tears we walk, Sire Lemaire?” Anne asked, thinking of her ruddy Charles-Orland, who would have been a youth of eighteen had he lived.

“Your Grace, you have just presented France with a bouncing princess so I am surprised you speak of tears,” Sire Lemaire replied.

“My tears fall today for the English queen. I wonder that she was stuck in limbo so many years between marriages.”

“Your Grace, it was six years, I believe, that the former English king and the King of Spain quarreled over her dowry.”

“Let me guess. Was it her father who refused to complete the payments?” Anne scoffed. Ferdinand was even more tightfisted than Louis. Much less handsome, too.

“Indeed, it was. But the old king was determined to get the full amount, so he dangled marriage to his son up ahead as a way to make the King of Spain pay up.”

“I heard there was more to it, too,” Madame de Dampierre added.

“Go on,” Anne encouraged. She sipped her mulled wine, enjoying its warmth spreading in her belly. She looked forward to another type of warmth heating her there soon. Once she regained her full strength she would try for a son again with Louis.

“It was said that the old king needed Spain’s royal stamp upon his line, being unsure of his legitimacy,” her lady-in-waiting expounded.

“Ah, poor Henry Tudor,” Anne sighed.

“Your Grace, do tell. Did he not spend some years of his youth in Brittany as the guest of your father?” Madame de Dampierre urged.

“He was under my father’s protection,” Anne told them. “The York kings would have killed him had he set foot on English soil before he was fully supported.”

“Did you meet him, Madame?” Her lady-in-waiting’s eyes shone.

“I met him just before he returned to England and won the throne.” She remembered Henry Tudor well. She had been a young girl, the Lancastrian exile a full twenty years older. Tall and lean like Louis, but there the similarities stopped. Not debonair in the least, Henry Tudor had been tentative, with a furtive hungry look that had puzzled her at the time. As a mother, Anne’s instincts told her he had been separated from loving arms at too young an age.

“And what was he like?” Madame de Dampierre pressed.

“Timid and penniless. Unsure of himself.” Her father had considered him as a match for her, but the idea had come to nothing when Henry had returned to England in 1483 and married Elizabeth of York. It had been the solution that had ended the War of the Roses, Anne thought approvingly. Marriage was life-giving, whereas war was the opposite. She had heard that it had been Henry Tudor’s mother who had brokered the union, the indomitable Lady Margaret Beaufort—even more ambitious than that redhead in Amboise, if such a thing were possible.

“That is it, Your Grace. He proved a good king, but he was uneasy on the throne,” Lemaire agreed. “Marrying his heir apparent to a Spanish princess legitimized his claim to the crown.”

“And now Catherine needs a son to anchor her marriage to the new English king,” Anne observed.

“Indeed, Your Grace. It would be most provident.” Lemaire’s tone was judicious.

“And how was her situation in those years between marriages to the two brothers?” she asked.

“I heard that before her marriage to the new king the young princess was living most precariously at the pleasure of the old king, but without means to support her household,” Lemaire described.

“Disgraceful,” Anne exclaimed. “But Henry Tudor was always cheap. It was not his fault, as he’d lived in hiding for so many years, but he should have supported his son’s widow in style until he decided what to do with her.” What misery it must have been for Isabella of Spain’s royal daughter to rot on the vine for six years of her first bloom, far from her family in a rainy, cold, foreign land.

“It was said at one time that he thought to marry her himself,” Madame de Dampierre put in.

“It would seem he thought to marry several great ladies,” Lemaire added. “I heard a proposal was made to the Countess d’Angoulême—”

“It would have been a disaster,” Anne snapped. “Henry Tudor was as contracted as the countess is grasping. Frankly, I don’t think he had it in him to take on a new wife after Elizabeth of York died.”

“Your Grace, it was said that the light went out in his eyes the day his York wife died,” Lemaire concurred.

“Sad for Henry Tudor that he achieved the throne he aimed for, yet could not sit on it with ease,” Anne mused.

“For fear of a pretender pushing him off,” Madame de Dampierre put in.

“Let u return to Catherine,” Anne directed them.

“She is finally the queen she was meant to be, as the young Henry’s wife,” Lemaire exclaimed.

“What have you heard he’s like?” Anne asked. Henry VIII was a wild card thus far. Only in power since 1509, he was an emerging player on Europe’s stage.

“Your Grace, it is said that the young King of England has inherited his mother’s York confidence and his Beaufort grandmother’s ambition,” Lemaire described.

“I hope he will be good to his queen,” Anne said. She was no friend of England, but for the sake of Isabella of Spain she prayed that the young Henry treated his bride as befit the daughter of one of Europe’s greatest monarchs.

“They say he is eager to prove himself.”

“As I am sure Catherine is eager to prove herself capable of providing him with an heir,” Anne replied, weighing an entirely different thought that she would share later with Louis. May the young English king not prove himself by entering into an alliance with his wife’s father.

“Madame, I am sure it will come to pass,” Lemaire said, avoiding her gaze.

“No one is sure of anything in such matters, but bring me my writing tools so I may send Catherine a note,” she told him, guessing his thoughts. All of France waited for her to provide Louis with an heir. Let them wait. She had produced two princesses, and if French Salic Law forbade putting a woman on the throne to rule, it was France’s loss.

“Right away, Your Grace.”

As Anne awaited his return, she met Madame de Dampierre’s questioning gaze.

“What is it?”

“Your Grace, I am surprised you are reaching out to the English queen.”

“To me she is not just the English queen. She is the daughter of Isabella, who I have ever held in high regard. Unlike her husband.” Ferdinand had never appealed to her although God knew he was a strong ruler. He lacked both gentility of spirit and the debonair courtliness that Louis possessed and that her father had had. How Isabella of Spain had put up with him she could scarcely imagine.

Madame de Dampierre let out a titter. “Madame, she will be grateful for your show of support.”

“I do not know her at all, but I know what it is to be queen and to fail at attempting an heir.”

“Your Grace, it is not an easy road to walk, is it?”

“You would not know, as you do not walk it,” Anne dispatched her. “But Catherine of England does, so I will offer her comfort as a peer.”

“Your Grace, she will be greatly consoled by a note from you.”

“Perhaps not, but it may help.” Anne waved her away as she contemplated other objectives in opening a line of communication to Catherine. It would be useful to have a conduit to the English court, should Henry VIII think to ally with one of Louis’ enemies.

Wishing the Queen of England a speedy recovery, Anne sent her prayers for blooming health and a blooming prince to grace her family soon in the future.

As she blotted and sealed the note, she prayed the same for herself.


From Anne and Louis Forever Bound, Book Four of the Anne of Brittany Series, the gripping tale of a larger than life queen. http://lrd.to/anneofbrittanyseries

Charles? Needs watching.–Anne of Brittany Series, Book One

24 Thursday Jan 2019

Posted by rozsagaston in 15th century, Anne and Charles, Anne of Brittany, Anne of Brittany series, arranged marriage, Charles VIII, childbirth, Duchess of Brittany, female rulers, feudal era, French culture, French history, historical fiction, historical romance, History, Hot & Trending, infidelity,, Kirkus Review, laws of inheritance, literary fiction, love, Medieval, medieval France, powerful women, Publishers Weekly reviews, Queens of France, relationships, Renaissance France, Salic Law, Salic Law laws of inheritance, Women in history, women of influence, women's empowerment

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Anne of Brittany, books, Brittany, Charles VIII, culture, European history, european royalty, fiction, France, French kings, French Queens, History, Italian campaigns, love, Naples, political marriage, politics, power, relationships, Renaissance, review

000 ac excerpt - charles needs watching

AAA Anne and Charles PW takeaway 3

Discover the story of Anne of Brittany’s marriage to Charles VIII, King of France, in Anne and Charles, Book One of the Anne of Brittany Series.

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Who was Anne of Brittany?

19 Thursday May 2016

Posted by rozsagaston in Anne of Brittany, Charles VIII, childbirth, Duchess of Brittany, female rulers, French culture, French history, historical fiction, historical romance, Hot & Trending, literary fiction, Louis XII, New release, publishing, Queens of France, Sense of Touch, Uncategorized, women's empowerment

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Who was Anne of Brittany?Front cover FINAL Hi-Res
Her dates: 1477-1514.

Her personality?

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Anne of Brittany by Jean Perreal, c. 1492

  • Decidedly feminist.
  • Delightfully feminine.
  • Intelligent.
  • Highly educated.
  • Raised to rule over Brittany.
  • Generous.
  • Lavish in her spending.
  • Imperious.
  • Unyielding.
  • Shrewd.
  • Relentless.
  • A bookworm.
  • Pious.
  • Lovingly conscientious to her husbands, both kings of France.
  • Faithfully conscientious to her Breton subjects, over which she ruled from the age of eleven.

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Anne of Brittany by Jean Perreal, c. 1492

Ever since picking up Mildred Allen Butler’s book on Anne of Brittany a few years ago (Twice Queen of France: Anne of Brittany. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1967), I’ve been fascinated by this French queen who came to power at age eleven as ruler of Brittany, then became queen of France at age fourteen.

Anne of Brittany’s travails trying to bring live children into the world rival any woman’s in history.
This girl/woman went through the wringer as a mother. Her fourteen pregnancies resulted in the survival of two children, both daughters.The rest? Three miscarriages, five stillborn infants, one son dead after three hours, one daughter dead after one day, another son lived three weeks, her longest living son survived to age three when he succumbed to measles. As a public figure, this queen’s drama played out on the stage of all of France. If I had made this up, readers wouldn’t believe it. But it’s all true, and carefully historically documented.

I began to wonder why Anne of Brittany’s story is not well known.
Many modern women share the same secret heartaches their medieval and ancient sisters suffered: pregnancy loss, inability to bring a live child into the world, inability to keep a child alive once born. Women still struggle with these issues and still suffer in silence when pregnancy and childbirth loss occurs. My heart aches for every one of them.

I wanted to bring alive Anne of Brittany’s tale for modern women, may of whom share her story in suffering and in courage. At the same time this brave woman endured continual personal tragedy she achieved great success as queen of France. She provides the world with an exceptional model of fortitude and resilience in the face of great personal suffering. Brava, Anne of Brittany!

  • Anne of Brittany ruled over the most sophisticated court in Europe.
  • She helped usher in the glories of the Renaissance from Italy to France. She ran the first finishing school for young women of noble birth, educating them in book learning and estate management and supplying or supplementing their dowries when they married.
  • Both of Anne of Brittany’s husbands were madly in love with her. Neither considered putting her aside despite her inability to produce an heir for the throne of France. Her second husband, Louis XII of France, died less than a year after her death at the age of thirty seven. It was said that he never recovered from her death.
  • Anne of Brittany was renown all over Europe as a matchmaker. Rulers of other European countries, including King Ferdinand of Spain after his wife Isabella’s death and the king of Hungary sought her advice in choosing a suitable spouse for them.

1

Cover painting by Anca Visdei, 2013, permission pending

I could say more, but I’ll save it for the sequel. Anne of Brittany: Girl Who Ruled a Country should arrive in early 2017. Meanwhile, please join me in discovering the remarkable historical figure of Anne of Brittany in my new release Sense of Touch.

Warmly,

Author Rozsa Gaston

Sense of Touch back cover
Sense of Touch back cover
Sense of Touch firepit

Sense of Touch: Love and Duty at Anne of Brittany’s Court

18 Friday Sep 2015

Posted by rozsagaston in French culture, History, literary fiction, love, Queens of France, relationships, romance, self-discovery, self-esteem, travel

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Amazon, Anne of Brittany, Brittany, Charles VIII, Claude of France, Duchess of Brittany, Europe, European history, France, French Queens, Kindle Scout, Louis XII, Medieval rulers, Middle Ages, Renaissance, Salic Law, Sense of Touch, women of history, women's issues, women's self-identity

Anne of Brittany by Jean Bourdichon, courtesy gallica.BnF.fr

Anne of Brittany by Jean Bourdichon, courtesy gallica.BnF.fr

Sense of Touch is coming soon. My seventh and latest novel is based on the life of Anne of Brittany, twice Queen of France. Her dates? 1477-1514.

Sense of Touch has been chosen by Kindle Scout for a 30-day pilot program to see if readers get interested in this story. If the book receives enough nominations by Oct. 19, 2015, it will be chosen for publication by Kindle Press. That’s a very big deal. Why? Worldwide distribution.

Here’s the link to nominate Sense of Touch for publication. It’s free, and if Sense of Touch gets picked up for publication, you will receive a complimentary advance copy. I will include your name on my acknowledgments page if you let me know you voted. Thank you.

Why am I excited about Anne of Brittany? This remarkable woman, Duchess of Brittany in her own right, and twice Queen of France due to marrying well, lived exactly at the convergence of the Middle Ages with the Renaissance. What does that mean?

Quick answer: Goodbye, Middle Ages. Hello, Renaissance.

To put it in a nutshell, it means goodbye to collective identity and hello to self-identity. My writing platform is all about self-identity, as in how do women achieve their own? Then, how do they hone it through the years as professional and family obligations conspire to obliterate their special je ne sais quoi?

Anne of Brittany did a great job of maintaining her own sense of self. Her motto? A ma vie, to my life. It takes a confident woman to have a motto like that.

Here’s the gist of Sense of Touch.

Fiction

Tapestry design based on Le Toucher from The Lady and the Unicorn series. Courtesy METRAX-CRAYE, Belgium

NICOLE SAINT SYLVAIN serves at the court of Anne of Brittany, Queen of France, in 1497, at age fifteen. Working with horse trainer Philippe de Bois to heal the Queen’s stallion, she shows an aptitude for diagnosing horses’ ailments through her sense of touch. Soon she has fallen in love, but not with the man her father has chosen for her. Duty pulls Nicole and Philippe in different directions and Nicole becomes a wife, mother, then widow while immersing herself in the healing arts. When Anne of Brittany begs her to save her infant daughter, Nicole works alongside a physician from the South whose reputation for healing began with his work with horses. Will Nicole succeed in saving the Queen’s daughter? And if she does, will the Queen reward her with the greatest desire of her heart—marriage to the only man she has ever loved?

Fact

512px-BNF_-_Latin_9474_-_Jean_Bourdichon_-_Grandes_Heures_d'Anne_de_BretagneANNE OF BRITTANY inherited the Duchy of Brittany at age eleven upon her father’s death in 1488. Three years later she married Charles VIII and became Queen consort of France. Instrumental in introducing new techniques of architecture and craftsmanship from Milan to France, Anne of Brittany ushered in the Italian Renaissance to France. By age twenty-one she had buried her husband and all four of her children. Within nine months she became wife of the new king, Louis XII. Pregnant fourteen times, seven times by either king, she raised two children to adulthood. Both were daughters.

She is known as the first female ruler of France to bring together young women of noble birth at court, where she educated and trained them, then arranged appropriate marriage matches. A ruler of influence, refinement, and resources, she rose above personal loss with dignity and grace while espousing the cause of women’s advancement. Her story is for women everywhere.

I would be delighted if you would click here to nominate Sense of Touch for publication. You’ll find an excerpt from Sense of Touch too. Enjoy and thank you.

Stay playful,

Rozsa Gaston

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  • ◆ Royalty ◆ Power ◆ Politics ◆ Love ◆ Struggle Discover Margaret of Austria for Women's History Month.… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 4 days ago
  • Jilted by Charles VIII of France, Margaret went on to rule the Netherlands. bit.ly/margaretofaust… #renaissance… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 5 days ago
  • @jomilleweb Elegant as always. And a fine sportswoman. 2 weeks ago
  • Jilted by Charles VIII of France, Margaret went on to rule the Netherlands. Discover this powerhouse of a woman.… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 2 weeks ago
  • Delighted to introduce you to this powerful Renaissance ruler. bit.ly/margaretofaust… #NewRelease… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 2 weeks ago
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