Le livre est écrit par une érudite de la vie de la Reine Margot. Je l’ai trouvé passionnant et plein de détails sur la vie de cette grande reine de la Renaissance qui diffère tant des histoires romancées d’Alexandre Dumas et autres.
This was relatively good, but rather one-sided in its interpretations. There was palpable sympathy for the main character and her Valois family. Marguerite herself is in a way idealised and some of her mistakes are glossed over. She may have been intelligent and refined, but the fact is that Marguerite committed treason against both her brother, Henri III of France, and her husband, Henri III of Navarre (the future Henri IV of France). And I’m not defending her brother or her husband here, just stating the facts. She asked for help from Philip II of Spain, who was an enemy of the French state. Eventually, Marguerite was lucky to survive after all she had done. We know that treason could be punished by death in the 16th century.
Nothing proves that Marguerite was an able politician in her own right, as Viennot suggests. On the contrary, some of her actions point to the lack of political thinking. But a big plus of this book is that the author shows how our view of this queen has been distorted by pamphlets, satire and literature, and how often we accept rumour as fact. Marguerite most likely was not the dissolute and frivolous queen of the pamphlets. And just saying, the mention of the young duc de Guise’s blue eyes as something making him attractive looks a bit ridiculous. By the way, Henri de Navarre also had blue eyes.
Despite some flaws, if you want to read only one biography of Marguerite, I’d recommend choosing this one.