Catherine of Mayenne

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Catherine of Guise
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Catherine de Mayenne
Catherine de Mayenne, duchess of Mantua
Born1585
Died8 March 1618
NationalityFrench
OccupationAristocrat

Catherine de Mayenne (1585 – 8 March 1618), or Catherine de Mayenne-Lorraine-Guise, was a French aristocrat who became Duchess of Mantua by marriage.

Early life

Catherine de Mayenne was born in 1585, as the daughter of

Henry of Guise, and his wife, Henriette of Savoy-Villars
(1541-1611), whom he had married in 1576.

Biography

She married

Charles de Gonzague, Duke of Mantua and Montferrat
, on 1 February 1599 in Soissons, at the age of 14, and actively assisted her husband in his administration. In 1604 she was courted insistently by
Henry IV of France. She and her husband chose to leave the French court. She gave her husband six children, three boys and three girls.[1]

Catherine created many convents, monasteries, abbeys, churches, schools and hospitals. In Charleville she founded a college of the Society of Jesus, where youth were educated in piety and letters. She also founded a Capuchin convent and a hospital in that city. She founded two Carmelite monasteries, a monastery of the Holy Sepulcher, a Franciscan convent, a Capuchin church, and a large priory of the Christian Militia that served as a hospital.[1]

In 1615 Catherine was chosen from among the princesses of France to accompany

Louis XIII of France, to the borders of France and Spain, and there to receive Infanta Anna of Spain.[2]
After catching a chill, she died at her Hôtel de Nevers in Paris in 1618 at the age of 33.[1] Her biography by Père Hilarion de Coste says that "One would not know enough to praise the wise, chaste and virtuous Caterine, except to confess that she surpasses all praise."[2]

Children

Notes

Sources

  • Coste, Hilarion de (1647), "Catherine de Lorraine (1585-1618)", Les Eloges et les vies des reynes, des princesses, et des dames illustres en pieté, en Courage & en Doctrine, qui ont fleury de nostre temps, & du temps de nos Peres. Avec l'explication de leurs Devises, Emblémes, Hieroglyphes, Divisez en deux tomes et dediez à la Reyne Regente (in French), Paris: Sébastien Cramoisy et Gabriel Cramoisy, retrieved 2017-11-16
  • Société d'Histoire des Ardennes (March 2016), "Les Princesses de Gonzague", CAROLO Mag (198), archived from the original on 2019-04-07, retrieved 2017-11-16