First Fronde Cardinal de Richelieu, chief minister of Louis XIII from 1624 to 1642, had many policies which weakened the influence of the nobility and reduced the powers of the judicial bodies, called
Parlements. Opposition to the government among the nobility began to grow from 1643 under the “foreign” rule of the queen
regent Anne of Austria (Louis XIV’s mother) and her chief minister, Cardinal Mazarin. The refusal of the
Parlement of Paris to approve the government’s revenue measures in the spring of 1648 was the catalyst for the first Fronde which was called, the Fronde of the Parlement.
The frondeurs wanted to put a constitutional limit on the monarchy by establishing its power to discuss and modify royal decrees. The government at war with Spain felt pressured to accept the terms since they lacked sufficient power to fight as most of their army was occupied in Spain. Conti´s sister Anne-Genevieve, Duchess de Longueville was the guiding spirit of the first
Fronde, when she convinced the nineteen Conti of the just cause of the frondeurs and he subsequently played a conspicuous part in the intrigues and fighting of the
Fronde. In 1648 he became the commander-in-chief of the rebel army, but by January 1649, Conti's brother Condé returned from Spain joined the cause of the government and besieged Paris. The two warring parties signed the
Peace of Rueil (11 March 1649) which granted amnesty to the rebels and confirmed the concessions to Parlement. Conti tried rallying the Parisians in asking for aid from Spain but they refused and with this the frondeurs had to lay down arms and submit to the government. The peace of Rueil lasted until the end of 1649.
Second Fronde The princes, welcomed at court again again, began to plot against Mazarin. Cardinal Mazarin, having come to an understanding with Monsieur Gondi and Madame de Chevreuse, had Conti, his brother Condé and brother-in-law (Longueville) arrested, on January 18, 1650, at the same time in a gallery of the
Louvre Palace, where they had been lured under various pretexts. They were then taken to be imprisoned in the donjon at
Vincennes. The person in charge of guarding them was captain Guy de Bar, who had been given a hundred men to guard them and was said to treat his prisoners very harshly. They were then taken on Château de Marcoussis where they arrived 15 November 1650 and after this to Fort du Havre on 25 November.
Life in prison Conti, his brother and their brother-in-law de Longuevilles imprisonment in the
Chateau de Vincennes would be prove to be an ordeal for the young prince, and during the earlier days of captivity Conti would keep to his bed and cry. Said to be "mystic" and "full of strange ideas", Conti turned slightly mad while in prison. (this might have been a symptom of the syphilis which would lead to his death) Having a secret passion for his sister the
Duchess of Longueville, he invented tricks to make her notice him. He would later like her become a fervent jansenist. He tried
alchemy and potions for some time and eventually bruised himself with a
spatula. This episode was ultimately fortunate for him because he could no longer be refused external help from physicians, some of whom would pass letters and pleas to the outside world which sped up his eventual release. The sister of the brothers, the Duchess de Longueville, having fled to avoid capture turned to
Turenne and begged him for aid and he resolved to rescue her brothers. The Fronde of the Princes, the second Fronde began in early 1650 and was unlike the first Fronde which dealt with constitutional issues, instead it was opportunistically motivated the result was a web of intrigues, rivalries, and ever-shifting allegiances. One common factor among the aristocratic rebels was opposition to Mazarin and his influence over government. Conti´s brother Condé, disappointed in his hope for political power became rebellious. Conti, his brother and brother-in-law were released early in February 1651, and by the spring the rebellion was over. Condé, and what was left of his army decided to enter the service of the king of Spain.
Third Fronde Conti and the Comte de Marsin were left as the Condes representatives in Guyenne while Condé, reinforced by the troops of the Duke of Orleans, advanced on the royalist army at Bleneau.The Grand Condé was arrested after paying a visit to the Anne of Austria, and yet again confined at Vincennes, and then imprisoned at Nantes, from where he managed to escape. Condé forced into exile and sentenced to execution in his absence was not able to return to France until after the death of Cardinal Mazarin. Conti on the other took refuge in Bordeaux and he capitulated on 31 July 1653 and obtained permission to retire to Languedoc, to Pézenas in his castle of La Grange-des-Prés. Released when
Cardinal Mazarin went into exile, Conti wished to marry Charlotte-Marie de Lorraine (1627–1652), the second daughter of
Madame de Chevreuse, the confidante of the queen,
Anne of Austria (wife of King
Louis XIII), but was prevented from doing so by his brother Condé, who was now supreme in the state. == Marriage ==