Intellectual interests The new king was intellectually more curious than his young predecessors, and liked to hear philosophical discussions and debates, these lectures became known as the
Académie du Palais, and Nevers was an infrequent attendee of these intellectual discourses. His wife Henriette also frequented them on occasion The new king was keen on theatre, this worked well with Nevers, who in 1571 had invited the first troop of Italian players into Paris. Nevers became one of the important patrons of the arts and sciences in 16th-century France. Though a close friend of the new king, he remained strongly connected to his former patron Catherine, and as her personal influence declined with the king, he and Retz could often be relied to champion her views during council discussions. The La Marcks had held the governorship of Normandie for some time, however in 1574
Henri-Robert de la Marck died. Henri was beset by demands from his powerful nobles seeking to secure the office as replacement. Nevers claimed that while the king had been in the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth he had promised Nevers the office, and when Henri refused to grant it to him he flew into a rage and departed court. Henri would settle on splitting the key governorship into three instead, to dilute the power of the office.
Alençon After Alençon fled from court to join with the Malcontents, Henri struggled to find a commander to bring the young prince back to court. Eventually he turned to Nevers as his man for the job, a decision which was met with much laughter at court, due to the duke's war injuries that left him with a limp. Alençon travelled north to
Dreux where he laid out the manifesto of his rebellion against the crown, lambasting his brother for relying on Italian advisers like Nevers for his administration. He began mustering forces at Dreux, far outmatching those that Nevers had brought with him to escort the prince back to the capital. Unable to militarily confront the prince he wrote to Catherine and Henri, explaining that his mission was not possible without reinforcements. His small force was also deteriorating, suffering defections to Alençon's camp in the days they faced off against one another. Catherine at first suggested to him trying to kidnap Alençon via covert means to avoid a direct confrontation, she then abandoned this policy. Catherine decided to negotiate personally with her son, who had now departed Dreux towards the
Loire. Nevers who had been following the prince, was instructed to go no further than
Chartres and hold back while the queen mother negotiated. He would have no further military engagements with Alençon.
Ligueur The fifth war of religion was brought to a close with the generous
Peace of Monsieur which was highly favourable to the Protestants, in the hopes of re-securing Alençon's loyalty to the crown. Militant Catholics reacted with disgust to the terms, and Nevers was among those who pushed for Henri to overturn the peace and ensure that there was only one religion in France. Nevers did not however exert much of his energies against the specifics of the piece as they related to a town of his,
Mézières being given as surety to Condé, alienating much of the area from him and sending it into the arms of the local Guise clients. Catherine listened to Nevers' demands for a resumption of war frustratedly, trying to impart to him that while she and her son supported a sole religion, the financial situation of the kingdom simply couldn't support a war to achieve that. The
Estates General of 1576, called as a term of the peace, and the vote of the council, forced Henri to follow Nevers' advice and re-open war. Indeed, Nevers spoke passionately at the estates, conjuring up the language of a crusade in his urgings for France to expunge heresy. At this time, Nevers was heavily in debt, with creditors through the
Parlements such as the Séguiers, but he was soon to be bailed out of his financial situation by his patron Catherine, ensuring in future his greater loyalty to the crown.
Sixth war of religion In conflict once more, Henri decided the now loyal Alençon would lead the royal army against the Protestants. As a symbol of the reunited Valois dynasty. Alençon lacked much in the way of military skill however, so real authority in the army would rest with Nevers, supported by Guise and Mayenne. Indeed, the king instructed Nevers to keep Alençon safely away from any place on the field that might be in danger. Throughout this period Catherine was desperately seeking a way to achieve peace, Nevers remained in opposition to such a policy. The army under Nevers command laid siege to La Charité, on the Loire, the site in which Nevers' soldiers had committed a massacre back in 1572. The army was of considerable size, however the bankrupt crown struggled to keep it in the field, with Henri writing to Nevers to ensure our 'deniers are used sparingly.' By late April 1577 Alençon wrote urgently to the king speaking of the plight of their men. Nevertheless, by 2 May the city surrendered, quickly falling prey to the starved and unpaid men of Nevers' army which brutally sacked the town. Alençon was received in glory when he returned to court, fêted and given all the credit for a victory the king had made sure he wasn't involved in. It was decided to continue the offensive on 8 May towards
Issoire in the
Auvergne. By now the royal army was only 5000 strong, and tried at first to negotiate with the city leaders, they were uninterested however, describing the siege as a violation of the peace edict. Keen to make an example of the town, the king instructed Nevers to proceed with a siege, and after 2 weeks of bombardment, the town was captured. Scenes of great brutality accompanied its fall, as every Protestant house in the town was burned to the ground, while the soldiers went about raping and murdering the inhabitants. The army, now numbering 2000 men continued on into the
Limousin, Nevers complaining to the king in letters about his lack of ammunition and his troops unwillingness to fight. The city of Limoges, keen to avoid the presence of these troops within its walls, offered the army 30,000 not to billet in the city. The king urged him to accept, and admitted he could not pay the army any more. Nevers and the remaining troops were recalled from the field. While the army had achieved several successes on the Loire, it was unable to make much headway against the main Protestant centres, and the king came to terms with them in the harsher
Treaty of Bergerac in September 1577. Nevers was among the grandees who gathered in 1583 at the personal invitation of the king for an Assembly of Notables. 68 Notables in total attended to discuss reform programs for the kingdom. The intended course of the sessions was derailed however, by the Cardinal de Bourbon who fell on his knees and begged the king to restore singular Catholic worship in the kingdom. Some progress was derived from the discussions however, and it was agreed that Henri would curb the extravagant expenditure that he had bestowed upon his favourites in the prior decade. In general the king was reinforced in his desire to reduce the spending required to upkeep the court.
Second ligue At the foundation of the second
ligue in 1584, it was hoped by Guise and
Philip II of Spain that Nevers would be amenable to participating, and as such a place was reserved for him among the leadership of the group. The
ligue aimed to block the right of succession of the Protestant Navarre to the French throne, now being next in line after the death of the king's brother Alençon. Unable to suppress his views on the succession he joined the
ligue in 1584, but was not involved in any military operations, despite having been named commander of a
ligue army in 1584. He and the king were in unison in their opposition to Guise's usurpation of the governor of the town of Mézières, when he replaced the governor with his own man, however Guise refused to back down. While the king would eventually satisfy himself with the new reality in the town, Nevers continued to angle for the prior office holder, succeeding in installing him in 1587. After the
Treaty of Flaix in 1585 in which the king capitulated to the
ligue Catherine was able to negotiate his departure from it, restoring his loyalty to the crown. After this point he remained loyal to the crown when faced with its successor. As such when Henri faced off with the
ligueur Charles, Duke of Aumale who was trying to seize
Boulogne as a staging ground for the
Spanish Armada, the king appointed Nevers as governor of
Picardie to replace the recently deceased
Prince of Condé confident that he would reliably support the crown against Aumale's influence in the region. The
ligueurs refused to hand over the towns of
Douellens or
Le Crotoy to him. This appointment proved brief however, and in January 1589, he was relieved of the office in favour of
Henri I d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville, the son of
Léonor d'Orléans who had governed Picardie from 1569 to 1573, and who was descended from the Valois through the
bastard of Orléans. In return for yielding the office, Nevers was offered the governorship of Champagne. He accepted, though he demanded that it be in the name of his son, as such while he governed Champagne, it would be his son who formerly held the office until his death, when his son unified the theoretical and practical control of the region. To support him and his son as lieutenant-general of the region, Joachim de Dinteville was maintained, largely able to act as governor in his own right, due to the absence of the Gonzague from the province. In August 1587, the king outlined how he planned to personally lead the army against the Protestant
reiters who were crossing the border into France in support of Navarre. All of his council virulently opposed the suggestion, arguing it was far too dangerous. Nevers however stood alone in support of the proposal, arguing that if the king secured a victory against the Protestant mercenaries that it would disarm the ability of Guise to claim pre-eminence as a defender of Catholicism. The king liked this idea and sent Guise with inadequate forces to block the German approach while he commanded the main body. His plan did not proceed as expected however, the German army began to disintegrate after crossing into France and was picked off by Guise in two battles.
Guise The
Estates General of 1588 required the presence of Guise, as such he abdicated his command of the army in Poitou to Nevers while he went to attend to the sessions, hoping they would support his
ligueur proposals against the king. The king faced a
ligueur assembly and was compelled into humiliating concessions. In return the Estates granted him a small sum of 120,000
livres while offering 100,000
livres directly to the armies under Mayenne and Nevers. With the various humiliations forced upon him by the Guise and
Ligue the king resolved to have them killed. In December 1588 his assassination plot fired, and the duke of Guise was murdered while attending a council session. The cardinal de Guise meanwhile was aggressively interrogated by the king's men, and confessed under duress that there was a plan for Nevers and other Catholic notables to capture the king.
Collapse of royal authority In the wake of these assassinations, Paris rose up and declared for the
ligue. The new
ligue administration of the city, the 'sixteen', urged Nevers to join them. After several weeks he responded, informing the
ligue that he was of course sympathetic to their desires for a country free of heresy, but chastising them for trying to achieve it in defiance of the king. He highlighted recent reversals for the Catholic cause in Europe, at the
Battle of Coutras, the
Spanish Armada and other defeats, informing the city that these were gods punishment for internal Catholic divisions. He warned the city that if they continued in this manner, France might face a ruin akin to that of the
Byzantine Empire. The sixteen shot back that if he continued to be loyal to the king his honour would be tarnished, but he refused to entertain their advances. The late dukes wife
Catherine de Clèves was equally optimistic Nevers might be a tool against the 'monster' who had murdered her husband, however he rebuffed her advances also. His vassal town in Rethel, that of Mézières informed him that he had to declare his intentions, or else the town would declare for the
ligue, he allowed the deadline to expire and the town joined the 'holy union'. The king licked his wounds in
Tours as his situation spiralled out of control. Many of his advisors urged him to come to terms with Navarre, forming an alliance against the
ligue. Nevers bitterly opposed such suggestions, outlining a picture of a ruined lawless France where Catholicism was illegal if such an alliance came to pass. Henri ignored these warnings, deciding to come to terms with his heir. Nevers in disgust departed the court, however he merely retired to his estates, not entering the
ligue camp. From his home in the Nivernois he promised Henri he was still loyal and that he would suffer the afflictions god would send to him for his sins of remaining loyal to the crown. The two maintained contact over the following months By June Nevers had become aware of plots to kill the king, writing in disgust to a friend of the wicked and sinful schemes to harm the lawful king. The following month Henri would be assassinated by the radical Catholic
Jacques Clément. ==Reign of Henri IV==