Opening address On 26 January the Estates were opened at the Louvre in the
salle des États. The location was symbolic, adjacent to the vacant king's apartments on the first floor of the building. Mayenne gave the opening address of the Estates, stressing the importance of establishing a Catholic king for France. He praised the
ligue for the work they had done to save France since 1588 and announced his willingness to lay down his life in protection of the Catholic religion and state. Mayenne was not a gifted orator, and his muttered address was barely heard by the assembled delegates. His speech was followed by one given by Cardinal Pellevé who argued in support of Philip, greatly alienating a considerable portion of the assembled delegates. In attendance alongside the delegates was the Papal Legate
the Cardianl de Piacenza, and a Spanish delegation. The Papal Legate struggled to get his credentials as 'protector of the kingdom' recognised, and therefore was not able to participate in the opening debate and had to join several days later. Only half of the delegates themselves had yet arrived, due to the problems on the roads, and therefore business proper would not get going until 4 February.
Spanish campaign In March, the new Spanish commander
the count of Mansfeld entered the Paris region, marching on the royalist held
Noyon, a town near Paris and seizing it on 30 March. Philip envisioned that Mansfeld's proximate presence to the Estates would encourage them towards adopting the correct candidate for the throne.
Spanish speech On 2 April the Spanish ambassador, the
duke of Feria, presented their credentials to the Estates. He was greeted in an almost royal fashion, with a delegation of senior grandees from the Estates awaiting his arrival, among them Mayenne's son and Cardinal Pellevé. Feria and Pellevé entered the Estates chamber, each taking a seat on opposite sides of a vacant throne that had been set up. He introduced himself with a speech in which he expounded on how Spain had supported France over the centuries. Unable to speak French the speech was delivered in Latin. This point was finished with the recent relief Spain had provided to the cities of Paris and Rouen during their respective sieges, and the vast sums of money Philip had expended in support of the Catholic
ligue. This was too much for some in the Estates, and Cardinal Pellevé rose to expound upon the thousand year long services France had given to Spain all the way back to the time of
king Clovis. France's service to Spain could be witnessed even in more recent times, as when
Bertrand du Guesclin had installed their present dynasty on the throne with the overthrow of
Pedro of Castile. Pellevé then in turn alienated many deputies when he stated that Philip would surely find in the afterlife the many grateful French he had saved from damnation by his noble services towards Catholicism.
Royalist response Henri was naturally hostile to the
ligueur Estates, however he recognised the necessity of working with the body. To this end, while not recognising the Estates as a legitimate convention of the body, he offered talks between the deputies and his agents. Entreaties to this effect were made on 27 January in which the
ligueurs were invited to meet to seek a reconciliation. In a follow up declaration on 29 January Henri declared the Estates General illegal and any decisions it undertook invalid. His advisor
D'Aubigné decried the Estates as lacking almost any nobles of worth, with not a single prince of the blood, Marshal or Chancellor in attendance. He further compared the gathering to the
Estates General of 1420 that had granted the French throne to the English. The ultra faction of the deputies were appalled by such a proposal to meet with Henri but the Estates at large voted to undertake the talks. The main body of the Estates found themselves alienated from the ultras and disapproving of their socially inferior status, pushing them towards negotiations with the king. The vote was taken on 26 February, while Mayenne was away from the Estates, and resulted in the decision to send a delegation. Despite agreeing to talks with the Estates, Henri did not want his foreign allies to be under any illusion as to the validity of the body. Therefore, he wrote to
Venezia, denouncing the body as a 'reckless and insolent enterprise'. On March 6 the royal camp received the terms of the Estates for the conduct of talks. Keen to maintain their face, the address was directed specifically at the royalist Catholics around Henri, and not the king himself.
Suresne On 29 April a delegation from the Estates met Henri's agents at
Suresnes and were successful in arranging a ten-day truce. Representing the
ligueur estates were
the archbishop of Lyon,
the bishop of Avranches, Jean le Maistre (a parlementaire) and Étienne Bernard. Mayenne added onto the Estates chosen delegates his own men: the former secretary of state
Villeroy,
the ligueur governor of Rouen and future Admiral Villars,
the ligueur governor of Paris Belin. For the royalist delegation, the
ligueur Estates vetoed the participation of
the bishop of Le Mans, as he was known to support toleration. Therefore, the king selected
the archbishop of Bourges, chancellor
Pomponne de Bellièvre,
Gaspard de Schomberg,
Rambouillet a former favourite of Henri III and the royalist
Parlementaire Jacques Auguste de Thou. When the
ligueur regime of Paris, known as the
Seize (named for the Sixteen districts of the city) learned of the negotiations underway at Suresnes they were horrified. They quickly undertook to push the Estates towards 'their true business', which was to elect a king. The Papal legate at the Estates was also horrified, but was unable to stop the meeting. On the matter of the truce negotiated at Suresnes, both the Second and Third Estate voted for its adoption, while the First refused to support it. The
Seize, increasingly frustrated, attempted to organise another uprising, as they had in 1588, and appealed to Philip to intervene. The archbishop of Bourges and archbishop of Lyon led the discussion, which began as a debate over the rights to the crown. Bourges succeeded in getting Lyon to say that the
ligues only objection to Henri was his religion. This would pave the way for the declaration of 17 May.
Conversion abjures at the
Basilica of Saint-Denis On 17 May Henri provided a further sabotage to the Estates when the archbishop of Bourges announced Henri's intentions to abjure Protestantism and become Catholic. The archbishop of Lyon, still present at Suresnes was shocked and managed only to say that he hoped the conversion was a true one and not an attempt to deceive Catholic France. Henri would formally abjure on 24 July, attending mass at
Saint-Denis the following day. This conversion would not be sufficient for the hardliners, but would further fracture the
ligueur movement.
Fourth Estate Mayenne was frustrated by the continued discord in the
ligue, and to this end sought to undermine the bourgeois
ligue by a proposal in May to establish a Fourth Estate. These members, unlike the rest of the Estates, would not be elected, and rather drawn directly from the senior French magistracy. He hoped through this proposal to garner an Estates with more legitimacy, and one that was easier for him to control. The Estates baulked at this proposal to create a new Estate. One prelate denounced it as an attempt to 'create a monster in our state'.
Noble claimants Meanwhile, the Estates began to consider the various candidates for king. There were a considerable number of French princes who held ambitions in that regard. Among them were
the duke of Lorraine and his son the
marquis du Pont;
the duke of Nemours representing the house of Savoie (though
the duke of Savoy also had interest); the young duke of Guise,
the duke of Mercœur, Mayenne himself and his son
the baron d'Aiguillon for the cadet
house of Lorraine descended from
the first duke of Guise. During May, Mayenne also undertook secret negotiations with the nominally royalist
Cardinal Bourbon, nephew of the first Cardinal Bourbon about him succeeding his uncle as
ligueur king through a marriage to the Infanta. Cardinal Bourbon had not yet received his orders, and it was therefore possible for him to cast them off and become a secular prince. His candidacy was only pushed half heartedly by some involved, who were using it largely to pressure Henri's conversion. Of these men, only du Pont and Nemours had a recent Valois heritage to offer. However many of the men's claims was based on descent through the line of a woman, which violated Salic Law. Other candidates looked to a marriage with the Infanta to validate their claims. In the hopes of coming to a consensus as to who to push on the Estates, the Lorraine-Guise family met at Reims in late April for a family conference. In the six day conference that followed both the young duke of Guise and du Pont were popular candidates, however Mayenne was uninterested in providing his backing to either man. No agreement was therefore reached by the time the conference dissolved and Mayenne returned to the Estates.
Infanta It was on the subject of the Infanta that the Spanish representatives worked to continue to alienate the Estates on 16 May, with their proposals towards her rights to the throne and denunciations of
Salic Law as a non-fundamental component of the French state. This time their entreaties were directed by Jean Baptiste de Taxis, who unlike Feria could speak French, he was joined by Don Iñigo de Mendoza who broke down the fallibility of Salic Law in a Latin address. He also reassured the delegates that Philip had enough kingdoms already, and had no designs to claim the French one for himself. This earned the rebuke of several
Parlementaire deputies present, among them Edouard Molé, Le Maistre and Du Vair. Even
Parlementaires of more solidly
ligueur inclination like Hacqueville found it difficult to countenance. They protested to the Estates against the Spanish remarks. Also among those who objected was Guillaume de Rose, the bishop of Senlis. One deputy opined that if Salic Law was not fundamental to the law of France, then all the Valois kings were illegitimate and they should be ruled by the English crown. By contrast those delegates aligned with the
Seize were open to the idea of inheritance being derived through the Infanta.
Bribery In the hopes of furthering their position at the Estates, Spanish money was given to many deputies, while the ambassadors continued to cajole the deputies. The Spanish position was however undermined by their poverty, with only 30,000
livres to spread around as opposed to the 200,000 initially promised for the purpose of bribery. 11,148
écus would be given to First Estate delegates, 8,180 to the Third Estate and 4720 to the Second, far too small sums to achieve their desired objectives. Bribes were also offered to the various captains of Paris to ensure their loyalty to Spain. The Spanish had difficult with resistance to accepting their bribes, many proving uninterested. This campaign of bribery was too much for Mayenne who protested.
Austrian match On 12 June one of the Spanish delegates went further, provocatively arguing that instead of marrying a French prince, the Infanta as queen of France could marry a Habsburg,
the archduke of Austria. To sweeten the pot on this proposal, the Spanish pointed out, that given the
Holy Roman Emperor presently lacked an heir, this would likely mean France's new king would succeed to the position and rule both kingdoms. This aroused further outrage from the majority of the Estates. The prospect of electing two foreigners to the throne was even too much for many of the
Seize deputies. The proposal was formally rejected by the Estates on 18 June. Mayenne intervened to ask the Estates to request that the Infanta be given a French husband. He proposed his own son, though this was shot down by the Estates, with some walking out. It was by now too late for Mayenne to re-secure the loyalty of the
Parlementaire moderate
ligueurs, Du Vair and many of the
Île de France deputies had walked out. Back in the Paris
Parlement, the returned deputies set about sabotaging the Estates. On 28 June the
Parlement issued a decree in which they defended Salic Law as a fundamental law of the kingdom and established that the crown could never be given to a foreign prince as such a treaty would be void in violation of the laws of the kingdom. Both Mayenne and the
Seize denounced the decree.
Guise match The Spanish considered the
Parlements declaration to be null and therefore pressed on with their efforts regarding the Infanta. Recognising that they had perhaps gone too far, the Spanish returned in early July with a new proposal, the Infanta could marry the popular French prince, the duke of Guise. They had missed their moment however, and the Estates, which might a month earlier have supported such a proposal, were no longer interested in hearing their entreaties. A majority in both the Second and Third Estate had by this point decided that it was not their place to elect a king. This was motivated both by changing opinions among the
ligueur leadership as to the succession, and more material factors, Henri possessed a large army that was a not inconsiderable distance from Paris. In mid June Henri besieged and captured
Dreux to drive home the point. Mayenne and the duke of Lorraine were also largely uninterested in this proposal. Mayenne proposed to the Spanish a list of demands for his acceptance of the candidacy of the young Guise which would have left him as the true power in France with his nephew as little but a figurehead. Among his demands was hereditary control of Bourgogne, the lieutenant-generalcy of the kingdom, control of Picardie during his lifetime and a large amount of money. Nemours dismissed Guise as a "young fool who has his mother to help him get ahead". Mayenne's wife referred to the prince as a "little boy who still needs a spanking". These internal divisions in the Lorraine family would greatly benefit Henri. Even Guise, who stood to become king in this proposal did not take it particularly seriously. By late July Mayenne informed the Spanish that at this point he would only proceed with trying to push through the election of an alternate king if a sizable Spanish army could be provided in the area of Paris. On 31 July 1593 a truce was reached between
Henri and Mayenne with an initial planned duration of three months.
Tridentine decrees With little being accomplished towards electing a king, the Estates turned to the matter of ratifying the
Tridentine Decrees, which pleased the
ligueur clergy. This was passed by the Estates on 30 July, despite the uniform opposition of the Parisian Third Estate. The Estates would meet as a whole body for the final time on 8 August, at which point they were technically extended into October. This done Mayenne proceeded to prorogue the Estates. While some deputies would remain in the capital until December, the Estates were over. ==Legacy==