's painting ''
Louis d'Orléans Showing His Mistress'' , long-term mistress of Emperor
Pedro I of Brazil The historically best known and most-researched mistresses are the
royal mistresses of European
monarchs, for example,
Agnès Sorel,
Diane de Poitiers,
Barbara Villiers,
Nell Gwyn,
Madame de Montespan, and
Madame de Pompadour. The keeping of a mistress in Europe was not confined to
royalty and
nobility, but permeated down through the social ranks, essentially to any man who could afford to do so. Any man who could afford a mistress could have one (or more), regardless of social position. A wealthy
merchant or a young noble might have had a kept woman. Being a mistress was typically an occupation for a younger woman who, if she were fortunate, might go on to marry her lover or another man of rank. The ballad "
The Three Ravens" (published in 1611, but possibly older) extolls the loyal mistress of a slain
knight, who buries her dead lover and then dies of the exertion, as she was in an advanced stage of pregnancy. The ballad-maker assigned this role to the knight's mistress ("leman" was the term common at the time) rather than to his wife. In the
courts of Europe, particularly
Versailles and
Whitehall in the 17th and 18th centuries, a mistress often wielded great power and influence. A king might have numerous mistresses but have a single "favourite mistress" or "official mistress" (in French,
maîtresse-en-titre), as with
Louis XV and
Madame de Pompadour. The mistresses of both Louis XV (especially Madame de Pompadour) and
Charles II were often considered to exert great influence over their lovers, the relationships being
open secrets. Other than wealthy merchants and kings,
Alexander VI is but one example of a
Pope who kept mistresses. While the extremely wealthy might keep a mistress for life (as
George II of Great Britain did with "
Mrs Howard", even after they were no longer romantically linked), such was not the case for most kept women. In 1736, when George II was newly ascendant,
Henry Fielding (in
Pasquin) has his Lord Place say, "[...] but, miss, every one now keeps and is kept; there are no such things as marriages now-a-days, unless merely Smithfield contracts, and that for the support of families; but then the husband and wife both take into keeping within a fortnight". Occasionally the mistress is in a superior position both financially and socially to her lover. As a widow,
Catherine the Great was known to have been involved with several successive men during her reign; but, like many powerful women of her era, in spite of being a widow free to marry, she chose not to share her power with a husband, preferring to maintain absolute power alone. In literature,
D. H. Lawrence's 1928 novel ''
Lady Chatterley's Lover'' portrays a situation where a woman becomes the mistress of her husband's
gamekeeper. Until recently, a woman's taking a socially inferior lover was considered much more shocking than the reverse situation.
20th century As
divorce became more socially acceptable, it was easier for men to divorce their wives and marry the women who, in earlier years, might have been their mistresses. The practice of having a mistress continued among some married men, especially the wealthy. Occasionally, men married their mistresses.
Sacha Guitry declared, "When you marry your mistress, you create a job vacancy". == In literature ==