Catherine de' Medici and the lost revolution
by Ralph Roeder
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Finally finished this one. It took me longer mostly due to the number of characters involved during Queen Catherine's regency. This aroused my interest in French history. For me it was a hard read at time. The Appendix and Bibliography may be useful in the pursuit of a rounded understanding of what is taking place in Catherine's time. This book was a good intro for me to the Medici family of Italy. I look forward to readiing more about the various players in Queen Catherine's life. She had been presented to me as a manipulator (politician?), but with the final paragraphs I came to respect her as a mother looking out for the welfare of her children just like some moms do today.
1659 Catherine de' Medici and the Lost Reformation, by Ralph Roeder (read 1 Sep 1981) Only after I had read this whole book did I notice on the front page "Second Edition, Abridged." I never knowingly read abridged books and if I had noticed those words I never would have read this book. The book itself says "it is not intended as a book of reference"--it is just a retelling, from a biased point of view, of the events which occurred in France during the life of Catherine de Medici, who was born Apr 13, 1519, and died Jan 5 1589. After reading this I am surfeited so far as the period from 1540 to 1589 is concerned. It was really a mess--and religion was only a pretext for many of the things that went on. This book was tedious, show more opinionated, and turgid (what more would have been in the unabridged edition?) but I read it with interest. show less
This older biography of Catherine does not bear up well against more modern scholarship. It should not be one's only source when reading about this fascinating and complex woman.
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- Original publication date
- 1937-01
- People/Characters
- Catherine de Medici; Henri II, King of France (1519-1559); François II, King of France; Charles IX, King of France
- Important places
- France
- First words
- Money is sterile. Of all the teachings of the primitive church none was more stubborn: it lasted well into the Renaissance, confound it. Everywhere the evidence was overwhelming; everywhere the teeming fertility of money w... (show all)as transforming the world; but still the old prohibition stood. Pecunia pecuniam non parere potest. Money cannot breed money; money is a medium, not an agent, and by its nature unproductive....
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Two hundred years later France and the world were ripe for the refolution of 1789. But again one oppression passes to be replaced by another. Political democracy is seen to be nothing without economic democracy. It has remained for our own day to attack the fundamental question which had it been the first instead of the last to be reached, might have spared the world the other two. Lurking in the sixteenth century, swelling in the eighteenth, it embraces the world today. But of our own revolution who will say that it is the last? Nothing endures, nothing is certain but change. Who knew that better than Catherine de' Medici? And her anguish has long since turned to indifference. The peacemaker has found peace, sleeping in the bosom of the whirling sphere, deep in the dust and the certitude of everlasting negation. The End.
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, History, Biography & Memoir, General Nonfiction
- DDC/MDS
- 923.144 — History & geography Biographies, Genealogy, Healdry Unique Notables Heads Of State Europe
- LCC
- DC119.8 .R6 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania France – Andorra – Monaco History of France Modern, 1515- 1515-1589. 16th century
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