A Popular History of France 
From The
by Francois Pierre 
Guillaume Guizot 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Popular History of France From 
The 
Earliest Times, by Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot This eBook is for 
the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions 
whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms 
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Title: A Popular History of France From The Earliest Times Volume V. 
of VI. 
Author: Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot 
Release Date: April 8, 2004 [EBook #11955] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY 
OF FRANCE, V5 *** 
 
Produced by David Widger
HISTORY OF FRANCE 
BY M. GUIZOT 
 
VOLUME V. 
LIST OF STEEL ENGRAVINGS: 
CASTLE OF PAU FRONTISPIECE. 
GABRIELLE D'ESTREES 130 
MARIE DE MEDICI. 147 
RICHELIEU. 180 
LOUIS XIV. 344 
TURENNE. 444 
 
LIST OF WOOD-CUT ILLUSTRATIONS. 
Henry IV. 11 
Henry IV. at Ivry 26 
"Do not lose Sight of my White Plume." 30 
Rosny Castle 30 
Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma 32 
Charles de Lorraine, Duke of Mayenne 35 
Sully 37
Lemaitre, Mayenne, and the Archbishop of Lyons 53 
Henry IV.'s Abjuration 56 
The Castle of Monceaux 91 
The Castle of St. Germain in the Reign of Henry IV. 107 
The Castle of Fontainbleau 124 
Henry IV. and his Ministers 138 
The Arsenal in the Reign of Henry IV. 143 
The Louvre 145 
Concini, Leonora Galigai, and Mary de' Medici 149 
Louis XIII. and Albert de Luynes 154 
Murder of Marshal d'Ancre 155 
Double Duel 188 
"Tapping with his Finger-tips on the Window-pane." 191 
Henry, Duke of Montmorency, at Castelnaudary 199 
The King and the Cardinal 204 
Cinq-Mars and De Thou going to Execution 215 
The Parliament of Paris reprimanded 217 
The Barefoots 221 
The Abbot of St. Cyran 234 
Demolishing the Fortifications 244
The Harbor of La Rochelle 248 
The King and Richelieu at La Rochelle 250 
John Guiton's Oath 254 
The Defile of Suza Pass 278 
Richelieu and Father Joseph 280 
Gustavus Adolphus 282 
Death of Gustavus and his Page 290 
The Palais-Cardinal 305 
The Tomb of Richelieu 308 
Descartes at Amsterdam 316 
The King's Press 323 
Peter Corneille 334 
The Representation of "the Cid." 335 
Corneille at the Hotel Rambouillet 342 
The Great Conde 348 
Arrest of Broussel 352 
Cardinal de Retz 352 
"Ah, Wretch, if thy Father saw thee!" 354 
President Mole 355 
The Great Mademoiselle 373
Anne of Austria and Cardinal Mazarin 394 
Death of Mazarin. 399 
Fouquet 404 
Vaux le Vicomte 405a 
Colbert 405 
Louis XIV. dismissing Fouquet 407 
Louvois 411 
William III., Prince of Orange 434 
The Brothers Witt 436 
Death of Turenne 443 
An Exploit of John Bart's 446 
Duquesne victorious over Ruyter 446 
Marshal Luxembourg 461a 
Heinsius 461 
Battle of St. Vincent 465a 
The Battle of Neerwinden 465 
"Here is the King of Spain." 475 
News for William III. 481 
Bivouac of Louis XIV. 503 
The Grand Dauphin 505
Marshal Villars and Prince Eugene 512 
Marly 525 
Colonnade of the Louvre 525a 
The Louvre and the Tuileries 525b 
Versailles 526 
Vauban 534 
The Torture of the Huguenots 552 
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes 556 
Death of Roland the Camisard 569 
Abbey of Port-Royal 580 
Reading the Decree 581 
Bossuet 591 
Blaise Pascal 597 
Fenelon and the Duke of Burgundy 610 
La Rochefoucauld and his fair Friends 629 
La Bruyere 633 
Corneille reading to Louis XIV. 642 
Racine 646 
Boileau-Despreaux 650 
La Fontaine, Boileau, Moliere, and Racine 657
Moliere 664 
Death of Moliere 669 
Lebrun 674 
Le Poussin and Claude Lorrain 675 
Lesueur 676 
Mignard 677 
Perrault 678 
 
A POPULAR HISTORY OF FRANCE FROM THE EARLIEST 
TIMES. 
CHAPTER XXXV. 
----HENRY IV., PROTESTANT KING. (1589-1593.) 
On the 2d of August, 1589, in the morning, upon his arrival in his 
quarters at Meudon, Henry of Navarre was saluted by the Protestants 
King of France. They were about five thousand in an army of forty 
thousand men. When, at ten o'clock, he entered the camp of the 
Catholics at St. Cloud, three of their principal leaders, Marshal 
d'Aumont, and Sires d'Humieres and de Givry, immediately 
acknowledged him unconditionally, as they had done the day before at 
the death-bed of Henry III., and they at once set to work to conciliate to 
him the noblesse of Champagne, Picardy, and Ile-de-France. "Sir," said 
Givry, "you are the king of the brave; you will be deserted by none but 
dastards." But the majority of the Catholic leaders received him with 
such expressions as, "Better die than endure a Huguenot king!" One of 
them, Francis d'O, formally declared to him that the time had come for 
him to choose between the insignificance of a King of Navarre and the 
grandeur of a King of France; if he pretended to    
    
		
	
	
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