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On 12 August, at Gien, he appointed his mother as regent for the second time. Four days later, however, he received a letter from Louis de Brézé, sénéchal of Normandy, warning him of a treason plot by the Constable of Bourbon.

      Charles duc de Bourbon was Francis I’s most powerful vassal. He owned three duchies, seven counties, two vicomtés and seven seigneuries. All these territories, save three, formed a compact bloc in central France. In addition to his French fiefs, Bourbon also had three lordships within the Holy Roman Empire, making him the vassal of both the emperor and the king of France. Within his domain he was virtually all-powerful: he raised troops, levied taxes, dispensed justice and summoned the estates. His chateau at Moulins was one of the finest in France. As constable, Bourbon had charge of the king’s army in peacetime: he enforced discipline, supervised supplies, appointed commissioners of musters, authorized military expenditure and allocated troops to garrison towns. In wartime he commanded the army in the king’s absence or the vanguard in his presence. On ceremonial occasions he carried the king’s naked sword. Bourbon was also Grand chambrier, responsible for the smooth running of the king’s chamber, and governor of Languedoc, where he represented the king though he delegated his functions to a lieutenant. The duke was related to Francis by marriage, for his wife Suzanne was Louise of Savoy’s first cousin.

      Relations between Francis and Charles de Bourbon were good, if not intimate, during the first five years of the reign. No special significance need be attached to the fact that Bourbon was recalled from Milan in 1516 and replaced as lieutenant-general by Marshal Lautrec. He continued to appear at court fairly often. In 1521, however, he was not chosen to lead the vanguard during the campaign in northern France, his rightful place being taken by the king’s brother-in-law, Alençon. This was a snub, which it is tempting to link to the death of Bourbon’s wife in April of that year. She had made a will in her husband’s favour, which was challenged by the king and his mother.

      Charles de Bourbon belonged to the younger branch of the house founded in the fourteenth century by Robert de Clermont, sixth son of King Louis IX. In 1443 its lands were divided between the two sons of duc Jean I and it looked for a time as if the two branches would go their separate ways; but in 1488 the lands of the elder branch passed into the hands of Pierre de Beaujeu, who, having no son, bequeathed them to his daughter Suzanne. When she married Charles the lands of both branches were reunited. Even so, her inheritance comprised lands of three kinds: first, lands which had originally been detached from the royal demesne as apanages and which, in theory, were to revert to it on the extinction of the family for which they had been created; secondly, lands due to escheat to the crown in the event of a failure of the direct or male line; and thirdly, lands that could be passed on to heirs male or female, direct or collateral.

      In April 1522, Louise of Savoy claimed Suzanne’s inheritance as her first cousin and nearest blood relative. At the same time Francis claimed the return to the crown of all her fiefs that were only transmissible to male heirs. The two claims were contradictory, but Francis and his mother were obviously working towards the same end: the dismantling of the Bourbon demesne. As the duke was a peer of the realm, it was up to the parlement to decide the rights and wrongs of the various claims, but on 7 October, before it could pass judgement, Louise paid homage to the king for most of the disputed lands. By accepting her oath, he implicitly recognized her claim, and soon afterwards he gave her lands and revenues pertaining to the inheritance of Suzanne’s mother, Anne de France, who had died in November. On 6 August 1523 the parlement ordered the sequestration of Bourbon’s lands.

      The death of Suzanne had also created another problem. As her only son had died, Charles needed to remarry in order to perpetuate his line. At thirty-one he was a most eligible widower. Even in Suzanne’s lifetime he had been offered the hand of one of the emperor’s sisters, an offer that was now renewed. Such a marriage would seriously threaten the territorial integrity of France. At the same time, it seems, Bourbon found himself under pressure to marry a French princess of royal blood. Louise herself may have been a suitor. Be that as it may, the duke grew increasingly restless. Early in 1523, during a visit to Paris, he allegedly quarrelled with the king, who had accused him of planning a secret marriage. In fact, Bourbon had been dabbling in treason for some time.

      In August 1522 the imperial chamberlain, Beaurain, was informed that Bourbon was prepared to lead a rebellion and eight months later was empowered to negotiate with him on behalf of Charles V and Henry VIII. He met the constable secretly at Montbrison on 11 July and signed a treaty. Bourbon was promised the hand of one of Charles’s sisters and a dowry of 100,000 écus. The emperor was to invade Languedoc from Spain and place 10,000 landsknechts at Bourbon’s disposal. Henry was to invade Normandy and subsidize the constable to the tune of 100,000 écus. Bourbon’s plan was to wait for Francis to invade Italy, then to rise in his rear, using the emperor’s landsknechts. But news of the plot soon leaked out. Two noblemen informed their confessor, the bishop of Lisieux, who passed the information to Louis de Brézé. On 10 August he wrote the letter which Francis received as he was travelling south to join his army.

      The king’s reaction to the disclosure of Bourbon’s plot was remarkably cool. He went to Moulins with an armed escort and, finding the duke ill in bed, told him of the warning he had received. Pretending not to believe it, he made various promises to Bourbon on condition that he accompanied him to Italy. The constable agreed, but asked for time to recover from his illness. This was granted and the king continued his journey to Lyon. A few days later Bourbon left Moulins, only to turn back almost at once. On 6 September he met Henry VIII’s envoy, Sir John Russell, at Gayette and formalized his relations with England. By now Francis was convinced of the duke’s treason. On 5 September three of Bourbon’s accomplices – Jean de Poitiers, seigneur de Saint-Vallier, Antoine de Chabannes, bishop of Le Puy, and Aymar de Prie – were arrested. Two days later Bourbon, who had retired to the fortress of Chantelle, severed his allegiance. Next day he fled with a few companions and, after wandering through the mountains of Auvergne, crossed the Rhône into imperial territory.

      The plot had failed, but Francis was unsure of its extent. He decided to remain in France to face developments and handed over his command in Italy to Bonnivet. The wisdom of his change of plan was soon demonstrated when a large English army under the duke of Suffolk invaded Picardy on 19 September. Suffolk’s initial objective was Boulogne, but he was persuaded to march on Paris instead. By late October he was only fifty miles from the capital. Francis dispatched Philippe Chabot to reassure the panic-stricken population, but the English withdrew of their own accord. By mid-December they were back in Calais. Bourbon, meanwhile, prepared to invade Franche-Comté, but he failed to receive the landsknechts he had been promised by Charles V. So he retired to Italy, hoping eventually to join the emperor in Spain.

      In the meantime, a special commission was set up by Francis to try Bourbon’s accomplices. The four judges were ordered to use torture if necessary to gain information and to mete out exemplary punishments to all the plotters save the constable, whose fate was reserved to the king’s judgement. The commissioners thought the parlement was the appropriate tribunal, and Francis eventually deferred to their wishes. In December, Bourbon’s accomplices were moved from their prison at Loches to Paris for trial. Saint-Vallier was sentenced to death on 16 January, but was reprieved just as he was about to be beheaded and remained a prisoner at Loches until his release in 1526. Legend has it that his daughter, Diane de Poitiers, had given her favours to the king in return for her father’s life. Other plotters were treated even more leniently, presumably because they incriminated friends who had fled abroad.

      Francis needed to regain the confidence of Parisians, who felt that he had left them defenceless while pursuing his Italian adventures. On 6 March, at the Hôtel de Ville, he presented himself as the innocent victim of Bourbon’s treachery. Many Parisians, it seems, sympathized with the constable, whose trial in absentia opened in the parlement on 8 March. Pierre Lizet, the avocat du roi, demanded that he be sentenced to death and all his property confiscated, but the parlement merely ordered his arrest and imprisonment along with the seizure of his property. At a lit de justice on 9 March, Francis expressed dismay that the property of Bourbon’s accomplices had not been seized. Their crime, he said, ought not to be treated merely as a civil case. On 16 May he ordered a retrial and appointed nineteen new judges to sit alongside

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