Summary
The commencement of the year 1614 was productive of new anxieties to the Queen-Regent. The Maréchal de Bouillon, whose restless ambition was ever prompting him to some new enterprise, had warily, but not the less surely, possessed himself of the confidence of the princes and the other disaffected nobles, and had succeeded in aggravating their feelings against the court party to such an extent that he experienced little difficulty in inducing them to abandon the capital and to retire to their several governments. M. de Condé had never forgiven the refusal of Marie to bestow upon him the command of the citadel of Château Trompette, or the recal of the ministers; and he also deeply resented the desertion of the Maréchal d'Ancre from his interests, as well as the wealth and honours to which he had attained ; while the Dukes of Nevers, Mayenne, Vendôme, Longueville, and Piney-Luxembourg, together with a host of others, considered themselves aggrieved by their exclusion from power, and were consequently ready to espouse his cause. Thus Bouillon found it easy to induce them to retire simultaneously from the court; and it was agreed that they should assemble at Champagne, and collectively demand a reform in the government.
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- The Life of Marie de Medicis, Queen of France , pp. 339 - 382Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1852