Read The Devil's Queen: A Novel of Catherine De Medici Online
Authors: Jeanne Kalogridis
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical
Even though I enjoy reading about Renaissance magic and related matters, I’m a skeptic; I approach it the way an anthropologist would approach learning about the magical beliefs of an ancient culture. But I admit, I was shocked when I came across the link between the star Algol and the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre.
“Even though I enjoy…Renaissance magic and related matters, I’m a skeptic.”
Since ancient times, Algol has been associated with the violent shedding of blood on a mass scale; the Chinese called the star “the Heaped-Up Corpses,” and the Arabs called it
al-ghul
, “the demon” star. Renaissance magicians and modern-day astrologers believed it to be the most evil star in the heavens, predicting great catastrophe.
Algol rose and made an extremely bad aspect with the planet Mars (associated with war and bloodshed) less than an hour before the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre began. Catherine surely knew this—she made use of several astrologers, including her favorite, Ruggieri, and always checked their mathematical calculations against hers (which were always right).
To learn more about Catherine’s favorite black magic spells, dark charms, and mysterious incantations, visit
www.stmartins.com/thedevilsqueen
.
Ruth Miller
Historical Perspective
Catherine de’ Medici: A Timeline
April 13, 1519 | Caterina de’ Medici is born |
October 28, 1533 | Caterina marries Henri |
January 19, 1544 | Catherine’s first son, François, is born |
March 31, 1547 | King François I dies; his son, Henri, becomes Henri II of France |
June 27, 1550 | Charles-Maximilien is born |
September 19, 1551 | Edouard-Alexandre is born |
May 14, 1553 | Marguerite (Margot) is born |
July 10, 1559 | Henri dies; his fifteen year-old son, François, becomes François II of France |
December 5, 1560 | François II dies; his brother, Charles, becomes Charles IX of France |
August 18, 1572 | Catherine’s daughter, Margot, marries the Huguenot king, Henri of Navarre |
August 23, 1572 | The St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre begins |
May 30, 1574 | Charles dies; his brother, Edouard, becomes Henri III of France |
January 5, 1589 | Catherine dies |
Recommended Reading
Catherine de’ Medici:
Renaissance Queen of France
Leonie Frieda
Renaissance Warrior and Patron:
The Reign of Francis I
R. J. Knecht
Keep on Reading
Beneath the Cross:
Catholics and Huguenots in
Sixteenth-Century Paris
Barbara B. Diefendorf
Memoirs of Marguerite,
Queen of Navarre
Reading Group Questions