Also known as Madame de Maintenon, Francisca de Aubigné y de Cardilhac, Françoise d' Aubigné, Françoise, marquise de Maintenon D'Aubigné, Francisca De Aubigné y de Cardilhac, Madame De Maintenon, Francisca de Aubigne
Mistress and later secret wife of King Louis XIV of France (1635-1719)
Top works
via Open Library + Wikidata
5 total works indexed
~22 min read
Françoise d'Aubigné (27 November 1635 – 15 April 1719), known first as Madame Scarron and subsequently as Madame de Maintenon ( French: [madam də mɛ̃t(ə)nɔ̃] ), was a French noblewoman and the second wife of King Louis XIV from 1683 until his death in 1715. Although she was never considered queen of France, as the marriage was carried out in secret, Madame de Maintenon had considerable political influence as one of the King's closest advisers and the governess of the royal children.
Born into an impoverished Huguenot noble family, Françoise married the poet Paul Scarron in 1652, which allowed her access to the Parisian high society. She was widowed in 1660, but later saw her fortunes improve through her friendship with Louis XIV's mistress, Madame de Montespan, who tasked her with the upbringing of the king's extramarital children. She was made royal governess when the children were legitimised, and in 1675 Louis XIV granted her the title Marquise de Maintenon. By the late 1670s, she had essentially supplanted Montespan as the king's maîtresse-en-titre.
· 2020 · cited 22,812x
· 2009 · cited 22,573x
· 2003 · cited 20,936x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikipedia infobox
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).