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Catherine de Medici's unique [[Agenda (Civ6)|agenda]] is '''Sumptuous Finery'''. She tries to collect as many copies of each luxury resource as possible, likes leaders who trade luxury resources with her and dislikes those who don't.
 
Catherine de Medici's unique [[Agenda (Civ6)|agenda]] is '''Sumptuous Finery'''. She tries to collect as many copies of each luxury resource as possible, likes leaders who trade luxury resources with her and dislikes those who don't.
   
Her leader ability is '''Catherine’s Magnificences'''. Her imrpoved [[List of resources in Civ6#Luxury|Luxury resources]] gain a +2 {{Culture6}} bonus when next to either a [[Theater Square (Civ6)|Theater Square]] or [[Château (Civ6)|Château]], and her [[City (Civ6)|cities]] with Theater Squares can undertake the Court Festival, a city [[Project (Civ6)|project]] that provides {{Culture6}} and {{Tourism6}} based on the number of excess copies of luxury resources that France possesses.
+
Her leader ability is '''Catherine’s Magnificences'''. Improved [[List of resources in Civ6#Luxury|Luxury resources]] gain a +2 {{Culture6}} bonus when adjacent to a [[Theater Square (Civ6)|Theater Square]] or [[Château (Civ6)|Château]], and her [[City (Civ6)|cities]] with Theater Squares can undertake the [[Court Festival (Civ6)|Court Festival]], a city [[Project (Civ6)|project]] that provides {{Culture6}} and {{Tourism6}} based on the number of Luxury resources that France possesses.
   
 
==Detailed Approach==
 
==Detailed Approach==

Revision as of 13:53, 27 July 2020


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"There is a certain joy of life to our culture. It is useless to resist its charm."
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Catherine de Medici (13 April 1519 – 5 January 1589) was an Italian noblewoman who was Queen consort of France from 1547 until 1559, and Queen mother from 1559 until her death. She leads the French in Civilization VI.

Magnificence Catherine augments her usual wonder and Château building program with lavish Court Festivals that quickly push France toward a Culture Victory, especially when she’s been able to hoard a vast collection of luxuries.

Intro

It falls to you, Catherine de Medici, to use your gifts of knowledge and of the arts to unite your people. Steer carefully through these troubled times, Queen Mother of France. You will build great wonders, drawing visitors from all corners of the earth. With your keen awareness of all things, both those seen and those hidden in the shadows, your empire will certainly stand the test of time.

In-Game

Catherine de Medici's unique agenda is Sumptuous Finery. She tries to collect as many copies of each luxury resource as possible, likes leaders who trade luxury resources with her and dislikes those who don't.

Her leader ability is Catherine’s Magnificences. Improved Luxury resources gain a +2 Culture Culture bonus when adjacent to a Theater Square or Château, and her cities with Theater Squares can undertake the Court Festival, a city project that provides Culture Culture and Tourism Tourism based on the number of Luxury resources that France possesses.

Detailed Approach

Magnificence Catherine is the one leader who wants to amass a large collection of luxury resources of all types and quantities. Having a sumptuous collection of opulent goods makes her Court Festivals the cultural events where all leaders want to see and be seen. With enough such festivals and a large collection of Châteaux and mid-game wonders, France should be the leading candidate for a Culture Victory whenever this benevolent version of Catherine appears. She’s just dangerous enough at this game that you might have to fight a war against the French Garde Impériale to keep her from rolling to a quick victory.

Lines

Catherine de Medici is voiced by Lara Parmiani. She mainly speaks French with an Italian accent, with three lines spoken in Italian with her native Florentine pronunciation.

Voiced

Agenda-based Approval: All of my lovers are positively murdering each other to get some of your goods. What fun!

Agenda-based Disapproval: How can my Flying Squadron critique your supposed luxuries if you don’t even send me any?

Attacked: You dare attack my sovereign realm? I don't believe even Nostradamus could have predicted this! (Vous osez attaquer mon royaume? Je ne crois point que Nostradamus lui même aurait su le prédire!)

Declares War: Masquerading as friends was kind of fun, wasn't it? Unfortunately it's time to drop the pretense and get to the business at hand. (In Italian: Ahahah, non siate sorpreso. Se non v'accorgeste di quanto stava per accadere, siete invero un folle. - lit. "Ahahah, don't be surprised. In truth, you'd be a fool if you didn't know what was going to happen.")

Defeated: I have lived long enough to know when I am defeated. Carry on. (J'ai vécu assez longtemps pour savoir reconnaître ma défaite. Poursuivez votre chemin.)

Greeting: I am Catherine, the Queen Mother of France, and I welcome you to the realm. I do so look forward to learning all there is to know about you. (Je suis Catherine, Reine Mère de France. Je vous souhaite la bienvenue en mon royaume. J'ai grand désir et envie de découvrir tous vos secrets.)

Quote from Civilopedia: There is a certain joy of life to our culture. It is useless to resist its charm.

Unvoiced

Delegation: I have sent you a trade delegation with all of the customary gifts: herbs, olives, various cheeses, and baguettes to eat them with, of course.

Denounced by Player: The glory and might of France will not be tarnished by such obvious lies.

Denounces Player: I don't like the look of what you've been up to. What would your friends think of this information?

Accepts Delegation from Player: We received your delegation at the palace. Thank you. The gifts will be treasured.

Accepts Player's Declaration of Friendship: I accept your offer of friendship. And of course, you'll be invited to the next royal wedding.

Rejects Player's Declaration of Friendship: I apologise, but this would be too sudden a change. Perhaps another time?

Invitation to City: You have not lived until you have had our delicacies of food and drink. And I can show you how to use a fork, if you wish.

Invitation to Capital: I am enamored with architecture. Tell me, does your capital have any triumphant arches, or large metal towers?

Civilopedia entry

Catherine de Medici (Gallicized from the Italian “Caterina”) has gotten a bad rap from historians, due in part from her de Medici family ties and in part from her own ruthlessness in keeping the Valois (a distaff branch of the Capetian bloodline) on the throne at all costs. Despite what may be said about her however, without Catherine it is unlikely that the House of Valois would have survived its challenges, nor France weathered its trials and tribulations of the time.

Catherine was borne into the nigh unbelievably wealthy and powerful de Medici family, de facto rulers of Florence, bankers to kings, and pope-makers (her great-uncle was at the time Pope Leo X). By all accounts, her father Lorenzo, made Duke of Urbino by Leo, was “as pleased as if it had been a boy” by her birth. Besides being bright and gifted (“for a girl”), the dukedom meant she could claim noble birth, opening all sorts of opportunities for her. Not the least a number of royal suitors; having spurned James V of Scotland and others, in October 1533 AD – at the tender age of 14 – she wed the second son of the king of France in an arranged marriage engineered by the de Medici pope Clement VII.

The young bride saw little of her husband, Prince Henri, as he was busy with his many mistresses. But in 1536, Henri’s older brother Francis caught a chill and died, making Henri the Dauphin... and Catherine the Dauphine of France. Not only that, but suddenly Catherine proved to be extraordinarily fertile – and resilient. After eight years bearing no children despite trying mightily, she gave birth to a son in 1544. Following the advice of the famed physician Jean Fernel, who had noticed some anatomical “irregularities” in the couple, the next year she bore a daughter for Henri. Whatever Fernel’s advice had been, it surely worked, for Catherine gave Henri a further eight children (an amazing feat given the incidence of death in childbirth at the time).

When Henri’s father died in March 1547, Catherine became Queen of France. Although Henri, much enamoured of his mistress Diane de Poitiers, treated Catherine with stiff respect, he allowed her no political influence – even giving a château she had sorely wanted to Diane. In 1556, Catherine nearly died giving birth to twins; she was to endure no more pregnancies. She was devoted to her brood, and used the wealth of her family as well as her status as Queen Consort to ensure that they had the best education, wanted for nothing, and were sheltered from their father, who took little interest in his children, save his eldest son. Catherine, who had a bit of a reputation as a dabbler in the “black arts” herself, even sent for the famed Nostradamus in August 1556 to come to court and cast the horoscopes of her seven children.

In June 1559, as part of the proxy wedding of his 13-year-old daughter Elizabeth to King Philip II of Spain, Henri insisted in joining the jousting tournament. Not the best of decisions, since he was badly injured and died a fortnight later. Francis II, already king of Scotland by his marriage to Mary (Queen of Scots), became king of France at the age of 15. In what amounted to a coup, the Guise brothers and the Cardinal of Lorraine moved into the Louvre Palace and effectively seized power. Catherine, using all the political acumen and guile she had inherited as a de Medici, elected to work with the Guise faction.

As de facto regent, although Catherine had no claim to that position, she set about consolidating her own power and influence. Using her “new-found authority,” she forced Diane de Poitiers to return the crown jewels (which besmitten Henri had given her) along with the château Catherine had once desired; Catherine effectively put the ex-king’s mistress out to pasture. The Queen Mother managed to keep herself out of the Guise’s bloody persecution of the Protestants, as well as the failed plot to overthrow them by the Bourbons. She also made common cause with the new chancellor Michel de l’Hopital in defending the law against attempts to circumvent it by the Guises, notably with regard to their dead-Protestant fixation. But she could also be ruthless in defending her son’s position as king; when the Prince of Condé raised an army and attacked Catholic towns, she ordered him to court and then imprisoned him as soon as he arrived. He was only saved from execution by the sudden death of Francis.

But it wasn’t all fun and games for Catherine; she also hosted lavish court festivals – the so-called joyeuse magnificences – at the slightest provocation: weddings, anniversaries, christenings, feast days, and just about any other occasion imaginable. It was at such fetes that Catherine’s notorious L’Escadron Volant (“Flying Squadron”) plied their wiles, ladies such as Lady Isabelle de la Tour and Baroness Charlotte de Beaune Semblancay. The “squadron” was a group of fetching young noblewomen Catherine used for the purpose of forming relationships with powerful men of the court, thereby extracting “insider” information of use to Catherine in her schemes. Along with the assassinations and blackmail, such insights helped her fend off threats to both France and her position within it.

Catherine barely missed a step as she became regent to her ten-year-old, Charles IX. If anything, she grew even more powerful. The boy, moody and sickly, cried at his coronation; Catherine kept close tabs on him, and even went so far as to sleep in his bedchamber. In effect, Catherine ruled France, but the nation faced some serious problems. She set about to take care of these in typical de Medici fashion. She called the religious leaders of France, both Catholic and Huguenot, to settle doctrinal differences; when that failed she issued the Edict of Saint-Germain to promote religious tolerance. (Unfortunately, the Duke of Guise attacked and massacred a Huguenot service, thus setting off the 30-year French Wars of Religion.)

When Protestant nobles raised an army in response to the massacre in 1562, after failed negotiations Catherine threw the royal army at them. When Protestant Antoine de Bourbon died from wounds, and the volatile Catholic Duke of Guise was assassinated, she issued the Edict of Amboise (the “Edict of Pacification”) in 1563 to end the unrest. Then she rallied both Huguenot and Catholics lords to retake Le Havre from the English, who were meddling again in French affairs. Except for the St. Bartholomew’s Day massacre, ordered by King Charles IX, things were fairly stable for the “Italian queen.” Then Charles died at the age of 23. Another son, her favorite, was crowned King of Poland in 1573 (which didn't last long) and then King Henri III of France in 1574 AD.

But Henri, already an adult and in good health both mental and physical, proved not as pliable as his brothers. Although he depended on Catherine to oversee much of the minutia of ruling for a decade, in 1588 at Blois he suddenly dismissed all her appointed ministers to the crown, effectively ending her influence over the government. Henry also moved against the still powerful Guise family, allies of his mother, having the Duke assassinated and eight other members murdered. Catherine, bedridden at the age of 69, was stoic at the news. Within the month, in January 1589, she died.

Trivia

  • Catherine de Medici's diplomacy screen shows her palace gardens at night.
  • Catherine de Medici's leader ability and agenda reference her lavish court festivals.

Gallery

Videos