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Louis XII
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==Early life== [[File:Jean Bourdichon (French - Louis XII of France Kneeling in Prayer - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|Louis kneeling in prayer, with saints, from the [[Hours of Louis XII]], his personal [[book of hours]], 1498–99, [[Getty Museum]]. Inscribed (literally) "Louis XII of this name: it is made at the age of 36 years".]] Louis d'Orléans was born on 27 June 1462 in the [[Château de Blois]], Touraine (in the modern French [[Departments of France|department]] of [[Loir-et-Cher]]).{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=1}} The son of [[Charles, Duke of Orléans]], and [[Marie of Cleves, Duchess of Orléans|Marie of Cleves]]. His father was almost seventy years old when Louis was born. Louis was only three years old when he succeeded as [[Duke of Orléans]] upon the death of his father in 1465.<ref>Susan G. Bell, ''The Lost Tapestries of the City of Ladies'', (University of California Press, 2004), 105.</ref> Louis XI, who had become king of France in 1461, became highly distrustful of the close relationship between the Orleanists and the Burgundians and began to oppose the idea of an Orleanist ever coming to the throne of France.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=3}} However, Louis XI might have been more influenced in this opinion by his opposition to the entire Orleanist faction of the royal family than by the actual facts of this paternity case.{{clarify|date=January 2015}} Despite any alleged doubts that King Louis XI had, the King, nevertheless, became the [[Godparent|godfather]] of the newborn.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=3}} King Louis XI died on 30 August 1483.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=368}} He was succeeded to the throne of France by his thirteen-year-old son, Charles VIII.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=373}} Nobody knew the direction which the new king (or more accurately his [[regent]] and oldest sister, [[Anne of France]]) would take in leading the kingdom. Accordingly, on 24 October 1483, a call went out for a convocation of the Estates General of the French kingdom.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=21}} In January 1484, deputies of the [[Estates General (France)|Estates General]] began to arrive in [[Tours]], France. The deputies represented three different "estates" in society. The First Estate was the Church; in France this meant the [[Roman Catholic Church]]. The Second Estate was composed of the nobility and the royalty of France. The Third Estate was generally composed of [[commoners]] and the class of traders and [[merchants]] in France. Louis, the current Duke of Orleans and future Louis XII, attended as part of the Second Estate. Each estate brought its chief complaints to the Estates General in hopes to have some impact on the policies that the new King would pursue. The First Estate (the Church) wanted a return to the "[[Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges|Pragmatic Sanction]]".{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=22}} The Pragmatic Sanction had been first instituted by King [[Charles VII of France|Charles VII]], the former King Charles VIII's grandfather. The Pragmatic Sanction excluded the [[papacy]] from the process of appointing bishops and abbots in France. Instead, these positions would be filled by appointment made by the cathedrals and monastery chapters themselves.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=22}} All church prelates within France would be appointed by the King of France without reference to the pope. The deputies representing the Second Estate (the nobility) at the Estates General of 1484 wanted all foreigners to be prohibited from command positions in the military.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=22}} The deputies of the Third Estate (the merchants and traders) wanted taxes to be drastically reduced and the [[revenue]] needs of the crown to be met by reducing royal [[pensions]] and the number of offices.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=22}} All three of the estates were in agreement on the demand for an end to the sale of government offices.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=22}} By 7 March 1484, the King announced that he was leaving Tours because of poor health. Five days later, the deputies were told that there was no more money to pay their [[salaries]], and the Estates General meekly concluded its business and went home. The Estates General of 1484 is called, by historians, the most important Estates General until the [[Estates General of 1789]].{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|p=23}} Important as they were, many of the reforms suggested at the meeting of the Estates General were not immediately adopted. Rather the reforms would only be acted on when Louis XII came to the throne. Since Charles VIII was only thirteen years of age when he became king, his older sister [[Anne of France|Anne]] was to serve as regent until Charles VIII became 20 years old. From 1485 through 1488, there was another war against the royal authority of France conducted by a collections of nobles. This war was the [[Mad War]] (1485–1488), Louis's war against Anne.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|pp=27–31}} Allied with [[Francis II, Duke of Brittany]], Louis confronted the royal army at the [[Battle of Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier (1488)|Battle of Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier]] on 28 July 1488 but was defeated and captured.<ref>Malcolm Walsby, ''The Counts of Laval: Culture, Patronage and Religion in Fifteenth-and Sixteenth Century France'', (Ashgate Publishing Ltd, 2007), 37.</ref> Pardoned three years later, Louis joined his cousin [[Charles VIII of France|King Charles VIII]] in campaigns in Italy,{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|pp=39–49}} leading the vanguards of the army. All four children of Charles VIII by Anne of Brittany died in infancy. The French interpretation of the [[Salic Law]] permitted claims to the French throne only by male [[agnatic]] descendants of French kings. This made Louis, the great-grandson of King [[Charles V of France|Charles V]], the most senior claimant as heir of Charles VIII. Thus, Louis, Duke of Orleans, succeeded to the throne on 7 April 1498 as Louis XII upon the death of King Charles VIII.{{sfn|Baumgartner|1996|pp=51–56}}
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