BELIEF IN THE DEVIL AND BLACK MAGIC DROVE COURTIERS...
"to run to a rogue priest for a mass to the Devil with slaughter of child. Sales of poison usually followed those rites: What the Devil had not managed, arsenic would."
-- The King's Way, historical novel by Françoise Chandeneggor, 1981
Main sources:
--The Affair of the Poisons: Alchemists and Sorcerers under Louis XIV by J-C. Petitfils, 1977 (in French).
-- Louis XIV and the Poison Affair: the Great Scandals of History /You/Tube (in French with English translation), 2020
Babies or small children were baptized before being slaughtered. Their blood was poured into a chalice and from it over the client's nude abdomen.
French texts use feminine forms to say "client" or "sponsor," which suggests that they were women.
The priest who practiced these masses with La Voisin (mentioned below) butchered his own children.
"La Voisin," the most notorious of France's few serial killers, bragged of committing 2500 murders through abortions,* poisonings and black masses.
* Criminalized until 1975.
- When a police spy heard a drunken woman boast of a clientele of "duchesses, marquises, lords and princes" an investigation began. Poisons were found in her dwelling and 200 people were rounded up.
- La Voisin was arrested on the steps of her parish church when leaving mass:
The medieval church burned (in 1821). This is its replacement.
A church-going serial killer? Black magic is a sacrilege, whose power depends on belief.
# # #
An enigmatic death
-- Correspondence of Madame de Sévigny, February 23, 1680 (translation and italics mine)
- Between sessions of having water forced down her throat La Voisin sang and drank with her guards, and the night before being burned alive, "broken as she was, continued her scandalous debauchery."
- At the scaffold she spurned the usual speech of penitence and praise of the king, although that might have encouraged leniency to her imprisoned daughter.
She even refused confession to a priest, so choosing, as a believer, to damn her soul or eternity. She screamed and kicked at the hay until the end.
"One of those miserable creatures,
who was hanged the other day...
told M. de Louvois [the minister in charge of executions] that if her life were spared she would say strange things; she was refused. 'Well!' 'said she, 'be assured that no pain will cause me to say a single word.' She was given the questions ordinary, extraordinary and so extraordinary that she thought she would die, as another had, let me say in passing, as a doctor took her pulse. That woman suffered extreme martyrdom without talking. When she was taken to City Hall [next to the execution site], she said she wanted to speak: Gentlemen, she said, assure M. de Louvois that I am his servant [a common figure of speech] and that I have kept my word; let's get on with it.' She was sent off in an instant. What do you say to that sort of courage? I have a thousand more agreeable little tales like that; but how say it all? "
It is thought that there will be great sequels that surprise us."
# # #
Suspicions concern the elite:
- Most accounts of the poisonings begin with the story of the marchioness of Brinvilliers, who poisoned members of her family after practicing on the sick at the City hospital.
- Before her execution (in 1676) she said that many people in high positions were as guilty as she.
Marie-Madeleine Anne Dreux d'Aubrey, Marchioness of Brinvilliers / zoom with a short account (in French) |
After La Voisin's death a crime that has never been solved
led the king to stop the inquiry:
- Witnesses charged Madame de Montespan, the royal favorite, with sponsoring black masses and trying to poison Louis and his new mistress.
Portrait of a Lady, said to be Madame de Montespan by a follower of Pierre Mignard, 17th century / zoom
Gorgeous, fiery and caustic, of a lineage superior to Louis's (his grandmother was the daughter of an upstart Medici banker), the Marquise de Montespan added to the éclat of the court...
-- Madame de Sévigny, July 29, 1676
Madame de Montespan and her Children by Pierre Mignard, 1673 / zoom
La Montespan and the four surviving children of the seven she had with the king.
. But she had visited La Voisin for aphrodisiacs.
- To keep crime from spattering the throne Louis stopped the inquest and burned the records, not knowing that the police chief had kept detailed notes. They seem to inculpate the marquise's lady-in-waiting, who had had an affair with the king and was furious that he refuse to recognize their child. One understands her anger: He recognized 22 other bastards.
# # #
Destinies
- Louis did nothing to the mother of those children, but the marquise lost all influence and after a few years the king tells her indirectly that it would be best if she left Versailles. She lived in the château he had given her and would quite often return, "like those unfortunate souls who come back to the places they have lived to atone for their faults."
-- The Recollections of Madame de Caylus, 1770, Mercure de France, ed. 1986, p. 99 (in French).
- The lady-in-waiting retired with a pension. Her daughter knew she was of royal blood and even resembled the king, but had to accept a mediocre marriage.
- When in memory of a long-standing friendship Louis sent Olympe Mancini a messenger warning of her coming arrest, she put down her gambling cards, went straight to her coach and fled abroad, never to return. Other courtiers were banished (a gentle fate for murder, especially since the king might forgive).
- A few underclass prisoners were freed, but 68 spent the rest of their lives chained to dungeons' walls. The last died in 1725.
# # #
Those dramas...
- Brought the first law regulating the sale of toxic products (in 1682). It is still on the books.
- Show the nightmarish underside of the time when France's classic culture, supposed to be one of glory, equilibrium and reason, took its lasting shape
Jean Prevost Hida, Canalblog
7 rue Notre-Dame de Bonne-Nouvelle
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