Vous consultez actuellement le France version du site.
Voulez-vous passer à votre site local ?
30 TEMPS DE LECTURE MIN

I Read the News Today

1578 MINION MELEE MADNESS

BATTLE OF THE HENRYS

During the French Wars of Religion (1562-98), the court of Henry III was divided. The mignons (above), meaning ‘the dainty ones’ or ‘darlings’, were the King’s favourites but they had made enemies of the supporters of Henry, Duke of Guise. On 27 April 1578, three members from each expressed their animosity through an utterly pointless, tragic duel. Two were cut down in the fighting, one succumbed the next day, another spent six weeks in hospital and the fourth fatality – who sustained 19 wounds – died after 33 days of agony. Needless to say, the ‘Duel of the Mignons’ did nothing to close the gap between the two Henrys.

Débloquez cet article et bien plus encore avec
Vous pouvez en profiter :
Découvrez l'intégralité de cette édition
Accès instantané à plus de 600 titres
Des milliers d'anciens numéros
Pas de contrat ni d'engagement
Essayer pour €1.09
S'ABONNER
30 jours d'accès, puis seulement €11,99 / mois. Résiliation à tout moment. Nouveaux abonnés uniquement.


En savoir plus
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

Cet article est tiré de...


View Issues
BBC History Revealed Magazine
April 2016
VOIR EN MAGASIN

Autres articles dans ce numéro


Editor’s Letter
Letter from the Editor
Think of the Vikings, and the image that generally springs
ON THE COVER
Viking Explorers
Though they might have a reputation as barbaric heathens, the
TIME CAPSULE
Snapshots
Dragging this large, aluminium sphere through the snow takes a
Yesterday’s Papers
The nuclear disaster released several hundred times more radiation than
The Extraordinary Tale of...
For nearly 40 years, she was queen of the ballet
Graphic History
On 27 April 1521, Portuguese sailor Ferdinand Magellan died in
What Happened Next...
As US and Soviet soldiers posed forphotos like this, British
FEATURES
Easter Rising, 1916
Having been designed in 1848, the Irish tricolour was still
Need to Know
From hit-and-run raiders to powerful kings, the Vikings flourished in
Timeline
Chart the rise of these ambitious explorers, from their first-ever
The History Makers: Haile Selaisse
Armed with a thick wad of papers, a diminutive, middle-aged
The Man Who Wrote History
£1 The amount the First Folio (see page 56) of
In Pictures: D-Day inventions
On 6 June 1944, D-Day, the meticulously planned Operation Overlord
Top 10: Oddest taxes
As Lord Protector of England, Scotland and Ireland, Oliver Cromwell
Battlefield: Lexington and Concord
Because the majority of contemporary muskets didn’t have rifled barrels,
Great Adventures: Escape to Mount Kenya
When amateur mountaineer Felice Benuzzi first laid eyes on Mount
Q&A
Ask the Experts
Social historian, genealogist and author of Mr Darcy’s Guide to
In a Nutshell
With relations between the West and East on a knife’s
How Did They do That?
As its influence in the known world spread, Rome transformed
HERE & NOW
On our Radar
Runs 16 April to 12 March 2017 at the Victoria
Past Lives
Late one night in August 1843, William Rees was rudely
Books
There is so much written about the ‘Virgin Queen’, Elizabeth
EVERY ISSUE
Letters
I enjoyed your article (The Big Story: The War at
A-Z of History
Towards the end of her life, the ever-increasing circumference of