1st Edition

The Gondi Family Strategy and Survival in Early Modern France

By Joanna Milstein Copyright 2014
260 Pages
by Routledge

260 Pages
by Routledge

260 Pages
by Routledge

One of the most striking features of French government in the second half of the sixteenth century was the influence of Italians. Notwithstanding widespread French admiration for Italian culture, Italian influence at the heart of French government aroused xenophobic antagonism amongst many in French society. This study throws light on this complex relationship by offering the first detailed... Read more
Contents: Foreword; Introduction; The Gondi in France: perceptions and realities; Money for royal endeavours; Power, prowess and prestige: the Gondi in politics; Pierre de Gondi: churchman and king’s man; Gondi women; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

Biography

Joanna Milstein received her BA from Columbia University in 2004. She completed her MLitt in 2007 and PhD in History in 2011 at the University of St Andrews. Dr Milstein has taught at the University of St Andrews and Dundee University. She currently serves as director of a research program at the Medici Archive Project focused on French relations with the Medici in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

"In this illuminating study, Joanna Milstein plots in meticulous detail the spectacular social and political ascent of the Gondi, a Florentine merchant banking family, in sixteenth-century France. (...) The author, herself, has manoeuvred subtly through eclectic themes to construct a nuanced and stimulating study."

- Lisa Di Crescenzo, Monash University in  Parergon: Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, volume 33.1 (2016).