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King Charles IX

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:1,000.00 - 1,500.00 USD
King Charles IX

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Auction Date:2018 Dec 05 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Magnificent LS in French, signed “Charles,” three pages on two adjoining sheets, 9 x 13.5, April 1568. Lengthy letter to Monsieur de Fourquevaulx, Charles’s Councillor and Ambassador in Spain, in part: “From your letter of March 17 which Don Francez de Alava gave me, I understand that you are no longer experiencing the difficulties you had when you sent me your secretary, La Place, after receiving my letters of February 23 and March 13. Since then, I assume that M. de Montmorin has given you a detailed account of my situation and attempt to reconcile my subjects and rid my realm of calamities and oppressions. Through Mathurin, whom I sent shortly after, I have briefly explained the outcome of this attempt as well as the actions and decisions that have been taken. I am also waiting for Montmorin's return so that I can send a man of quality to explain my affairs to the Catholic King, my brother-in-law, and the Queen, my sister, as I always do with people who care about the good state and prosperity of said affairs. However…when your secretary returns to you, you will learn that after Mathurin's departure, we have been working continuously to carry out the decisions that have been made so that my realm will be restored to its state before the unrest—rebuilding of towns, places and castles, returning all German foreigners on both sides, garrisoning my cavalrymen, and dispatching the infantrymen I want to keep on the border as well as in all the cities where it seems necessary, in order to enforce my will from now on and prevent the problems we have just had from occurring again. Since the foreigners I have been sending back might want to enter the land of the King, I would like you to let him know that I have written down the itinerary they must follow, a copy of which I am sending to you. They have been expressly ordered not to enter the lands under his rule, and I shall make sure they will not.

From the letter you had your secretary send to the Queen, my mother, I have learned what Prince d'Evolly told you on behalf of his master as well as the Emperor‘s complaints about my taking into my service some of the people who had been banished from the Empire along with Grambach and Mandelo. The letters the King has received from the Emperor about this matter must be very old as I have been complying with the Emperor's will on this point for a long time, ever since the unrest started in my realm, and I am confident that he has been quite content about it. When Mandelo came into my service at the beginning of the unrest, I told him very clearly that I did not want nor had ever intended to use people who had been banished from the Empire, and I ordered him to leave my realm as well as any land under my rule, without even waiting for a written statement from the Emperor or a request from any other Prince. There was no reason for me to take him, especially since I have always had enough colonels and captains to bring me as many troops as I wanted from Germany, as everyone has seen. I told the Emperor about this a long time ago, and it seemed to me he was happy about it. I also told the same thing to Don Francez de Alava when I spoke to him about the state of my affairs, so I think that when he received the orders from his master to talk to me about it, he will give me an answer in agreement with what I am telling you. Please tell this to the King as well as to all the people you think necessary.

In the meantime…the best thing you can do to please me is to tell me about the King and Queen as often as possible. You told me in your last two letters that the King was to go to the Netherlands in May. Can you please confirm this and find out who will go with him, what will become of the country in his absence, of my sister and the Prince, his son, what orders he intends to give before his departure, why he has done the levying you have described to me in Germany, and also in Spain, and what use he intends to make of these troops." Signed at the conclusion by the king, and countersigned by De Neufville. In fine condition, with wear to the edges affecting a couple of words of text.