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CHARLES DE MARILLAC (c1510-1560), French prelate and diplomatist, came of a good family of
Auvergne, and at the age of twenty-two was advocate at the parlement of Paris. Suspected, however,
of sympathizing with the reformers, he deemed it prudent to leave Paris, and in 1535 went to the
East with his cousin Jean de la Forêt, the first French ambassador at Constantinople. Cunning
and ambitious, he soon made his mark, and his cousin having died during his embassy, Marillac was
appointed his successor.
He did not return from the East until 1538, when he was sent almost immediately to England, where
he remained ambassador until 1543. He retained his influence during the reign of Henry II,
fulfilling important missions in Switzerland and at the imperial court (1547-1551), and at the
courts of the German princes (1553-1554). In 1555 he was one of the French deputies at the
conferences held at Mark near Ardres to discuss peace with England. His two last missions were at
Rome (1557) and at the Diet of Augsburg (1559).
In 1550 he was given the bishopric of Vannes and in 1557 the archbishopric of Vienne; he also
became a member of the privy council. He distinguished himself as a statesman at the Assembly of
Notables at Fontainebleau in 1560, when he delivered an exceedingly brilliant discourse, in which
he opposed the policy of violence and demanded a national council and the assembly of the states
general. Irritated by his opposition, the Guises compelled him to leave the court, and he died on
the 2nd of December of the same year.
Source:
Encyclopæedia Britannica, 11th Ed. Vol XVII.
New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica, 1911. 719.
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