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  1. King Francis I is the king of France (as well as a claimant to the Duchies of Burgundy and Milan) during the duration of The Tudors. Although only appearing in a handful of episodes in Seasons 1 and 2, he is the most frequently seen foreign monarch. Francis has a libertine personality and is...

  2. Francis I was a true Renaissance Monarch and wanted to make France a center of the Renaissance. He patronized painters, sculptors, architects, scholars and writers. He was a close friend of Leonardo da Vinci. He was also a shrewd diplomat and strengthened centralized rule in France.

  3. Queen consort of Francis I of France. She rejects the Duke of Suffolk's advances because she believes that making love in revenge (on her husband, who flaunts his mistresses much like Henry VIII) kills the soul. Princess Margaret Tudor: Gabrielle Anwar (2007) Mary Tudor, Queen of France; Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scots: Episode 1.03 Episode 1.09

  4. Although he allowed the humanists to publicize their program, Francis I had no intention of actually supporting the establishment of Lutheranism in France. The threat that Lutheranism posed to civil society and to traditional religious practice was clear in the 1520s, but Francis refrained from actively persecuting Protestants until the late ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_TudorsThe Tudors - Wikipedia

    20 June 2010. ( 2010-06-20) The Tudors is a historical fiction television series set primarily in 16th-century England, created and written by Michael Hirst and produced for the American premium cable television channel Showtime. The series was a collaboration among American, British, and Canadian producers, and was filmed mostly in Ireland.

  6. King Francis I of France. The subject of today's Claire Chats video talk is King Francis I of France, "le Roi-Chevalier" (the Knight King) and "Père des Lettres" (Father of Letters), Henry VIII's contemporary. Who was he and what was he like?

  7. May 4, 2023 · He was the classic Renaissance prince: chivalrous, highly educated, and a patron of artists and scholars. Seeking to rival the courts of his counterparts, especially Francis I of France, Henry raised the English court to a new level of sophistication. Despite his religious conservatism, he severed England’s ties with the Catholic Church in 1533.

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