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GEORGES AMBOISE

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 797 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GEORGES

AMBOISE  D' (1460-1510), French cardinal and minister of state, belonged to a noble
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family possessed of considerable influence . His
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father,
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Pierre d'Amboise, seigneur de Chaumont, was chamberlain to Charles VII. and Louis XI. and ambassador at Rome . His eldest
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brother, Charles d'Amboise, was governor of the Isle of France,
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Champagne and
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Burgundy, and councillor of Louis XI . Georges d' Amboise was only fourteen when his father procured for him the bishopric of Montauban, and Louis XI. appointed him one of his almoners . On arriving at manhood d'Amboise attached himself to the party of the duke of Orleans, in whose cause he suffered imprisonment, and on whose return to the royal favour he was elevated to the archbishopric of
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Narbonne, which after some time he changed for that of
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Rouen (1493) . On the appointment of the duke of Orleans as governor of
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Normandy, d'Amboise became his
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lieutenant-general . In 1498 the duke of Orleans mounted the
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throne as Louis XII., and d'Amboise was suddenly raised to the high position of cardinal and prime minister . His administration was, in many respects, well-intentioned and useful . Having the good fortune to serve a king who was both economical and just, he was able to diminish the imposts, to introduce order among the soldiery, and above all,. by the ordinances of 1499, to improve the organization of justice . He was also zealous for the reform of the church, and particularly for the reform of the monasteries; and it is greatly to his credit that he did not avail himself of the extremely favourable oppoxtunities he possessed of becoming a pluralist . He. regularly spent a large income in charity, and he laboured strenuously to stay the progress of the plague and famine which broke out in 1504 . His
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foreign policy, less happy and less wise, was animated by two aims—to increase the French power in Italy and to seat himself on the papal throne; and these aims he sought to achieve by diplomacy, not by force .

He, hdwever, sympatlured with, and took

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part in, the
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campaign which was begun in 1497 for the
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conquest of Milan . In 1500 he was named lieutenants general in Italy and charged with the organization of the
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con-quest . On the
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death of Alexander VI. he aspired to the papacy . He had French troops at the gates of Rome, by means of which he could easily have frightened the conclave and induced them to elect him; but he was persuaded , to
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trust to his influence; the troops were dismissed, and an
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Italian was appointed as
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Pius III.; and again, on the death of Pius within the month, another Italian,
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Julius II., was chosen (1503) . D'Amboise received in compensation the title of legate for
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life in France and in the Comtat Venaissin . He was one of the negotiators of the disastrous
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treaties of
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Blois (1504), and in 1508 of the
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League of
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Cambrai against'Venice . In 1509 he again accompanied Louis XII. into Italy, but on his return he was seized at the city of Lyons with a fatal attack of
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gout in the stomach . He died there on the 25th of May 1510 . His "
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body was removed to Rouen, and a magnificent tomb, on which he is represented kneeling in the attitude of prayer, was erected to his memory in the
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cathedral of that
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town . Throughout his life he was an enlightened
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patron of letters and
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art, and it was at his orders that the chateau of Gaillon near Rouen was built . See Leltres du roi Louis XII. et du cardinal d'Amboise (Brussels, 1712) ; L . Leeendre,
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Vie du cardinal d'Amboise (Rotten, 1726); E .

Lavisse, Histoire de France (vol. v. by H . Lemonnier, Paris, 1903); J . A . Deville, T'ombeaux de to cathedrale de Rouen (3rd ed., 1881) . For a bibliography of the printed
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sources, see H . Hauser,
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Les Sources de l'histoire de France, X Vie siecle, vol. i . (1906) . (J .

End of Article: GEORGES AMBOISE
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