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See also: monk, the confidant of
See also: Richelieu, was the eldest son of See also: Jean Leclerc du Tremblay, president of the chamber of See also: requests of the See also: parlement of See also: Paris, and of See also: Marie Motier de See also: Lafayette
.
As a boy he received a careful classical training, and in 1595 made an extended journey through See also: Italy, returning to take up the career of arms
.
He served at the siege of See also: Amiens in 1597, and then accompanied a See also: special See also: embassy to See also: London
.
In 1599 Baron de Mafflier, by which name he was known at See also: court, renounced the See also: world and entered the Capuchin monastery of See also: Orleans
.
He embraced the religious
See also: life with See also: great ardour, and became a notable preacher and reformer
.
In 1606 he aided Antoinette d'Orleans, a nun of Fontevrault, to found the reformed See also: order of the Filles du Calvaire, and wrote a See also: manual of devotion for the nuns
.
His proselytizing zeal led him to send missionaries throughout the Huguenot centres—he, had become provincial of See also: Touraine in 1613
.
He entered politics at the conferences of See also: Loudun, when, as the confidant of the See also: queen and the papal See also: envoy, he opposed the Gallican claims advanced by the parlement, which the princes were upholding, and succeeded in convincing them of the schismatic tendency of See also: Gallicanism
.
In 1612 he began those See also: personal relations with Richelieu which have indissolubly joined in See also: history and See also: legend the See also: cardinal and the " See also: Eminence grise," relations which research has not altogether made clear
.
In 1627 the monk assisted at the siege of La Rochelle
.
A purely religious reason also made him Richelieu's ally against the Habsburgs
.
He had a dream of arousing See also: Europe to another crusade against the See also: Turks, and
believed that the See also: house of See also: Austria was the obstacle to that universal See also: European See also: peace which would make this possible
.
As Richelieu's See also: agent, therefore, this See also: modern See also: Peter the See also: Hermit mancxuvred at the See also: diet of See also: Regensburg (1630) to thwart the aggression of the emperor, and then advised the intervention of Gustavus See also: Adolphus, reconciling himself to the use of See also: Protestant armies by the theory that one See also: poison would counteract another
.
Thus the monk became a war See also: minister, and, though maintaining a personal austerity of life, gave himself up to See also: diplomacy and politics
.
He died in 1638, just as the cardinalate was to be conferred upon him
.
The See also: story that Richelieu visited him when on his deathbed and roused the dying See also: man by the words, " Courage, See also: Father See also: Joseph, we have won See also: Breisach," is apocryphal
.
See See also: Fagniez, Le Pere Joseph et Richelieu (1894), a See also: work based largely on See also: original and unpublished See also: sources
.
Father Joseph, according to this biography, would seem not to have lectured Richelieu in the fashion of the legends, whatever his moral influence may have been in strengthening Richelieu's hands
.
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