He was the loose inspiration behind the character of Longueville in William Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost.[8]
References
^ a bWard, Prothero & Leathes 1911, p. xii.
^Potter 2005, p. 133.
^Boltanski 2006, p. 501.
^Butler 1904, p. 47.
^Johnson 2018, p. 398.
^Spangler 2016, p. 162.
^Balsamo 2002, p. 246.
^Hibbard 1990, p. 49.
Sources
Balsamo, Jean, ed. (2002). Les funérailles à la renaissance XIIe colloque international de la Société française d'étude du seizième siècle Bar-le Duc, 2-5 décembre 1999 (in French). Droz.
Boltanski, Ariane (2006). Les ducs de Nevers et l'État royal: genèse d'un compromis (ca 1550 - ca 1600) (in French). Librairie Droz.
Butler, A.J. (1904). "The Wars of Religion in France". In Ward, A.W.; Prothero, G.W.; Leathes, Stanley (eds.). The Cambridge Modern History. Vol. III. Cambridge at the University Press.
Hibbard, G.R., ed. (1990). Love's Labour's Lost. Oxford University Press.
Johnson, A.H. (2018). Europe in the Sixteenth Century 1494-1598: Period IV. Outlook Verlag.
Potter, David, ed. (2005). Foreign Intelligence and Information in Elizabethan England: Two Treatises on the State of France, 1580-1584. Cambridge University Press.
Spangler, Jonathan (2016). "Holders of the Keys: The Grand Chamberlain, the Grand Equerry and Monopolies of Access at the Early Modern French Court". In Raeymaekers, Dries; Derks, Sebastiaan (eds.). The Key to Power?: The Culture of Access in Princely Courts, 1400-1750. Brill. pp. 153–177.
Ward, A.W.; Prothero, G.W.; Leathes, Stanley, eds. (1911). The Cambridge Modern History. Vol. XIII. Cambridge at the University Press.
External links
His funerary monument in the Louvre Archived 2017-06-10 at the Wayback Machine