Louise of Savoy: A Model of Female Power at the French Court
As you know, I am learning more about some of the people, especially women, who may well have influenced Anne Boleyn. We have touched on her time in Austria and are now learning more about the influences the French court had on her. We know that she loved French fashions and brought them back to England with her, but she would also have been shaped by the people at court. Whether she met them or simply observed them from a distance, their presence would have made a lasting mark. So here is another powerful woman, who I believe may well have influenced Anne.
Louise of Savoy was born on the 11th of September 1476 at Pont-d’Ain, the daughter of Philip II, Duke of Savoy, and Margaret of Bourbon. After her mother’s early death, she was raised by Anne de Beaujeu, the capable sister of King Charles VIII, and was introduced to the refined and politically charged French court. There she met Margaret of Austria, with whom she would later negotiate peace many years on.
At just eleven years old, Louise was married to Charles of Orléans, Count of Angoulême, though she did not live with him until she was fifteen. Their marriage, though not without its complications, was bound by a shared love of books and learning. They had two children who would rise to great prominence, Marguerite, later Queen of Navarre, and Francis, who became King Francis I of France. When Charles died in 1496, Louise was only nineteen, but she proved herself a woman of determination and intelligence, guiding her children’s futures.
She secured her son’s position at court and ensured both he and Marguerite were educated in the humanist ideals and artistic spirit of the Italian Renaissance. Francis’s marriage to Claude of France, daughter of King Louis XII, was a triumph of Louise’s political skill. When Louis died in 1515, Francis ascended the throne, and his mother, now Duchess of Angoulême and later of Anjou, became one of the most influential figures in France.
Louise twice acted as regent while her son was away at war in 1515 and again in 1525- 1526 when he was held captive in Spain. During these times she displayed a talent for diplomacy and governance that earned her widespread respect. She even initiated contact with the Ottoman Empire, seeking the support of Suleiman the Magnificent, and successfully helped negotiate the Treaty of Cambrai in 1529, known as the “Ladies’ Peace”, with her former acquaintance Margaret of Austria. This agreement brought a temporary end to the wars between France and the Holy Roman Empire.
Louise of Savoy died on the 22nd of September 1531 at Grez-sur-Loing, likely of plague, and was buried at Saint-Denis in Paris. Through her daughter Marguerite and granddaughter Jeanne d’Albret, she became the ancestress of the Bourbon kings of France.
A woman of learning, resilience, and political insight, Louise’s influence stretched far, shaping not only her son’s reign but also the world of refinement, intellect, and ambition that Anne Boleyn would encounter in France. Anne would have seen and heard about these powerful and intelligent women and learned how grace, wit, and diplomacy could shape influence at court, something her family would later use to their advantage, with Anne becoming a tool for their ambitions.
Of equal importance was the model Louise provided for female authority exercised without a crown in her own right. She ruled not through spectacle or overt dominance, but through proximity, intellect, and careful cultivation of loyalty. Her household became a training ground for women who learned how influence could be wielded discreetly: through conversation, patronage, education, and emotional intelligence. This was a court culture in which women were not merely decorative, but observant, articulate, and politically aware. For a young woman like Anne Boleyn, watching from within or just beyond this circle, it demonstrated that power did not always require a throne—only access, confidence, and an ability to read the shifting currents of favour.
Louise also embodied the delicate balance between ambition and restraint. Fiercely protective of her children’s interests, she nevertheless understood the dangers of overreach. Her successes came from patience and timing rather than impulsive action, a lesson Anne may have absorbed deeply. The French court prized elegance, wit, and intellectual sharpness, but it was Louise who showed how these qualities could be transformed into real political capital. In this environment, Anne learned not only how to dress and speak, but how to be seen: how to attract attention without appearing threatening, how to influence without issuing commands, and how a woman’s mind could become her most powerful asset. These lessons, shaped by women like Louise of Savoy, would echo through Anne’s later life in England-sometimes to her advantage, and sometimes with tragic consequences.
Image info:
Artist: Jean Clouet
Portrait of Louise of Savoy
Date: 16th century
Collection: Fondation Bemberg