for months; her bravery and her refusal to behave “as a woman of her time ought” were amazing. She’s still famed in Italy for her daring exploits and lifestyle.

Much of the plot of The Devil’s Queen revolves around astrology and Catherine de’ Medici’s birth chart or natal horoscope, as well as those of her family members. How much of this was historically accurate? How did you do your research?

I’ve collected books about Renaissance magic for twenty-five years, so this was an area already familiar to me. But to do Catherine and the novel justice, I brushed up on Renaissance astrological magic by taking a course in the subject and reading the same authors Catherine would have studied in her day. None of the spells, astrological charts, or references to stars came from my imagination; they were the result of careful research.

I hired two different astrologers to cast the charts of Catherine and her sons, so with luck, they’re completely accurate. (I also cast them myself using my computer-I’m definitely not the math whiz Catherine was!)

It has been said that Catherine’s natal horoscope was one of the worst anyone could possibly have. Can you explain why?

When the first astrologer I visited cast Catherine’s chart, he actually gasped aloud in horror. Just for fun, I’d told him only that the subject was a long-dead queen who was the heroine of my novel. He told me she had a Grand Cross-four planets aligned at ninety degree intervals from each other, so if you connected them with a pencil line, you’d draw a square-armed cross.

Trust me, you don’t want a Grand Cross. You will be up against very, very difficult forces, and have conflict after conflict without being able to resolve it.

The astrologer explained that one planet (Jupiter) represented Catherine, and the others represented three powerful men who thwarted her at every turn. No matter what good she tried to achieve, these three forces undermined her efforts. Tragedy was the inevitable result.

Eerily enough, one of the planets happened to be her husband’s astrological “ruler”-and the two others were the rulers of her two malevolent sons, each of whom became king. Catherine was charming, diplomatic, and exceedingly intelligent-far more so than her husband or sons, whose mental and emotional deficiencies vexed her at every turn. I believe their failings, not Catherine’s, ultimately led to the massacre; Catherine struggled to right their wrongs and prevent civil war, but she was unable to control the situation.

The astrologer also said-without knowing anything else about Catherine’s background-that her chart revealed that she lost her parents in early childhood, and faced a massive catastrophe during her life, as a result of the Grand Cross.

In your research of the astrological charts of Catherine and her family and the superstitions of the time period, what was the most interesting/surprising/shocking thing you learned?

Even though I enjoy reading about Renaissance magic and related matters, I’m a skeptic; I approach it the way an anthropologist would approach learning about the magical beliefs of an ancient culture. But I admit, I was shocked when I came across the link between the star Algol and the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre.

“Even though I enjoy…Renaissance magic and related matters, I’m a skeptic.”

Since ancient times, Algol has been associated with the violent shedding of blood on a mass scale; the Chinese called the star “the Heaped-Up Corpses,” and the Arabs called it al-ghul, “the demon” star. Renaissance magicians and modern-day astrologers believed it to be the most evil star in the heavens, predicting great catastrophe.

Algol rose and made an extremely bad aspect with the planet Mars (associated with war and bloodshed) less than an hour before the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre began. Catherine surely knew this-she made use of several astrologers, including her favorite, Ruggieri, and always checked their mathematical calculations against hers (which were always right).

Historical Perspective

Catherine de’ Medici: A Timeline

April 13, 1519 Caterina de’ Medici is born

October 28, 1533 Caterina marries Henri

January 19, 1544 Catherine’s first son, Francois, is born

March 31, 1547 King Francois I dies; his son, Henri, becomes Henri II of France

June 27, 1550 Charles-Maximilien is born

September 19, 1551 Edouard-Alexandre is born

May 14, 1553 Marguerite (Margot) is born

July 10, 1559 Henri dies; his fifteen year-old son, Francois, becomes Francois II of France

December 5, 1560 Francois II dies; his brother, Charles, becomes Charles IX of France

August 18, 1572 Catherine’s daughter, Margot, marries the Huguenot king, Henri of Navarre

August 23, 1572 The St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre begins

May 30, 1574 Charles dies; his brother, Edouard, becomes Henri III of France

January 5, 1589 Catherine dies

Recommended Reading

Catherine de’ Medici:

Renaissance Queen of France

Leonie Frieda

Renaissance Warrior and Patron:

The Reign of Francis I

R. J. Knecht

Keep on Reading

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