Abstract

Abstract This article seeks to reassess the influence of Eleanor of Austria as queen of France. Her dual role as a foreign queen consort not only encompassed her persona as a queen of peace, emphasized at public appearances, but also involved an intimate sphere of back-channel diplomacy where she maintained close connections with her siblings, Emperor Charles V and Queen Mary of Hungary. First, Eleanor’s peace-making identity in public diplomacy will be discussed. Then, by examining dispatches from imperial ambassadors, this article demonstrates how Eleanor stimulated the Habsburg information-gathering process. Furthermore, an analysis of her unedited correspondence provides insight into the political and cultural context in which she operated as a letter writer at the court of François Ier. This article then illuminates the prominent roles played by her courtiers, and most notably Beatriz Pacheco, as informants of the imperial ambassadors and her support for covert agents such as Domingo Leyton, thus offering a more political and personal portrayal of the queen’s entourage. In this way, the article aims to present novel perspectives on secrecy and espionage at the French and Habsburg Renaissance courts.

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