From the beginning of the French Wars of Religion a small minority of
toleration-minded Protestants and Catholics sought out a via media to
end the civil wars which were destroying France. Later called politiques
by their more zealous Catholic opponents, this group turned to François
de Valois, duke of Alençon and Anjou in the 1570s, to champion their
cause. Youngest son of Henry II and Catherine de Medici and heir to the
throne himself after 1574, Anjou was also sought out by William of
Orange and a similar group of politiques in the rebel provinces of the
Netherlands, where the Dutch Revolt had virtually become a civil war.
Anjou never became the saviour that either group had looked for,
however. This book analyses why he nevertheless became the focus of such
attention, and tries to explain why he never joined the politique
struggle of the later sixteenth century.