Francisco Gómez de Sandoval, Duke of Lerma (1553-1625) is the last major
unknown statesman in modern European history. Patrick Williams brings
him dramatically to life and challenges the assumptions that historians
have made about him and about Spanish history at a time of profound
crisis, inviting a re-evaluation of the phenomenon of government by
favourites in this seminal period of European history.
Lerma served Philip III as his favourite and first minister between 1598
and 1618. His power dazzled contemporaries; one petitioner telling
Philip that he had come to see him 'because I could not get an
appointment with the Duke of Lerma'. Within a decade of assuming office
Lerma had raised his family from humiliating poverty to great riches and
was the greatest patron of the arts in Europe. His use of power provoked
intense debate about the nature of corruption in government. Yet Lerma
remained deeply ambivalent about his position. Determined to follow
family tradition and retire into religious life to secure the salvation
of his soul, he secured a cardinalate in 1617, ending his life as a
prince of the Church.