Francis 1, a member of the
Valois Dynasty, was born at
Cognac, Charente, the son of
Charles d'Angoulême (
1459 –
January 1 1496), and of
Louise of Savoy (
September 11 1476 –
September 22 1531). His father, Charles d'Angoulême, was the cousin of King
Louis XII. In 1498, the four-year-old Francis, already
Count of Angoulême, was created
Duke of Valois. He was the
heir presumptive of Louis XII, who did not succeed in siring sons with any of his three wives. Young Francis was, by instigation of King Louis, in 1506 betrothed and on 18 May 1514 married, to
Claude of France (1499-1524), the daughter of Louis XII and
Anne of Brittany and heiress of Brittany. Because of the
Salic Law that stated that women could not inherit the throne of France, the throne passed to Francis I at the death of
Louis XII, as he was the descendant of the eldest surviving male line of the
Capetian Dynasty. Claude of France became
queen consort.
When young Francis ascended the throne in
1515, he was already a king with unprecedented
humanist credentials. While his two predecessors,
Charles VIII and
Louis XII, had spent much of their reigns concerned with
Italy they did not much embrace the new intellectual movements coming out of it. Both monarchs continued in the same patterns of behavior that had dominated the French monarchy for centuries. They are considered the last of the medieval French monarchs, but they did lay the groundwork for the Renaissance to come into full swing in France.
Contact between the French and Italians in the long running series of wars under Charles and Louis had brought new ideas to France by the time the young Francis was receiving his education. Thus a number of his tutors, such as Desmoulins, his Latin instructor, and
Christophe de Longeuil were schooled in the new ways of thinking and they attempted to imbue Francis with it. Francis's mother also had a great interest in Renaissance art, which she passed down to her son. One certainly cannot say that Francis received a humanist education; most of his teachers had not yet been affected by the Renaissance. One can, however, state that he clearly received an education more oriented towards humanism than any previous French king.