Theodore Beza was born at
Vezelay (8 miles west-south-west of
Avallon), in
Burgundy, France. His father, Pierre de Beze, royal governor of
Vezelay, descended from a
Burgundian family of distinction; his mother, Marie Bourdelot, was known for her generosity. Beza's father had two brothers; Nicholas, who was member of
Parliament at Paris; and Claude, who was
abbot of the
Cistercian monastery Froimont in the
diocese of Beauvais.
Nicholas, who was unmarried, during a visit to Vezelay was so pleased with Theodore that, with the permission of his parents, he took him to Paris to educate him there. From Paris, Theodore was sent to
Orleans in December 1528 to receive instruction from the famous German teacher
Melchior Wolmar. He was received into Wolmar's house, and the day on which this took place was afterward celebrated as a second birthday.
Young Beza soon followed his teacher to
Bourges, where the latter was called by the
duchess Margaret of
Angoulême, sister of
Francis I. At the time, Bourges was the focus of the Reformation movement in France. In 1534, after Francis I issued his edict against ecclesiastical innovations, Wolmar returned to Germany. Beza, in accordance with the wish of his father, went back to Orleans to study law, and spent four years there (1535-39). The pursuit of law had little attraction for him; he enjoyed more the reading of the ancient classics, especially
Ovid, Catullus, and
Tibullus.
He received the degree of licentiate in law
August 11, 1539, and, as his father desired, went to Paris, where he began to practice. To support him, his relatives had obtained for him two benefices, the proceeds of which amounted to 700 golden crowns a year; and his uncle had promised to make him his successor.
Beza spent two years in Paris and gained a prominent position in literary circles. To escape the many temptations to which he was exposed, with the knowledge of two friends, he became engaged in the year 1544 to a young girl of humble descent, Claudine Denoese, promising to publicly marry her as soon as his circumstances would allow it.
In
1548 he published a collection of
Latin poetry, Juvenilia, which made him famous, and he was everywhere considered one of the best writers of Latin poetry of his time. Among these poems was "De sua in Candidam et Audebertum benevolentia" in which the poet compares his passion for two young lovers, Candida and Audebert, and concludes that though he kisses them both he loves Audebert the best. Some have taken this to point to
bisexuality or
pederasty. For many years afterwards
Catholic opponents would hold this work against Beza in particular and against Calvinists in general as a defense of
sodomy and proof of moral failing,. The
Encyclopedia of Homosexuality, however, notes that the poem was influenced by
classical authors (who not infrequently demonstrated "pederastic interests and allusions"), making evidence for Beza's
homosexuality "uncertain at best," and
church historian Philip Schaff likewise argued that it was a mistake to "read between his lines what he never intended to put there" or to imagine "offences of which he was not guilty even in thought."
Shortly after the publication of his book, he fell ill and his illness, it is reported, revealed to him his spiritual needs. Gradually he came to accept
salvation in Christ, which lifted his spirits. He then resolved to sever his connections of the time, and went to
Geneva, the French city of refuge for Evangelicals (adherents of the Reformation movement), where he arrived with Claudine on October 23, 1548.