Guillaume de l'Aubespine de Châteauneuf (1547–1629) was a French diplomat in London between 1585 and 1589, involved in the affairs of Mary, Queen of Scots.[1] He became the Marquis of Châteauneuf.
He was a son of Claude de l'Aubespine, baron de Châteauneuf and Jeanne Bochetel, a daughter of the diplomat Guillaume Bochetel. Her brother Jacques Bochetel de la Forest, had been a diplomat in London in the 1560s.[2]
Châteauneuf succeeded Michel de Castelnau as ambassador in London in September 1585.[3] He inherited packets of unsent ciphered letters for Mary.[4] In February 1586, Châteauneuf complained to Francis Walsingham that his lodgings were small and had a bad smell, and made his daughter unwell. His wife was pregnant. He hoped that Walsingham would move him to an empty house belonging to Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke.[5]
Walsingham had kept spies in Castelnau's household and now determined to intercept Mary's correspondence arriving at the French embassy.[6] Walsingham's agent was the courier Gilbert Gifford.[7] Châteauneuf later described how Gifford would carry secret letters from London to Mary at Chartley Castle. The letters were taken to the nearby houses of Catholic sympathisers, and then hidden in beer barrels for delivery. Her letters to London were delivered by couriers disguised as locksmiths, upholsterers, or other craftsmen.[8]
In March 1586, Mary wrote from Chartley to Châteauneuf about maintaining a secret correspondence. She suggested writing sometimes on supplies of white taffeta or fine linen using invisible ink made with alum. He also could write between the lines on certain pages of new books delivered to her secretary Claude Nau.[9] She thought writing with alum on paper was insecure.[10] Because she often received new slippers, it would be convenient for him to hide secret messages in the cork soles and heels. He should be sure that the slippers with secret letters should be discretely marked on the sole with a fingernail.[11] A cipher alphabet key for their correspondence survives in the National Archives.[12]
Anthony Babington was captured in London and the event became a celebration with bonfires and the ringing of church bells. Some of Châteauneuf's servants were arrested during the search for Babington. It was said that the plan was to have Elizabeth shot on 15 August. Châteauneuf and another diplomat, Charles de Prunelé, Baron d'Esneval, who had recently returned from Scotland, had an audience with Elizabeth I at Windsor Castle, and Elizabeth declared that Mary, Queen of Scots, was behind the plot.[13] In September 1586, Châteauneuf wrote to Courcelles, a French diplomat in Scotland, describing the arrest of Mary's secretaries Claude Nau and Gilbert Curle. Papers were seized which were used to implicate Mary in the Babington Plot.[14]
Châteauneuf and his secretary Destrappes were thought be personally involved in the Babington Plot, or another plan to poison Elizabeth I, and he was questioned by William Cecil with the informer William Stafford, a brother of the ambassador in Paris, Edward Stafford.[15] His answers were doubtful, and although it was thought Elizabeth requested his removal he remained in post.[16] Châteauneuf discussed the release of Destrappes with Elizabeth at Croydon Palace in May.[17]
Châteauneuf wrote a description of the discovery of the Babington Plot for Henry III of France.[18] He worked in vain with a special envoy Pomponne de Bellièvre to argue against her execution.[19] An eight-page extract from Châteauneuf's report of Mary's execution was published as Le discours de la mort de trés-haute et treés-illustre Princesse Madame Marie Stouard, Reyne d'Ecosse (Paris, 1587).[20] After Mary's funeral at Peterborough Cathedral, her doctor, Dominique Bourgoing, came to see Châteauneuf, who sent him to Henry III.[21]
In 1573, Guillaume de L'Aubespine married Marie de La Châtre (died 1626), a maid of honour in the household of Catherine de' Medici. She was a daughter of Claude de La Châtre de Maisonfort and Anne Robertet. Daniel Dumonstier made a drawing of Marie de La Châtre, and at least two other portraits survive.[22]
Their children included:
Charles de L'Aubespine and his parents were commemorated by a marble monument at Bourges Cathedral sculpted by Philippe de Buyster.[24]