Everything about La Voisin totally explained
Catherine Monvoisin, known as "
La Voisin" (c.
1640 –
February 22,
1680),
French sorceress, whose maiden name was Catherine Deshayes, was one of the chief personages in the famous
affaire des poisons, which disgraced the reign of
Louis XIV.
Sorcery and scandal
Her husband, Monvoisin, was an unsuccessful
jeweller. She was
promiscuous throughout her marriage, and she practised
chiromancy and face-reading to retrieve her and her husband's fortunes. She gradually added the practice of
witchcraft, in which she'd the help of a renegade priest,
Etienne Guibourg, whose part was the celebration of the "
black mass," a parody of the
Christian Mass.
She practised medicine, especially midwifery, procured
abortion and provided love powders and poisons. Her chief accomplice was one of her lovers, the magician
Lesage, whose real name was Adam Coeuret.
The great ladies of Paris flocked to La Voisin, who accumulated enormous wealth. Among her clients were
Olympe Mancini, comtesse de Soissons, who sought the death of the king's mistress,
Louise de La Vallière;
Françoise-Athénaïs, marquise de Montespan, another of the king's mistresses; and the
comtesse de Gramont ("la belle Hamilton"), among others.
The bones of toads, the teeth of moles,
Spanish flies, iron filings, human blood and
mummy, or the dust of human remains, were among the alleged ingredients of the love powders concocted by La Voisin. Her knowledge of poisons wasn't apparently so thorough as that of less well-known sorcerers, or it would be difficult to account for La Vallière's immunity. The art of poisoning had become a regular science at the time.
Public execution
The death of the king's sister-in-law,
the duchesse d'Orléans had been falsely attributed to poison, and the crimes of
Marie Madeleine de Brinvilliers (executed in 1676) and her accomplices were still fresh in the public mind. In April 1679 a commission appointed to inquire into the subject and to prosecute the offenders met for the first time. Its proceedings, including some suppressed in the official records, are preserved in the notes of one of the official court reporters,
Gabriel Nicolas de la Reynie.
La Voisin was thereafter convicted of
witchcraft and was
burned in public on the
Place de Grève.
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