5. Which King of France had to cope with a mother who was insane, a wife who was a nyphomaniac, children that were probably not his, a major war, and the thought that he was made of glass?
From Quiz Dig Those Crazy Royals!
Answer:
Charles VI
Charles VI (1368-1422) became King at a very early age during the hundred years war, and the first part of his reign was dominated by a self-serving regency (which did not include his locked-up mother) intent on enriching themselves through the protracted war with England. He asserted his own authority in his middle teens, married the beautiful Isabella of Bavaria, and earned the name "Charles the Well-Beloved" because of his reforms and solid governing ability. Then he went insane.
What Charles probably suffered from was porphyria, a rare inherited blood disorder. What is certain was that his caregivers had no idea what to do about it. They locked up the King for months at a time, leaving his brother and wife in charge of running the country. However, the two of them were serial adulterers, having dozens of affairs both with one another and others, and several children were born to Isabella that could not possibly have been the King's - in fact, it is thought in some circles that the next King of France, Charles VII, was not his son at all. Isabella hired a woman who looked like her for the sole purpose of sleeping with the King, and thus Charles actually believed that he had fathered all of his wife's children, even when he was lucid.
When he was not lucid Charles could be violent and suffered from various delusions, including the thought that he was made of spun glass and as such, would shatter if touched by anyone. He was more-or-less locked up and neglected, along with Isabella's many children, none of whom she had much time for.
When Henry V of England married Charles' daughter Katherine it was thought to be a brilliant match. However, it also brought porphyria into the English royal family. Their son Henry VI is thought to have suffered from it, and several descendants of his half brother (through Henry's mother Katherine) probably had it too. These people are thought to include Margaret Tudor, Mary Queen of Scots, James I, George III and possibly George IV, his wife Caroline of Brunswick (another descendant of Charles VI) and Queen Victoria.