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20 Mistresses Who Had More Power Than the Queens Beside Them


20 Mistresses Who Had More Power Than the Queens Beside Them


Power Wasn’t Always on the Throne

Royal history loves a crowned head, doesn’t it? We all love a good story about an influential queen or a cut-throat king, but court life was often messier than those stuffy portraits suggest. In many palaces, it was actually the mistress who had the king’s ear, and sometimes the political machinery humming in her direction. A few were official mistresses, while others were so-called “consorts,” but the pattern is the same: they stood close enough to power that it was obvious who really called the shots. Let’s explore 20 names that were secretly pulling the strings. 

1779457659a934a34c05a3e11712e26156d304728f6d7e20bb.jpgFrançois Boucher on Wikimedia

1. Agnès Sorel

Agnès Sorel didn’t just waltz into Charles VII of France’s life; she became the first officially recognized royal mistress in French history. Queen Marie of Anjou remained the king’s wife, but Agnès had intimate access, which became even less of a secret after Charles gave her the estate of Beauté-sur-Marne. 

177945748399f29758106487049bad29303b6377e93516198a.jpgBenjamin Gavaudo on Wikimedia

2. Diane de Poitiers

Diane de Poitiers was a lot of things for Henry II: his mistress, his adviser, and the woman many at court treated as queen. Catherine de’ Medici had the crown, but Diane received everything else, including the crown jewels, the coveted Château de Chenonceau, and Henry’s confidence. 

17794575147746d3fa242325473e7065ad99266909578c01bb.jpgAmbroise Dubois on Wikimedia

3. Anne de Pisseleu

Anne de Pisseleu became Francis I’s chief mistress after his return from captivity in Madrid, and she quickly turned that affection into leverage. Queen Eleanor of Austria had the official place beside Francis, but it was Anne who became lady-in-waiting to the queen, governess to royal daughters, and a patron for her own relatives. Her enemies knew the score, too, stripping away her influence after Francis died.

1779457535968e5deda5c257b011349fb8f1f929234924aa70.jpgCorneille de Lyon on Wikimedia

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4. Gabrielle d’Estrées

Gabrielle d’Estrées is often remembered as Henry IV’s great love, but she was much more than that. She was one of his closest advisers during France’s brutal wars. While Henry was still married to Marguerite de Valois, Gabrielle was actually the one who pushed him toward Catholicism and encouraged its acceptance of the Edict of Nantes. 

17794575805f5d18171c20f18666fc6e53bda776088ae5fb17.jpgLouis-Marie Lanté, Georges-Jacques Gatine on Wikimedia

5. Marie-Anne de Mailly-Nesle

Marie-Anne de Mailly-Nesle had a short run as Louis XV’s mistress, but she knew how to make the most of it. Queen Marie Leszczyńska was largely kept out of serious political business, but not Mary-Anne; Châteauroux encouraged his involvement in the War of the Austrian Succession. 

177945760101a9b02025967a235d3681f63c15107de26598c2.JPGSailko on Wikimedia

6. Madame de Pompadour

Madame de Pompadour may have started her influential run as Louis XV’s official mistress, but she then became his friend, adviser, and cultural gatekeeper long after their romance cooled. Marie Leszczyńska was pious and respected in private life, but Versailles itself notes that she was kept away from serious business. Not Pompadour; she shaped everything from patronage to royal taste. 

17794576196a9ba4cc509d91f2ff2c22638833ec83f349f236.jpgFrançois Boucher on Wikimedia

7. Madame de Montespan

When you’re called “the true queen of France,” you know you had some pull. Madame de Montespan is known as exactly that, holding such sway over Louis XIV’s court that contemporaries gave her the moniker. Queen Maria Theresa had the crown, but Montespan had the apartments, the king’s children, and a circle of courtiers itching to stay on her good side. 

1779457678153076d9a1352dbc334e2ef8135d545ae0b6f381.jpgAnonymous (France), workshop of Henri and Charles Beaubrun on Wikimedia

8. Madame de Maintenon

Initially, Madame de Maintenon entered Louis XIV’s world as governess to his illegitimate children with Montespan, but after Queen Maria Theresa’s death, she secretly married him. The move ultimately made her a sort of second wife and queen, allowing her to push Louis toward piety and a more sober royal household.

1779457714d38d2438e6dc9c771d87261d2a2e88cddfea9adb.jpgPierre Mignard I on Wikimedia

9. Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland

Barbara Villiers, also known as Lady Castlemaine, wasn’t the sort of mistress who just waited around. Catherine of Braganza was Charles II’s queen, but Barbara made things happen, openly asserting influence over her and even helping bring down the Earl of Clarendon. All in all, that legendary temper made her one of Restoration England’s most unavoidable women.

17794577290e8465d6c07d0175e516ae97f25ae97524fe59ec.jpgPeter Lely on Wikimedia

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10. Louise de Kéroualle, Duchess of Portsmouth

Louise de Kéroualle played the long game at Charles II’s court, and she played it with enough skill to raise the backs of English observers. Catherine of Braganza actually got along with her, but Louise’s usefulness to French interests made her far more politically consequential than a friendly attendant. 

17794577451d0dcbbbf46b3d6d87546745bdef8d7eee8b0397.jpgPierre Mignard I on Wikimedia

11. Alice Perrers

Alice Perrers started in Queen Philippa’s household and didn’t waste much time making moves. She became Edward III’s mistress during his declining years, and after Philippa died, Alice’s influence only expanded to her becoming a so-called “uncrowned queen” during the political crisis of the 1370s. If that wasn’t enough, Parliament eventually moved against her, which shows just how seriously men took this supposedly unofficial woman.

177945778270afeb8bb957b8a398ba315ebb24e9a05767c1fd.jpgFord Madox Brown on Wikimedia

12. Jane Shore

Jane Shore wasn’t the richest. She wasn’t even the most enchanting of royal mistresses. But that didn’t matter. Elizabeth Woodville remained Edward IV’s queen, but Jane had enough influence over the king to bring people who had fallen from favor back into his mercy. Sure, that looks softer than organizing a coup, but if you were begging for a pardon, her power mattered.

1779457807dd4a9d4a4aa98e95145fdcde96e38175f6fb7c1f.jpgFrancesco Bartolozzi on Wikimedia

13. Melusine von der Schulenburg

Melusine von der Schulenburg followed George I from Hanover to Britain, where she became Duchess of Kendal—and one of the most powerful women around your majesty. George’s wife, Sophia Dorothea, had been imprisoned in Germany after their divorce; meanwhile, Melusine received all the titles, money, and influence that made her comparable to a queen.

1779457825a358f377f9f737b3dcd9d25b8a6f5b8f266cc0cb.jpgUnidentified painter on Wikimedia

14. Lola Montez

Lola Montez arrived in Munich as a dancer and left as one of the biggest political scandals recorded for the period. Queen Therese was still Ludwig I’s wife, but Lola gained a title and enough influence over the king to inflame the public. When Ludwig abdicated during the turmoil of 1848, people didn’t have to look far for one of the sparks.

17794578419d0b3e9985a297c8cc75c7c967236f2602db2de3.jpgJoseph Karl Stieler on Wikimedia

15. Countess Cosel

Anna Constantia von Brockdorff, better known as Countess Cosel, spectacularly climbed the ranks at the court of Augustus the Strong. His wife, Christiane Eberhardine, pretty much lived apart from him, allowing Cosel to receive titles of her own. That said, her story ended grimly in long confinement at Stolpen Castle.

1779457866ecf05d9dea423328033068b0fec143e64b232e10.PNGUnidentified painter on Wikimedia

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16. Catherine Dolgorukova

Catherine Dolgorukova became Alexander II’s long-term mistress while Empress Maria Alexandrovna was ill—a “secret wife” of sorts. The relationship caused all sorts of turmoil, given that Alexander visited Catherine constantly, fathered children with her, and married her morganatically soon after the empress passed. The Romanovs weren’t happy, but the tsar’s devotion made Catherine impossible to ignore.

1779457903f976425bde98558aeddaed4b730c8e84f4405648.jpgVladimir Borovikovsky on Wikimedia

17. Anna Mons

With his marriage to Eudoxia Lopukhina collapsing, Anna Mons eventually snuck in as Peter the Great’s long-term mistress. He gave Anna property, kept her in a semi-official position, and at one point, she even cozied up close enough that marriage rumors started swirling. However, once Peter suspected she had shifted her attention elsewhere, the once-powerful mistress had a huge downfall. 

1779457922cdb162fd15289f82741e487e1ba761d30a90173b.jpgUnidentified painter on Wikimedia

18. Wu Zetian

Wu Zetian had a pretty insane story: she started as a concubine, returned to court under Emperor Gaozong, and eventually outmaneuvered Empress Wang and Consort Xiao. Once she became empress, her influence effectively allowed her to administer the empire during Gaozong’s illness—and later became China’s only undisputed female emperor. 

1779457935643e0ea71601d3d69cef3c42c8ba07a0b82f18cf.JPGUnknown author on Wikimedia

19. Hürrem Sultan

Hürrem Sultan was also a concubine, but that didn’t stop her from becoming Suleiman the Magnificent’s favorite (and wife and political correspondent). The Ottoman system didn’t exactly have a typical queen beside Suleiman, but Hürrem’s rise still shook the hierarchy, especially after she eclipsed Mahidevran, the mother of Suleiman’s oldest surviving son. 

177945795591db317dc4a6f8f126bc275011aad2aa10262dda.jpgWorkshop of Titian on Wikimedia

20. Cixi

Cixi entered the Qing court as a consort of the Xianfeng emperor, but that was just the beginning. Perhaps her biggest boost forward was becoming the mother of his only surviving son. Empress Ci’an had senior ceremonial status after Xianfeng’s death, but Cixi proved the more durable political operator, so by the time she was finished, she was one of the most powerful women in Chinese history.

1779457990388c00bf1149e445c0b3dcd00e2042396440e67a.jpgHubert Vos on Wikimedia


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