Historically, as the representative of a nation, it was essential that a  monarch remain strong and healthy. In 1559 
Henri II of France was  injured at a jousting tournament when a lance splintered, went into his  eye and shot upwards into his brain, causing a subdural haemorrhage (a  build-up of blood between the inner and outer membranes covering the  brain). Although he was badly injured, the king managed to get to his  chambers, where all of his physicians gathered in the hope of curing  him.
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| Medieval tournament | 
Born  in 1519, the future 
Henry II married 
Catherine de Medici in 1533 when  they were both 14 years old. His father, 
King Francis I, reportedly  supervised the consummation, announcing they had both shown valour in  the ‘joust’. Catherine was rich but not pretty and Henry was soon in the  arms of 
Diane de Poitiers, a beautiful, ambitious widow in her  mid-thirties who became almost a queen behind the scenes. Henry had  other mistresses but his two other great loves were hunting and  jousting. He succeeded his father to the French throne on his 28th  birthday in 1547 and in 1558 his and Catherine’s eldest son, the stunted  and sickly Francis, was married to Mary, Queen of Scots, who had been  brought up in France by her mother’s family, the Guises, to keep her out  of the hands of the English. The French intended through her to acquire  the Scottish throne.