Michel de Codignac
{{Short description|French diplomat}}
File:Corsica by Piri Reis.jpg in 1553.]]
Michel de Codignac was French Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1553 to 1556, and successor to Gabriel de Luetz d'Aramon.
Michel de Codignac lobbied for Ottoman support during the Invasion of Corsica (1553).[https://books.google.com/books?id=LPp63EKb9moC&pg=PA929 The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean world in the age of Philip II by Fernand Braudel p.929ff] He is known to have participated to Suleiman's Persian campaigns, and to have sailed with the Ottoman fleet in its campaign against Piombino, Elba and Corsica in 1555.{{harvnb|Setton|1984|page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=DUwLAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA692 692, Note 143]}}
The last few months of Codignac in the Ottoman Empire were difficult ones, as he was attacked by Rüstem Pasha for the failure of the French government to repay debts to the Ottomans. Codignac himself had apparently incurred debts and was disgraced by the Sultan.
He returned to Europe in 1558, passing through Venice in July 1558, and entered in the service of Philip II of Spain, to the ire of the French government.
See also
Notes
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References
- {{The Papacy and the Levant|volume=4}}
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{{succession box|title=French Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire|before=Gabriel de Luetz d'Aramont|after=Jean Cavenac de la Vigne|years=1553–1556}}
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