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Absolutism in France

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Absolutism in France L etat c est moi -- Louis XIV Temple of Love Hall of Mirrors The King s Chapel Opera Stage at Versailles Furniture: Louis XIV Style ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Absolutism in France


1
Absolutism in FranceLetat cest moi-- Louis
XIV
2
France in the 17th Century
  • Population
  • 3 times that of England
  • 2 times that of Spain
  • Uneven very wealthy, very poor
  • Large merchant class
  • Self-sufficient economy
  • India, North America and Caribbean

3
Absolutism(Absolute Monarch)
  • Unlimited power
  • No limits
  • No constitution
  • Tradition and custom
  • Theory People must have complete trust in
    well-bred and well-trained monarchs who were
    raised for the role from birth
  • Divine Right to Rule
  • Examples Russian Tsars, French Kings

4
Henry IVHenry the Great
  • Ruled 1589-1610
  • Born Protestant (Huguenot)
  • Converted to Catholicism
  • 1598 Edict of Nantes
  • Freedom to the Protestants
  • Ended French Wars of Religion
  • Murdered by a fanatical Catholic

5
Louis XIII
  • Ruled 1610-1643
  • Ruled during 30 Years War
  • Cardinal Richelieu
  • Intrigue Three Musketeers
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vGuKudT1bM68feature
    related
  • Married Anne of Austria
  • Absolute Monarch
  • French nobility under control
  • No privileges for the Huguenots
  • Built powerful navy
  • No tax reform

6
Cardinal Richelieu
  • 1585-1642
  • Believed in the State above all else

7
Richelieu and Government
  • Cardinal Richelieu was Louis XIIIs Chief
    Minister
  • Consolidated royal power
  • Crushed domestic dissenters
  • Created stronger economy
  • Restrained the power of the nobility
  • Transformed France into a strong, centralized
    state

8
Richelieu and France
  • Main foreign policy objectives
  • limit Hapsburg Dynasty
  • Alliances with Protestant rulers
  • Thirty Years War
  • France emerges more powerful than other nations
  • Decline of HRE
  • Legacy King Louis XIV
  • Further suppressed aristocracy
  • Edict of Fontainebleau in 1685
  • Nullified Edict of Nantes (1598)
  • Ordered destruction of Huguenot churches
  • Closed Protestant schools
  • Result nearly 500,000 Protestants left France
    over the next 20 years
  • Went to England, Netherlands, Denmark, Germany,
    North America

9
Young King Louis XIV
  • Born 1638
  • Ruled 1643-1715
  • Assumed power at age 23

10
Cardinal Mazarin
  • Advisor to Louis
  • De facto ruler of France
  • Italian. Not popular.
  • Father-figure to Louis XIV

11
Thirty Years War Causes
  • 1618-1648
  • Mostly religious conflict between Catholics and
    Protestants
  • Also political conflict between Holy Roman Empire
    and France

12
European Results Thirty Years War
  • Dutch independence from Spain
  • France gains Alsace from HRE
  • Protestant German princes ally themselves with
    France
  • Peace of Westphalia
  • Everyone must recognize the Peace of Augsburg
  • Catholics and Protestants are legally equal
  • Calvinism is permitted
  • Decline of HRE
  • Doesnt end conflict between Spain and France

13
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14
Thirty Years War Results for France
  • Treasury nearly bankrupt
  • 1659 Spain cedes territory (mostly land in the
    Spanish Netherlands) to France, ending the
    conflict
  • Balance of Power changes. Spain begins to
    decline, France is rising in power

15
Just when things are getting better . . . . Le
Fronde
  • 1648 -- 1653 Civil War
  • Rebellion nobles vs. the king over traditional
    rights
  • Long term results
  • Louis distrust of nobility
  • Louis XIV must enforce absolutist rule
  • French realize benefit of a strong monarch

16
A brief history of Louis
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vybgRY8bUAV4

17
Jean Baptist ColbertFinance Minister
  • Believer in Mercantilism
  • prosperity depends on supply of capital.
  • Positive balance of trade with other nations
  • Tariffs to control BoT
  • Other gov. controls

18
Colbert and the Domestic Economy
  • More taxation to enrich treasury
  • Destroyed domestic commerce
  • Farmers, small manufacturers penalized
  • Restricted movement of goods and labor
  • Unfair tax system reinforced
  • Gentry, clergy exempt from taxation
  • Capitalists have favorable taxes
  • Ag. Land used for export industries (wine, wool)

19
Louis XIV Domestic Problems
  • Weak economy
  • Civil Unrest
  • Nobles too powerful. Louis must punish them.
  • Filled government positions with commoners
  • Reduced nobles to courtiers
  • Required nobles to spend the majority of the year
    with him
  • Rewarded nobles with time spent with him

20
L etat cest moi!
  • I am the State
  • 1643-1715
  • France became world power, leader in the arts.
  • Fashion Clothing is large and showy to emphasis
    the kings personality

21
Le roi soleil
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vHWjHUEdw8TI

22
Louis XIV the Sun King
  • Overall brilliance
  • Nobles stayed within the kings orbit
  • Ruled for 72 years
  • Great influence on French culture
  • French is language of diplomacy
  • French style imitated

23
Life of Opulence and Grandeur
  • The Daily Routine of the King

24
Louis as the sun god Apollo
25
Louis as Apollo
by Jean Nocret, 1670
26
1673 Louis represented as a classical hero
27
The sun symbol was everywhere at Versailles
28
Family Life
  • His wife and cousin Marie Therese (a Hapsburg)
  • Seven children, one son survived

29
Mistresses of the King
  • Mistress is a public role sits next to the
    queen at court.
  • Mademoiselle de la Vallière 3 children, convent
  • Madame de Montespan 7 children, also retired
    to a convent
  • Madame de Maintenon no children, but married
    Louis in secret.

30
Versailles
  • Glory of the monarch glory of the state

31
Versailles Statistics
550,000 square feet 2,153 windows 700 rooms
67 staircases 6,000 paintings 2,100
sculptures 5,000 pieces of furniture 6,500
Acres
32
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33
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34
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35
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36
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37
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38
Temple of Love
39
Hall ofMirrors
40
The Kings Chapel
41
Opera Stage at Versailles
42
Furniture Louis XIV Style
43
Imitators
Winter Palace in St. Petersburg and Peterhof
summer palace near St. Petersburg
44
Blenheim Palace England
45
Schonbrunn Austria
46
La Granja Madrid
47
Marie Antoinettes Peasant House
  • Looks rustic, but opulent on the inside
  • Many aristocrats mimicked this style
  • Revolution wiped out that idea

48
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49
Marie Antoinettes Peasants Hut
50
War of Spanish Succession
  • Carlos II (1669-1700)
  • Descended from Joanna the Mad 14 times

51
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52
  • War of Spanish Succession
  • 1702-1713
  • France and HRE want to share Spanish territory
  • Spanish kings will favors France
  • This would make France too powerful, disrupt
    balance of power
  • War
  • Two sides
  • Grand Alliance (led by England, Holland, HRE) vs.
    France
  • France loses war, but gains Spanish throne

53
1713 Treaty of Utrecht
  • The Grand Alliance
  • England finally becomes one of the great powers
    of Europe
  • Made Louis XIV unpopular at home, but his
    grandson is now king of Spain
  • Spain loses Italian possessions
  • France gives England Hudsons Bay territory
  • Balance of Power is preserved

54
Death of Louis XIV
  • "Je m'en vais, mais l'État demeurera toujours."
    ("I am going away, but the State will always
    remain")
  • Advice to Louis XV "Do not follow the bad
    example which I have set you I have often
    undertaken war too lightly and have sustained it
    for vanity. Do not imitate me . . . may you apply
    yourself to the alleviation of the burdens of
    your subjects".

55
1715 Death of Louis XIV
  • War left France in need of revenue
  • Spread of French culture and style throughout
    Europe
  • Other monarchs mimicked his lifestyle
  • French is the lingua franca of Europe, the
    language of diplomacy

56
Louis XV Reigned 1715-1774
  • Great-grandson of Louis XIV
  • Mismanagement of finances
  • Loss of colonial possession during the 7 Years
    War with England
  • Scandalous private life
  • Where did all this lead? To questions about
    Absolutism.

57
Limits to Royal Absolutism
  • Must be reasonable, conform to the will of God
  • Still limited by traditions, customs
  • Must operate under a recognized body of law
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