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FRENCH ABSOLUTISM I. FRENCH ABSOLUTISM A. INTRODUCTION 1. as Louis the XIV, the Sun King, a. I command you to listen to me explain how I came to rule 2. & why you must obey my every wish 3. as I was chosen by God himself to rule you French 4. most all my fellow kings a. in the various nations of Europe b. will become even more powerful than the kings in the Middle Ages c. but none will be as great or as powerful as me 5. only England a. that puny little island b. will be the exception to this c. their king can't keep control of his people d. he lets parliament have too much power e. what amounts to a limited or constitutional monarchy 6. France & the other countries adhere to absolute principles 7. sovereignty resides in us - the kings a. not the nobility or the parliament 8. we kings are responsible only to God a. divine right to rule b. absolute right to rule 9. we as absolute kings a. are creating new state bureaucracies & armies b. regulating all institutions 10. according to my crystal ball 11. we do not have as much power as leaders will in the future 12. they will call them leaders of modern totalitarian states a. Stalin, Saddam, Hitler 13. I want to give you some background leading up to my reign 14. and then I will tell you why I am the greatest king II. PRE-LOUIS XIV ABSOLUTISM A. INTRODUCTION 1. 2 kings Henry IV & Louis XIII 2. together w/their ministers, a. Sully, Richelieu & Mazarin b. set in motion absolutism that I will turn into thee absolutism of all time B. HENRY IV 1599-1610 1. outstanding king 2. best loved of French monarchs 3. Protestant who converted to Catholicism to save France from anarchy a. PARIS IS WORTH A MASS 4. he was very concerned for France's welfare 5. Under Henry w/aid of Sully, his chief minister a. France's economy strengthened & enlarged b. marshes for farm land reclaimed c. luxury crafts in Paris encouraged d. thousands of mulberry trees planted to foster manufacture of silk e. canals extended f. road & bridge built (1) won France reputation of maintaining best highways in Europe 2 g. even balanced budget of income & expenses 6. he also curtailed power of nobility 7. really set in motion foundation that later kings built on 8. history might be different if he had not been assassinated in prime of his career C. LOUIS XIII (reign 1610-43) 1. only 9 yrs old (1610) when father, Henry IV assassinated 2. his mother Marie de'Medici attempted to rule 3. but showed little of her famous family's political skill 4. once again political machinations surfaced among French nobles a. as during time of St. Bartholamew's Day Massacre 5. when Louis XIII came of age 6. though incapable himself of asserting a strong rule, 7. he had minister who could a. Cardinal Richelieu III. CARDINAL RICHELIEU 1585-1642 A. GENERAL REMARKS 1. set cornerstone of French absolutism 2. chief architect of absolutism for Louis XIII 3. Ideas passed to Louis XIV 4. virtual ruler of France for next 18 yrs. 5. He proved to be a good Machiavellian 6. he subordinated everything to raison d'etat = reason of state 7. mastermind behind French royal power 17th c. 8. his work also served as basis for France's cultural domination of Europe in later 17th c. B. WHO WAS HE? 1. trained as a gentleman/soldier 2. but renounced that life for church a. when became convinced it offered a better path to advancement 3. brilliant C. HIS POLITICAL PLAN FOR LOUIS XIII 1. outlined in his POLITICAL TESTAMENT 2. 4 things he promised Louis XIII he would do a. crush Huguenots (Protestants) b. harness the nobles c. keep king's subjects in dutiful order d. make king's name great abroad 3. raison d'etat determined his policy toward Huguenots 4. The Edict of Nantes had given them certain political privileges 5. to Richelieu these formed a state w/in the state a. a block to strong centralization 6. personally led army to subdue La Rochelle, capital of Huguenots 7. Richelieu canceled political clauses of Edict of Nantes a. but left its religious provisions intact 8. also his idea of funding protestants (Sweden) a. to thwart power of Hapsburgs & Spain b. during Thirty Years' War 9. in 1635 he founded the Academie, a. famous French institution to compile a dictionary of French language b. set standards & style of national culture 10. Richelieu said a. only 1 law & that law of king b. none could stand above it 11. he ordered destruction of some of nobles' chateaux 12. he forbid favorite aristocratic indulgence of private duels 3 13. when disobedient noblemen defied his edicts a. were imprisoned & even executed 14. more significant a. his transfer of local political administration away from nobles b. to more reliable royal officials (1) intendants c. hand picked by him 15. a man largely responsible for setting in motion a. the grand nation & absolutism of Louis XIV 16. Historians have always differed in their estimates of how good he was for France in long run 17. for royalists he built an efficient centralized state 18. for others he built in a sense too well 19. made French govt a. so centralized b. so professionally bureaucratic c. it had no placed for give & take of politics 20. a govt by discussion like England's parliament 21. & no political place for new, growing & ambitious middle classes a. except for few bureauacractic positions 22. perhaps ultimate decision on his benefits a. must be settled by upheaval of French Revolution of 1789 23. Richelieu also left legacy of strong resentment of monarchy 24. by both French aristocracy & privileged bourgeoisie 25. this led to revolt when Louis XIII died a. & Louis XIV a minor b. & regency ruled IV. LOUIS XIV 1643-1715 A. REGENCY UNDER CARDINAL MAZARIN 1. as Louis XIV only 4 1/2 yrs old when father Louis XIII died 2. Richelieu's hand picked successor & protege a. Cardinal Mazarin (Italian) (1) in charge of regency govt (2) for 18 years - 1643-1661 (a) when he died 3. Mazarin too a cardinal of church a. & master of raison d'etat 4. continued Richelieu's policy of centralization 5. but backlash occurred against absolutism & financial policies & rule by a foreigner 6. uprising known as "Frond" 7. Mazarin won by applying old adage a. divide & rule 8. & realization that their choice a. either anarchy or absolute monarchy B. GENERAL REMARKS LOUIS XIV 'S OWN RULE 1661-1715 1. Louis XIV 18 yrs old when Mazarin died a. king for 72 years b. longest reign in western history 2. under him apex of French absolutism 3. French consider Louis XIV reign their Golden Age 4. under him French culture and language spread throughout Europe 5. known as sun king 6. sun symbol perfect example of l'etat, c'est moi = I am the state 7. elaborately dressed a. large head of hair not a wig 4 b. powdered wigs were popular under his father c. then again when Louis got older & his hair turned grey 8. he never did have a chief minister like his predecessors 9. intelligent & boundless energy 10. serious as to responsibilities of king 11. yet had strong sense of grandeur of his crown 12. never missed an opportunity to impress C. PERSONAL LIFE 1. married to Spanish princess Marie Theresa a. for political reasons in 1660 2. but a ladies man & kept many mistresses 3. Louis encouraged belief at court that it was an honor to lie w/king 4. when became known a new lady enjoying favors of king a. & might become his mistress, b. other ladies always stood in her presence 5. to preserve appearance of domestic peace, a. Louis forced mistresses to pay calls on Queen b. & then entire group had to attend mass together every day 6. 3 major mistresses a. Louise de la Valliere (1) had 5 children by Louis (a) 1 daughter legimatized b. Marquise de Montespan 7. Mme de Montespan was mother of 6 of his children a. Louis legitimated Louis Ceasar b. & gave titles & arranged proper marriages with the other ones 8. & Mme de Maintenon 9. after Marie's death 1683 secret marriage to Madame de Maintenon a. who had been governess of his illegitimate children b. morganatic marriage (1) man of royalty or nobility marries a woman of inferior social status (2) w/provision that any children of marriage or wife may not lay claim to his rank or property c. she had lots of influence over Louis D. LOUIS' COURT AT PALACE OF VERSAILLES 1. capstone in his absolutism policy 2. true monument to absolutism 3. proclaimed glory of sun king 4. both royal residence & seat of French government 5. requiring his nobles to abide there part of year 6. 150,000 lived at Versailles 7. dukes & counts who had been autonomous in their castles a. now reduced to status of courtiers at Versailles 8. Versailles - showplace of Europe 9. cost $100 million & 40 yrs to build 10. formal, carefully ordered & perfectly landscaped gardens a. expresses spirit of age of Louis XIV 11. every tree, every bush, every fountain, 12. every piece of statuary within 3 miles of landscaping a. perfectly laid out 13. life at court organized around king's daily ritualistic routine a. rising, dressing, retiring 14. Louis believed it was king's duty a. to pursue royal pleasure as relentlessly as he pursued royal business 15. dress codes & high stakes of gambling at court contributed to a. indebtedness & dependency of nobility on king 5 16. all this ritual & play served political purpose of keeping an impoverished nobility in check 17. while Versailles gave every appearance of magnificence 18. degrading influence of ambition built on flattery & hypocrisy, a. & continual fear of king's displeasure 19. nobles barred by law from high govt positions 20. Louis kept them busy & dependent a. so that they had little time to plot a revolt against him 21. Versailles also part of elaborate pr campaign a. to exalt French monarchy in eyes of other European rulers & their courts E. SPREAD OF FRENCH CULTURE THROUGHOUT EUROPE 1. French culture of Louis XIV permeated all of Europe 2. 1 of Louis' first acts a. to purchase & place under state control the Gobelins (1) Factory in Paris that produced exquisite handicrafts 3. from its workshops poured forth tapestries, silver & furniture 4. before France imported luxury items a. now will export them 5. Louis also 1st French king who consistently encouraged writers 6. he granted annual allowance to such authors as a. famed playwright of comedies Moliere b. & tragic dramatist Racine 7. he supported court composer Jean Baptiste Lully 8. rulers all over Europe, including host of princes in Germanies a. aped standards of Louis' court at Versailles 9. French manners, language, clothes, dishes, furniture, architecture, art were all the fashion 10. smaller scale Versailles built a. Peter the Great of Russia in St. Petersburg b. Schoenberg Palace of Hapsburgs in Vienna 11. many royal courts of other countries spoke French a. Sweden, Russia, Poland & Germany 12. in 18th c. great Russian aristocrats more fluent in French than in Russian 13. In England, first Hanoverian king George I spoke fluent French, halting English 14. French also gradually replaced Latin as the language of international scholarship & learning 15. & French became language of diplomats 16. the prestige of France was not diminished by those who hated her while they envied her 17. France was hardly loved, but she was admired & imitated F. RELIGIOUS POLICY 1. Louis believed that political unity required religious conformity 2. un roi, une foi, une loi = 1 king, 1 faith, 1 law 3. thus he suppressed 2 groups of religious dissenters a. Catholic Jansenists (1) opponents of the Jesuits b. Huguenots (1) Calvinists 4. he revoked religious part of Edict of Nantes 1685 (1598) a. serious mistake b. 50,000 Huguenot families including many skilled artisans fled to (1) Holland, England, Germany, North America & South Africa G. LOUIS' ECONOMIC POLICIES 1. appointed Colbert his minister of Finances 2. Colbert worked to centralize the French economy a. with same rigor that Louis had worked to centralized French Govt 3. govt controlled economy through philosophy of mercantilism 4. aim of mercantilism a. to maximize foreign exports 6 b. & build up internal reserves of gold & silver c. in order to make war 5. also Louis encouraged movement to Canada & exploration of Mississippi area a. Louisiana (1) named after Louis XIV 6. most nb contributions a. created new national industries & organized factories b. created merchant marine 7. increased taille (tax) on peasants a. became chief source of royal wealth 8. nobles had secured freedom from taxes in exchange for opting out of role in government 9. middle classes too were exempt from many taxes 10. but lack of money grave weakness of Louis' absolutism 11. revenues never enough to keep pace w/expenses 12. but Colbert's financial policies a. unquestionable transformed French into a (1) major industrial & commercial power H. LOUIS' FOREIGN POLICY 1. Louis had 2 major goals a. secure natural frontiers for France (1) Pyrenees & alps, Rhine River, ocean b. establish great French empire outside Europe 2. but in order to accomplishment these goals 3. war was necessary 4. so Louis' foreign policy was war policy 5. in fact he loved war so much he had miniature battle scenes painted on his high heels 6. Richelieu & Mazarin had seldom gone beyond point of maintaining French power & prestige 7. they attempted little actual French expansion in Italy, Germany or Low Countries 8. Louis XIV definitely attempted to add to French territories 9. Spain he wanted to conquer by marriage 10. to establish a great French empire a. Louis motivated by rivalry of English & Dutch 11. he fought 4 wars over 46 years 12. Louis impressive military machine suffered from 2 grave defects a. essentially a mercenary army b. army of French state not an army of Frenchmen c. army did not have men who were personally committed to cause for which they fought 13. other reason a. chronic lack of sufficient funds 14. in later years Louis conducted many of his campaigns himself from his desk at Versailles a. with as little success as Saddam did 15. after 1 particularly stunning loss to British general, Lord Marlborough a. king indignantly complained b. God seems to have forgotten all I have done for Him. 16. He fought a. Spain b. United Provinces of Low Countries c. England d. Sweden e. Denmark f. Brandenburg g. Lorraine h. Holy Roman Empire i. Bavaria j. Saxony 7 k. Portugal 17. wars were entitled a. War of Devolution, b. Dutch War, c. War of League of Augsburg d. & War of Spanish Succession 18. height of French expansion reached in 1678 a. with victory over Spain & the Holy Roman Empire 19. Louis then fought new Dutch king of England a. William III and the League of Augsburg 20. War of Spanish Succession involved issue of succession to Spanish throne a. Louis claimed Spain b. but was opposed by (1) Dutch, English, Austrians & Prussians c. war also attempt to check French economic growth in world 21. war concluded that union between France & Spain was forbidden 22. Louis' wars had people believing France was threatening things they held dear a. life, property, independence 23. Europe thought Louis dreamed of conquering all of Western Europe 24. Louis' objective ran counter to England's concept of the balance of power 25. so England brought an alignment of most of the nations of western Europe against France 26. in 4 wars of Louis, France severely drained of manpower & finances 27. in last war alone 1 million of French Army killed 28. by end of last war in 1713 France on brink of bankruptcy with widespread misery 29. in end France lost a. Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Hudson Bay territory in Canada 30. while France still a major power had lost her position of predominance in Europe 31. in end only territory Louis gained from 46 years of was a. city of Strasbourg in Alsace-Lorraine area between Germany & France I. APPRAISAL OF LOUIS XIV FROM A CONTEMPORARY 1. Duc De Saint Simon, army officer & public official during Louis' reign 2. Louis xiv's vanity was without limit or restraint; it colored everything & convinced him that no one even approached him in military talents, in plans and enterprise, and in govt. Hence, those pictures and inscriptions in the gallery at Versailles which disgust every foreigner; those opera prologues that he himself tried to sing; that flood of prose and verse in his praise for which his appetite was insatiable; those dedications of statues copied from pagan sculpture, and the insipid and sickening compliments that were continually offered to him in person and which he swallowed with unfailing relish; J. CONSEQUENCES OF LOUIS XIV 1. European wars would never again be confined to continent a. because of entrance of America in 2 of them 2. at beginning of 17th c king's authority had been felt only rarely by his subjects 3. by 18th c his influence was all-encompassing 4. absolutism had become more than a theory 5. Louis absolutely controlled all jurisdictions & interest groups in France a. Church b. economy - finances c. army d. bureaucracy e. nobles 6. but in last decades of his rule many of positive gains of absolutist govt a. canceled out by crushing weight of growing national debts 7. in fact France on brink of financial bankruptcy 8. as absolutism became more & more efficient 9. condition of people grew steadily worse 10. on his deathbed, dying Louis warned Dauphin 8 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. a. not to imitate his love of building b. & his liking for war when he died Frenchmen had grown to hate old man a. they had welcome w/such rejoicing as an infant 77 yrs before Louis left a legacy of popular hatred for 18th c. rulers to come who would continue French Absolutism a. Age of Absolutism 1660-1789 antecedents for the French Revolution but French today revere Louis XIV as one of their greatest national heroes; because of the culture he inspired and symbolized. V. PHILOSOPHIES OF ABSOLUTISM 16-17TH CENTURIES A. GENERAL REMARKS 1. today perhaps it is hard to understand why Louis & absolutism was so popular 2. absolutism incorporated into rising states of Russia, Prussia & Austria a. all will follow France 3. need to remember survival of medieval view a. that right decisions in govt are not arrived at by experiment & discussion b. but by finding authoritative answer provided for in God's scheme of things 4. in days of Louis XIV men still believed that God thru his chosen agents directly managed the state 5. men beginning to question this idea, a. but it would take generations 6. for Louis' subjects a. he earthly representative of God on earth 7. God had chosen Louis to be ruler 8. & Louis would be held accountable & responsible to God for what he did as a monarch 9. he had succeeded to his position by divinely ordained workings of principle of primogeniture 10. he was not elected by his subjects 11. nor did he acquire his throne by force of arms 12. he was born to a position God had planned for legitimate male heir of 9th c. Hugh Capet 13. as God's agent his word was final 14. to challenge it would be to challenge whole structure of God's universe 15. disobedience both a political & religious offense 16. during this time several philosophers spelled out this rationale of absolutism B. JEAN BODIN 1530-96 1. credited w/originating first clear concept of sovereignty of absolutism 2. thesis a. absolute sovereign who acknowledges no one greater than himself except for God C. THOMAS HOBBES 1. English, but lived in France for awhile 2. Leviathan 1651 a. most influential justification of absolutism b. sovereign lawfully demands the unqualified obedience of his subjects c. subjects have no right of revolution even against tyranny D. BISHOP JACQUES BOSSUET - Bo su ay 1. devout tutor to dauphin 2. feared anarchy more than tyranny because of revolutions of 17th c. 3. cited Old Testament rulers divinely appointed by & answerable only to God 4. as medieval popes had insisted only God could judge a pope 5. so Bossuet argued that none save God could sit in judgment on the king