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Chapter 17 Section 2 France Under Louis XIV

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Title: Chapter 17 Section 2 France Under Louis XIV


1
Chapter 17 Section 2 - France Under Louis XIV
2
  • Setting the Scene
  • "I have had an idea that will give much pleasure
    to the people here wrote Louis XIV. His plan was
    to throw a grand party. Each guest would receive
    a ticket for a prize of jewelry, and every ticket
    would be a winner. At Louis's bidding, some 600
    noble guests flocked to the royal palace for a
    week of sumptuous feasts, pageants, sports,
    dances, plays, and music. This extravaganza was
    the first of many spectacles organized by Louis
    XIV. By the late 1600s, Louis was absolute
    monarch of France and the most powerful ruler in
    Europe. Yet, just 100 years earlier, France had
    been torn apart by turbulent wars of religion.

3
I. Rebuilding France
  • 1560s - 1590s Religious wars between Catholics
    and Huguenots (French Protestants) tore France
    apart

On August 24, 1572 thousands of Protestants were
killed in the Massacre of St. Bartholomew
4
A. Henry IV
  • 1589 - Huguenot prince Henry IV inherited the
    throne and became a Catholic

Early in his career he was a major leader of the
Protestant Huguenot party.  For three years after
his accession to the throne of France in 1589,
the strongly pro-Catholic Paris stood in
opposition to him.  Finally Henry yielded to
these stronger political interests by converting
to Catholicism, claiming that Paris is worth a
mass.
Henry IV (1553-1610)
5
A. Henry IV
  • 1598 - the Edict of Nantes protected the
    Huguenots by granting religious toleration

400th Anniversary - Edict of Nantes
Huguenot Cross
6
A. Henry IV
  • 1610 - Henry IV was killed by an assassin and his
    9 year-old son Louis XIII inherited the throne

Assassin François Ravaillac "Before being drawn
and quartered, he was scalded with burning
sulphur, molten lead and boiling oil and resin,
his flesh then being torn by pincers."
7
B. Richelieu
  • 1624 - Louis appointed Cardinal Armand Richelieu
    as his chief minister

Louis XIII
Richelieu
8
B. Richelieu
  • Richelieu sought to destroy the power of the
    Huguenots and nobles, groups that did not bow to
    royal authority

Cardinal Richelieu at the Siege of La Rochelle
9
II. Louis XIV, the Sun King
  • 1643 - 5 year-old Louis XIV inherited the throne

"Le Roi du Soleil" (the Sun King)
10
II. Louis XIV, the Sun King
  • Cardinal Jules Mazarin, Richelieus successor,
    became chief minister and worked to expand royal
    power

Cardinal Jules Mazarin(1602-1661)
11
II. Louis XIV, the Sun King
  • Soon after Louis became king, violence swept
    France in an uprising called the Fronde

12
A. "I Am the State"
  • Louis IV firmly believed in divine right and took
    the sun as the symbol of his absolute power

13
A. "I Am the State"
  • Louis often said I am the state and never
    called a meeting of the Estates General

14
B. Strengthening Royal Power
  • Louis XIV expanded the bureaucracy and made the
    French army the strongest in Europe

15
B. Strengthening Royal Power
  • Finance minister Jean Colbert practiced
    mercantilist policies that made France the
    wealthiest state in Europe

Jean Baptiste Colbert, 1619-1683
16
III. Versailles, Symbol of Royal Power
  • Louis XIV turned a hunting lodge into the palace
    of Versailles, the grandest in Europe

17
III. Versailles, Symbol of Royal Power
  • He held ceremonies that emphasized his own
    importance and tied the nobles to their king

The Levee
18
III. Versailles, Symbol of Royal Power
  • Louis supported a "splendid century" of the arts
    French culture replaced Renaissance Italy as the
    new standard

19
IV. Successes and Failures
  • Louis XIV ruled France for 72 years, longer than
    any other monarch

Louis XIV and his Family as Olympian Gods Jean
Nocroit, 1670
20
A. Wars of Louis XIV
  • Louis XIV fought to expand France Rival rulers
    formed alliances to maintain the balance of power

21
A. Wars of Louis XIV
  • 1700 - Louis grandson Philip V became king of
    Spain Louis believed France and Spain "must
    regard themselves as one"

King Philip V of Spain or Philippe of Anjou (1683
- 1746) was king of Spain from 1700 to 1746, the
first of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain. He was the
son of Louis, le Grand Dauphin and Maria Anna of
Bavaria. His paternal grandparents were Louis XIV
of France and Maria Theresa of Spain. His
maternal grandparents were Ferdinand Maria,
Elector of Bavaria and Adelaide Henriette of Savoy
22
A. Wars of Louis XIV
  • 1713 - The War of the Spanish Succession ended
    with the Treaty of Utrecht Spain and France did
    not unite

23
B. Persecution of the Huguenots
  • 1685 - Louis viewed the Huguenots as a threat to
    religious and political unity and revoked the
    Edict of Nantes

Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, October 1685
24
B. Persecution of the Huguenots
  • Thousands of Huguenots fled France their loss
    was a serious blow to the French economy

Effect Of Revoking The Edict Of Nantes
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