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Absolutism in France “L’etat c’est moi” -- Louis XIV. France in the 17 th Century. Population: 19 million 3 times that of England 2 times that of Spain Uneven distribution of wealth – very wealthy, very poor Large merchant class Protestantism declining Self-sufficient economy
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France in the 17th Century • Population: 19 million • 3 times that of England • 2 times that of Spain • Uneven distribution of wealth – very wealthy, very poor • Large merchant class • Protestantism declining • Self-sufficient economy • Trade with India, settlements in North America and Caribbean (Canada, Mississippi Valley, West Indies)
Absolutism(Absolute Monarch) • Monarch possesses unlimited power • No laws or direct opposition • No constitution or body of law above the king • Monarch is expected to act according to tradition and custom • People must have complete trust in well-bred and well-trained monarchs who were raised for the role from birth • Believe in the Divine Right to Rule • Examples: Russian Tsars, French Kings
Henry IV“Henry the Great” • Ruled 1589-1610 • Born Protestant (Huguenot) • Converted to Catholicism to become King • 1598: Edict of Nantes • Guaranteed religious liberties to the Protestants • Ended French Wars of Religion • Murdered by a fanatical Catholic
Louis XIII • Ruled 1610-1643 • Ruled during 30 Years War • Influenced by Cardinal Richelieu • Intrigue: “Three Musketeers” • Married Anne of Austria • Absolute Monarch • French nobility under his control • No more special privileges for the Huguenots • Built powerful navy • No tax reform
Cardinal Richelieu 1585-1642 Believed in the State above all else Two Goals • Strengthen the power of the king/central government • Make France the dominant power in Europe
Richelieu and Government • Cardinal Richelieu was Louis XIII’s “Chief Minister” • Consolidated royal power • Crushed domestic dissenters • Created stronger economy • Restrained the power of the nobility • Transformed France into a strong, centralized state
Richelieu and France • Main foreign policy objectives: • limit Austrian-Hapsburg Dynasty • Catholic, but made alliances with Protestant rulers • Thirty Years War • France emerges more powerful than other nations • Decline of HRE • Legacy: King Louis XIV continued Richelieu's work • Further suppressed the 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
Young King Louis XIV • Born 1638 • Ruled 1643-1715 • Assumed power at age 23
Cardinal Mazarin • Advisor to Louis while he was a child (1643- 1661) • De facto ruler of France • Italian. Distrusted by the French • Father-figure to Louis XIV • His policies during the Thirty Years War were unpopular • On his death, there was not a successor to “First Minister”
Thirty Years War: Causes • 1618-1648 • Mostly religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants • Also political conflict between Holy Roman Empire and France
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 • Doesn’t end conflict between Spain and France
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
Just when things are getting better . . . . Le Fronde • 1648 -- 1653 – Civil War – Began immediately after end of Thirty Years War • Rebellion: mostly nobles, and members of parlements who feared too much royal power • Nobility and Bourgeoisie wanted to defend and protect regional influence, traditions • Long term results: • Louis developed life-long distrust of nobility • Ensured Louis XIV would enforce absolutist rule • Most French realize the benefit of a strong monarch
Jean Baptist ColbertFinance Minister • Believer in Mercantilism • the prosperity of a nation depends upon its supply of capital. • Economic assets = bullion held by the state • This is best increased through a positive balance of trade with other nations (exports minus imports). • Government must encourage exports and discourage imports, through the use of tariffs.
Colbert and the Domestic Economy • Made taxation more efficient to enrich treasury • Pushed Internal commerce • Farmers, small manufacturers penalized • Restricted movement of goods and labor between regions • Unfair tax system was reinforced • Gentry, clergy exempt from taxation • Capitalists have favorable taxes • Land used for export industries (wine, wool)
Louis XIV – Domestic Problems • Inherited weak economy • Civil Unrest • Nobles are still too powerful. Louis must punish them. • Filled high 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
L’ etat c’est moi! “I am the State” 1643-1715 France became a world power and a leader in the arts. Fashion: Clothing is large and showy to emphasis the king’s personality
Louis XIV – the “Sun King” • Overall brilliance at court • The nobles stayed within the king’s orbit • Ruled for 72 years • Great influence on French culture • French is language of diplomacy • French style greatly imitated
Life of Opulence and Grandeur • The Daily Routine of the King
Louis as Apollo by Jean Nocret, 1670
1673 Louis represented as a classical hero
Family Life • His wife and cousin: Marie Therese (a Hapsburg) • Seven children, only one son survived
Versailles Glory of the monarch = glory of the state
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 Versailles Statistics
Mistresses of the King • Mistress of the king is a very public role – sits next to the queen at court. • Mademoiselle de la Vallière – 3 children, later fled to a convent • Madame de Montespan – 7 children, also “retired” to a convent • Madame de Maintenon – no children, but married Louis in secret.
Imitators Winter Palace in St. Petersburg and Peterhof summer palace near St. Petersburg
Marie Antoinette’s “Peasant” House • Looks rustic, but opulent on the inside • Many aristocrats mimicked this style • Revolution wiped out that idea
Carlos II (1669-1700) Descended from Joanna the Mad 14 times -- twice as a great, great, great grandson War of Spanish Succession
War of Spanish Succession 1702-1713 • France and HRE want to share Spanish territory • Spanish king’s 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