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AP EURO Unit #1 – Age of Absolutism Lesson #3 Louis XIV (FRENCH ABSOLUTISM)
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Create a chart: Who foughtWhat happened Who wonResults Phase I Phase II Phase III Phase IV
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Essential Questions 1.What was the purpose and success of Versailles? 2.What made Louis XIV worthy of the title THE SUN KING?
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Divine Right “By the grace of God” God chose the ruler Kings spoke with God’s voice Bishop Jacques Benign Bossuet: "the king, Jesus Christ, and the Church, God in His three names"
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How does this concept create stability? Will the Church support this concept?
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Foundations of Absolutism Most monarchs espoused this idea The French kings got away with it Kings remained ceremonial Allowed their “favorite” to run the government – Duke of Sully ran Henry IV’s government – Cardinal Richelieu ran Louis XIII’s government – Cardinal Mazarin ran Louis XIV’s government
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Why would using a “favorite” be a good idea for a king’s safety?
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Henry IV (1553-1589-1610) (born-king-died) Married (1572) age 19 (to Margo) – 27 miserable years – Had a lot of mistresses Separated (1589) (annulled 1599) Henry III killed (1589) Coroneted as a Catholic king (1593) age 41 Edict of Nantes (1598) Married Marie de Medici (1600) “a man of vision and courage”
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Why was Henry so beloved if he was more an enemy of the French monarchy?
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Henry IV (1553-1589-1610) (born-king-died) Not popular becoming king Beloved by the time he died Highly concerned for welfare of France – regularized finances – promoted agriculture, drained swamps – public works, encouraged education – protected forests from devastation; ordered plantings – new system of tree lined highways – constructed new bridges and canals – renewed Paris as a great city – added wings to the Louvre, built Place Royal – promoter of arts for and by all classes
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Louis XIII (1601-1610-1643) Nine years old Power in the hands of Richelieu Anti-Hapsburg policy – Entered Thirty Years War on Protestant side Anti-Huguenot policy – Retracted privileges promised in Edict of Nantes Anti-Nobles policy – Tried to control Nobles – Created resentment among Nobles – Led to THE FRONDE “Louis the Chaste” (no mistresses)
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Louis XIV (1638-1643-1715) Was only five Nobles rebellion: THE FRONDE – Anarchy for three years (1649-1652) – Louis would never forget – Would evoke grandeur of the position THE SUN KING – When he was a child – danced as the sun – Became his symbol L’etat c’est moi Suppression of Jansenists (1660) – Catholics who opposed Free will Revocation of Edict of Nantes (1685) – 10% of France Huguenot (1.7 million) – 200,000 abandoned nation 3m bio on Louis XIV
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What is his obvious attitude toward religion? How will this be bad? How will this create stability? “One king, one law, one faith”
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Versailles 3m Cribs - Versailles
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Describe Versailles Why would Louis design such and expensive and elaborate palace? What does this have to do with the Fronde?
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Versailles Promote image of divine ~2 billion to build – Millions to maintain – As many as 10,000 people – Four building phases – 1685 – 36,000 builders, 6000 horses, 2x size of CR South Meant to inspire awe Created a whole culture Hierarchy, power, prestige to even be there Nobles who may have led the Fronde now WANTED to be there – Bigger rooms to higher rank – All had to turn in room key daily Special day to be near the king 2m “this… is Versailles”
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Mercantilism International trade should benefit only the nation – Create colonies – Wealth is finite – control as much as possible – Preserve bullion & Maximize exports Jean-Baptiste Colbert – finance minister – Centralized economy – Raised the $$ Louis squandered in wars Marquis du Louvois – war minister – Good salaries – Highly disciplined – Promotion by merit
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Louis XIV’s Four Wars Meant to create awe of France Often to punish enemies Ultimately destroyed France Louis saw himself as a warrior Louis went in a GREAT MAN Wars destroyed French treasury And Louis died a year later…
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War of Devolution (1667-1668) Louis claimed Spanish Netherlands – Belgium Louis never got 500,000 crown dowry Triple Alliance formed to repel French army – England – Sweden – United Provinces Leopold (HRE) pushed for peace – Saw this as a dangerous escalation Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle – No real change
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Franco-Dutch War (1672-1678) Meant to punish the Dutch – Had prevented French victory – Had Louis seething Treaty of Dover – Ended Triple Alliance – France bought English support with gold France and England declared war on Dutch – Quick French victories – 180,000 French troops – Dutch flooded land England dropped out HRE, Spain, Prussia joined Dutch War ended – not much change France clearly the dominant nation
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Nine Years War (1688-1697) King William’s War League of Augsburg – Grand Alliance – England, Spain, Sweden, Austria – United Provinces, Bavaria, Palatinate, Saxony Glorious Revolution (England) French army – now 400,000 Peace of Ryswick – France got Alsace and Lorraine William III
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War of Spanish Succession (1701-1714) Queen Anne’s War Spanish King Charles “the sufferer” Philip of Anjou Grand Alliance France not ready Famine and revolts in France Peace of Utrecht (1713) – Philip did get to be King of Spain – But, they could not unite with France – And Louis had to accept the Glorious Revolution
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