190
See also: The execution of Charles I 174–75 ■ Diderot publishes the Encyclopédie
192–95 ■ The storming of the Bastille 208–13 ■ The Battle of Waterloo 214–15
O
n the death of his chief
minister Cardinal Mazzarin,
the 23-year-old Louis XIV
of France declared that he would
now rule alone, as an absolute
monarch. During his 72-year reign
(1643–1715), Louis dominated his
subjects, cultivating the image of
a “Sun King” around whom the
country orbited. Louis saw his
power as God-given, and himself
as the embodiment of the state,
with the nobility, the middle
classes, and peasants dependent
on him for justice and protection.
To maintain this position,
Louis controlled the historically
unruly aristocracy. He compelled
them to attend his court, where he
dispensed privileges and positions
via a system of etiquette. He filled
the treasury’s depleted coffers by
appointing members of the upper-
middle classes to collect taxes
in the provinces. Taxation was
extensive and the burden fell
mainly on the peasantry. Louis’s
finance minister, Jean-Baptiste
Colbert, whose overhaul of France’s
trade and industry helped to make
the country Europe’s leading power,
increased the efficiency of the
revenue system.
Expanding France
Louis’s tax income paid for his court
at the dazzling Palace of Versailles,
an old hunting lodge extended into
a royal palace, and the venue for
extravagant entertainments. From
1682 it became the permanent
base of the royal court, and the seat
of government. Louis also waged
a series of costly dynastic wars to
make some territorial gains along
France’s frontiers, leading the other
European nations to form
coalitions against him.
Peace was finally achieved at the
Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, but brought
few gains for France. The country
was plunged into debt and opinion
turned against the Crown. In spite
of this, Louis established a pattern
of absolutism in France that lasted,
in a more enlightened form, for most
of the 18th century until attempts to
reform the system resulted in the
overthrow of the monarchy in 1792
during the French Revolution. ■
I AM THE
STATE
LOUIS XIV BEGINS PERSONAL
RULE OF FRANCE (1661)
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
Absolutist France
BEFORE
1624–1642 Cardinal Richelieu,
Louis XIII’s chief minister,
reforms and strengthens
central administration.
1643–1661 Louis’s mother,
ruling on his behalf, helps
to consolidate royal power.
1648–1653 Nobles revolt
against royal authority in
a conflict called the Fronde.
AFTER
1685 Louis XIV revokes the
Edict of Nantes, which had
granted Huguenots the right
to practice their religion.
1701–1714 The War of the
Spanish Succession severely
strains French resources.
1789 The French Revolution
removes King Louis XVI and
ends absolutist royal
power in France.
US_190-191_LouisXIV.indd 190 15/02/2016 17:05
191
See also: Christopher Columbus reaches America 142–47 ■ The Defenestration
of Prague 164–69 ■ The voyage of the Mayflower 172 –73 ■ The Battle of Waterloo
214 –15 ■ The Battle of Passchendaele 270–75
O
n September 13, 1759,
24 British men scaled
the cliffs below Quebec,
opening the way for British forces
commanded by General James
Wolfe to capture the city. The crucial
battle ended French dominance in
Canada and was a key event in the
Seven Years’ War (1756–1763).
The war involved most of
the chief European nations in a
struggle for territory and power. It
centered on two main clashes: one
maritime and colonial, involving
land battles in North America and
India between Britain and Bourbon
France; the other a European land
war that chiefly pitted France,
Austria, and Russia against
Prussia. Overseas colonies also
became involved, making this the
first true global conflict.
Competing powers
Britain achieved notable victories
over France. A French invasion
attempt on Britain was thwarted by
Britain’s superior navy, and Britain
scored colonial victories over France
in West Africa, the Caribbean, and
North America where there were
major successes in Canada. Britain
forced France to cede all of their
territory east of the Mississippi
River, effectively ending the threat
France posed to Britain’s North
American colonies.
There were similar victories in
India. The British general Robert
Clive, wrongfooted the French by
defeating the Nawab of Bengal at
Plassey in 1757 and acquiring his
territory for Britain, paving the way
for the British domination of India.
The end of the Seven Years’ War left
Britain the leading colonial power. ■
THE EARLY MODERN ERA
DON’T FORGET YOUR
GREAT GUNS, THE MOST
RESPECTABLE ARGUMENTS
OF THE RIGHTS OF KINGS
THE BATTLE OF QUEBEC (1759)
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
Seven Years’ War
BEFORE
1754 Fighting between France
and Britain in North America,
the so-called French and
Indian War, begins.
1756 Frederick II of Prussia
begins the Seven Years
War by invading Saxony
to prevent Russia from
creating a base there.
1757 Prussia inflicts a
significant defeat on superior
French and Austrian forces
at Rossbach.
1759 Russia wipes out
two-thirds of the Prussian
army at Kunersdorf.
AFTER
1760 French forces at Montreal
surrender to the British.
1763 The Seven Years’ War
comes to an end with
the treaties of Paris
and Hubertusburg.
Without supplies
no army is brave.
Frederick the Great, 1747
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