Post by vigilanti on Jul 1, 2006 20:29:22 GMT -5
Louis Dieudonné (God given) born 1638 sept 5th near the Château de Saint Germain to Louis XIII and his Spanish wife Anne d’Autriche who had been married 23 years. His father was shy and stammered Anne was more robust and self confident – like Louis. The death of his father made Louis XIV king on the 14th of May 1643 when he was only five years of age But he had to wait sixteen years before he began to rule. Power lay for some time in the hands of the queen-mother and in those of her minister, Cardinal Jules Mazarin (who died March 9, 1661.)
Children of Louis’s day played outdoor games, the hoop, the top, skittles, kites, skipping rope. Indoors they had the hobby horse, dolls, even a primitive sort of magic lantern which would produce shadowy pictures on the walls. But by in large minors of the period were relatively unimportant creatures even children of nobility and sovereigns were aloud to run wild. Louis was often so neglected and it is said that no one dared go near his rooms. Young Louis and his brother Philippe were left much on their own as their governesses preferred to play cards than bother with them. He was often heard to speak of those times with great bitterness. Louis often recounted that through the carelessness of his attendants, he was found one evening in the basin of a fountain in the Palais-Royal gardens and well might have drowned had a servant not spotted him.
Louis was noted often later in life to treat servant’s better than nobility whose aspirations he feared. The boy king never had much money yet he was noted to throw his pocket money to the stable boys. Louis was also known to have romped with a peasant daughter of one of the servants, pushing her around in the gardens in a wheeled chair. At 10 Louis’s favorite card-game was called servants – he later taught the game to the courtiers at Versailles. Older children and adults played jeu de paume a form of indoor tennis Louis was also particularly fond of.
Louis was not a particularly good student. He learned Latin but was hardly taught how to read or write. He had a foolish gouverner, the Maréchal Duc de Villeroy whose rule rendered it inevitable the king would never read a book if he could avoid doing so. Later on in his life he regretted not having knowledge of history. His mother found time to teach him in Catholic doctrine and devotion instilled in him a lasting fear of "crimes committed against God". The only thing that was labored into his brain was honor and chivalry. Humility and self control were primary aspects of the kings training. That latter was especially difficult for the active young king. It is recorded that on one occasion before getting into bed he turned somersaults and fell out with a loud thump. Both Louis and his brother Philippe were known to be free and easy in their ways daring to raid the dishes as they proceeded along the corridors of the Louvere on their way to the table. Another noted incident recounted when Louis asked his brother to share his room; in the morning Louis spat on his brother’s bed, whether accidentally or by design is unknown but the two boys got into a tug-of-war at the end of the conflict there was reciprocal ‘bed-wetting’ – most undignified for a royal pair.
More than most “The Sun King” was to experience love, pride, anger, concupiscence and impatience. In order to combat these all too human failings Mazarin and Turenne saw the young king subjected to ridged discipline. In time Louis absorbed a method of regular and steady working, not asking too much of his own powers nor failing for lack of courage and determination.
His mother the Regent of France and Mazarin found it difficult to maintain the power of the throne and the integrity of French territory. The minister was hated as a foreigner, and the childhood of the king weakened the royal authority. Leading Frondeaurs protested that their target was Mazarin; yet everyone knows that in politics as in chess if a king happens to be in a week position—because of character or age—other pieces would rush up to check mate him.
Great nobles and the judges of the parliament of Paris launched a major but uncoordinated revolt (the Fronde of 1648-53) in reaction to the centralizing policies of Louis XIII's minister Cardinal Richelieu and his successor, Mazarin. Mazarin finally suppressed the Fronde and restored internal order. The Peace of Westphalia (1648), which ended the Thirty Years' War, together with the Peace of the Pyrenees (1659), which concluded prolonged warfare with Spain, made France the leading European power.
These series of disturbances proved harrowing for the young king who for the first time experienced poverty, misfortune, fear, humiliation, cold and hunger. King Louis was reduced to wearing old clothes; The sheets on his bed were so tattered his legs went right through to the mattress of his bed. The royal family (along with the court) was twice driven out of Paris, his enforced and surreptitious flight from it still rankled in his memory; and at one point Louis and Anne were held under virtual arrest in the royal palace in Paris, word got out preparations had been made for the royal family to vacate Paris yet again and the mob forced admittance to the kings own bedchambers to reassure themselves that he hadn’t been spirited away in the night. Louis was mortified and never felt safe in Paris again.
The troubles of the minority had given him a dislike to that city and He would never fully forgive either Paris, the nobles, or the common people. For this reason very early in the reign of Louis XIV the Court was removed from Paris, never to return. He transformed his father’s modest hunting lodge in to one of the primer showplaces the world has ever known.
When LouisXIV turned thirteen (September 7, 1651) a ceremony took place that was to mark the end of his minority Even thought at the time he was only five feet five inches tall many people marveled at how handsome, well built, and robust he was.
They were also fascinated that he was a good horseman, good dancer, and skillful jouster. Glory was his passion, but he also liked order and regularity in all things; he was naturally prudent, moderate, and reserved; always master of his tongue and his emotions. He was also naturally kind-hearted. He developed a high degree of noble patriotism, a devotion to the common good, sober judgment, a love of order and justice. Regard for men of varied talents and the ability to make himself respected by all.
God had given him all that was necessary for him to be a good King, perhaps also to be a fairly great one. All these qualities were just the right combination to capture a woman’s heart. His first love was Maria Mancini. She was niece of Cardinal Mazarin. Maria was good educated and made Louis to be interested in literature. Louis felt in love with her and they shared several years together. In 1660 he was forced to marry Marie Therese the daughter of Philip IV of Spain. That was a very hard step for him - his love was so strong, that he wanted Maria Mancini to be his wife, although he was a king. After he married Marie-Therese, he devoted himself to her and a year later they had a son and heir. But later he began to pay too much attention to the ladies of his court. One of his lovers was the wife of his own brother- Henrietta of England. Louis was the most powerful man in Europe and every woman was dreaming to be his mistress. His greatest deed - he legitimized all his illegitimate children, gave them education, position in society and married them in such way, that they become real princes and princesses.
In 1682, as he was 45 years old, he decided that he does not have much time to live and that he has to live according to church laws in order to be later in paradise and not in hell. So he decided to be only with his wife. Unfortunately Marie-Therese died a year later, so Louis was forced to marry somebody else. As he didn't want to marry another princess from foreign land, he decided to choose a lady from his court. His choice was Madame de Maintenon, whom he judged to be best educated. He married her secretly in 1683 and he had never had any other woman after that (for 32 years)."- Even at the age of 72 years it's known that, he was still making love with his wife two times a day.
Children of Louis’s day played outdoor games, the hoop, the top, skittles, kites, skipping rope. Indoors they had the hobby horse, dolls, even a primitive sort of magic lantern which would produce shadowy pictures on the walls. But by in large minors of the period were relatively unimportant creatures even children of nobility and sovereigns were aloud to run wild. Louis was often so neglected and it is said that no one dared go near his rooms. Young Louis and his brother Philippe were left much on their own as their governesses preferred to play cards than bother with them. He was often heard to speak of those times with great bitterness. Louis often recounted that through the carelessness of his attendants, he was found one evening in the basin of a fountain in the Palais-Royal gardens and well might have drowned had a servant not spotted him.
Louis was noted often later in life to treat servant’s better than nobility whose aspirations he feared. The boy king never had much money yet he was noted to throw his pocket money to the stable boys. Louis was also known to have romped with a peasant daughter of one of the servants, pushing her around in the gardens in a wheeled chair. At 10 Louis’s favorite card-game was called servants – he later taught the game to the courtiers at Versailles. Older children and adults played jeu de paume a form of indoor tennis Louis was also particularly fond of.
Louis was not a particularly good student. He learned Latin but was hardly taught how to read or write. He had a foolish gouverner, the Maréchal Duc de Villeroy whose rule rendered it inevitable the king would never read a book if he could avoid doing so. Later on in his life he regretted not having knowledge of history. His mother found time to teach him in Catholic doctrine and devotion instilled in him a lasting fear of "crimes committed against God". The only thing that was labored into his brain was honor and chivalry. Humility and self control were primary aspects of the kings training. That latter was especially difficult for the active young king. It is recorded that on one occasion before getting into bed he turned somersaults and fell out with a loud thump. Both Louis and his brother Philippe were known to be free and easy in their ways daring to raid the dishes as they proceeded along the corridors of the Louvere on their way to the table. Another noted incident recounted when Louis asked his brother to share his room; in the morning Louis spat on his brother’s bed, whether accidentally or by design is unknown but the two boys got into a tug-of-war at the end of the conflict there was reciprocal ‘bed-wetting’ – most undignified for a royal pair.
More than most “The Sun King” was to experience love, pride, anger, concupiscence and impatience. In order to combat these all too human failings Mazarin and Turenne saw the young king subjected to ridged discipline. In time Louis absorbed a method of regular and steady working, not asking too much of his own powers nor failing for lack of courage and determination.
His mother the Regent of France and Mazarin found it difficult to maintain the power of the throne and the integrity of French territory. The minister was hated as a foreigner, and the childhood of the king weakened the royal authority. Leading Frondeaurs protested that their target was Mazarin; yet everyone knows that in politics as in chess if a king happens to be in a week position—because of character or age—other pieces would rush up to check mate him.
Great nobles and the judges of the parliament of Paris launched a major but uncoordinated revolt (the Fronde of 1648-53) in reaction to the centralizing policies of Louis XIII's minister Cardinal Richelieu and his successor, Mazarin. Mazarin finally suppressed the Fronde and restored internal order. The Peace of Westphalia (1648), which ended the Thirty Years' War, together with the Peace of the Pyrenees (1659), which concluded prolonged warfare with Spain, made France the leading European power.
These series of disturbances proved harrowing for the young king who for the first time experienced poverty, misfortune, fear, humiliation, cold and hunger. King Louis was reduced to wearing old clothes; The sheets on his bed were so tattered his legs went right through to the mattress of his bed. The royal family (along with the court) was twice driven out of Paris, his enforced and surreptitious flight from it still rankled in his memory; and at one point Louis and Anne were held under virtual arrest in the royal palace in Paris, word got out preparations had been made for the royal family to vacate Paris yet again and the mob forced admittance to the kings own bedchambers to reassure themselves that he hadn’t been spirited away in the night. Louis was mortified and never felt safe in Paris again.
The troubles of the minority had given him a dislike to that city and He would never fully forgive either Paris, the nobles, or the common people. For this reason very early in the reign of Louis XIV the Court was removed from Paris, never to return. He transformed his father’s modest hunting lodge in to one of the primer showplaces the world has ever known.
When LouisXIV turned thirteen (September 7, 1651) a ceremony took place that was to mark the end of his minority Even thought at the time he was only five feet five inches tall many people marveled at how handsome, well built, and robust he was.
They were also fascinated that he was a good horseman, good dancer, and skillful jouster. Glory was his passion, but he also liked order and regularity in all things; he was naturally prudent, moderate, and reserved; always master of his tongue and his emotions. He was also naturally kind-hearted. He developed a high degree of noble patriotism, a devotion to the common good, sober judgment, a love of order and justice. Regard for men of varied talents and the ability to make himself respected by all.
God had given him all that was necessary for him to be a good King, perhaps also to be a fairly great one. All these qualities were just the right combination to capture a woman’s heart. His first love was Maria Mancini. She was niece of Cardinal Mazarin. Maria was good educated and made Louis to be interested in literature. Louis felt in love with her and they shared several years together. In 1660 he was forced to marry Marie Therese the daughter of Philip IV of Spain. That was a very hard step for him - his love was so strong, that he wanted Maria Mancini to be his wife, although he was a king. After he married Marie-Therese, he devoted himself to her and a year later they had a son and heir. But later he began to pay too much attention to the ladies of his court. One of his lovers was the wife of his own brother- Henrietta of England. Louis was the most powerful man in Europe and every woman was dreaming to be his mistress. His greatest deed - he legitimized all his illegitimate children, gave them education, position in society and married them in such way, that they become real princes and princesses.
In 1682, as he was 45 years old, he decided that he does not have much time to live and that he has to live according to church laws in order to be later in paradise and not in hell. So he decided to be only with his wife. Unfortunately Marie-Therese died a year later, so Louis was forced to marry somebody else. As he didn't want to marry another princess from foreign land, he decided to choose a lady from his court. His choice was Madame de Maintenon, whom he judged to be best educated. He married her secretly in 1683 and he had never had any other woman after that (for 32 years)."- Even at the age of 72 years it's known that, he was still making love with his wife two times a day.