Louis XIV

Louis XIV

by Prof Anthony Levi (Author)

Synopsis

In his day Louis XIV was monarch of Europe's grandest nation, one of the most politically effective European monarchs ever to reign. Depicted as Apollo, the ancient mythological sun god, he became Le Roi Soleil, invested, throughout his long life, with unprecedented power and privilege. Like Apollo he was equated with all life's finest attributes, with the arts, with music, poetry and elegance. His image reflected the position of France in the 17th century, an exceedingly rich, diverse and powerful culture. He was its magnificent public face, the pinnacle of its glory, for almost 50 years. But he was also a man who was irredeemably flawed and ultimately damaging both to France and its monarchy. At the core of this biography of Louis XIV of France lies the story of the clash between his role as le Roi Soleil , custodian of the grandeur of France, and his guilt, as a human being, at the effect of his rule on France and its people. It questions too the possibility of training one person to be the symbol of absolute authority without allowing or obliging them to act as the embodiment of that authority. Invested with such power, how did he use it? Was he cruel or kind? Tyrant or populist? What was behind his prodigal expenditure on his own glory? Did he confuse that with that of France? And was it training that led him to do so? In this intricate and controversial biography Anthony Levi shows how Louis XIV ultimately acquitted himself throughout the lengthy and testing role that fate cast him to play in European history.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Edition: First edition
Publisher: Constable
Published: 26 Feb 2004

ISBN 10: 1841194255
ISBN 13: 9781841194257

Media Reviews
Louis XIV was one of the most successful monarchs of all time, whose manufacturing industries and scientific and artistic advancements were the envy of the world, but they were supported by a vast war machine whose undisguised aim was hegemony over the entire European continent and its colonies overseas. Louis's famous personal motto, 'the state is me', expressed a dictatorial philosophy which deviated from the rule of law. Second only to God, and the head of an immensely powerful state, Louis XIV was an institution rather than a private individual. At the heart of this lucid and continually absorbing biography lies the story of the clash between his role as le Roi Soleil and his guilt as a human being at the effect of his reign on France and its people.