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Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV
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Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Jan 08, 2018

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Virgil Goodman

Henry of Navarre becomes Henry IV 1589 – Catherine and her last son died; King Henry IV is the 1 st Bourbon King of France. To satisfy Cath. he gave up Protestantism & became Cath – Edict of Nantes – Huguenots could live in peace & build churches in some cities He restored the monarchy and brought peace to France 1610 – He was killed by a religious fanatic Francois Ravaillac.
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Page 1: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800)

Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV

Page 2: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Religious Wars and Power Struggles

• 1562-1598 – France had 8 religious wars

• Henry of Navarre, a Huguenot prince married the daughter of Catherine de Medicis (wife of King Henry II & mother of 3 French kings)

• 1572 St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in Paris began as a protest vs. this wedding – 6 weeks of violence followed!

Page 3: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Henry of Navarre becomes Henry IV• 1589 – Catherine and her last son

died; King Henry IV is the 1st Bourbon King of France.

• To satisfy Cath. he gave up Protestantism & became Cath.

• 1598 – Edict of Nantes –Huguenots could live in peace & build churches in some cities

• He restored the monarchy and brought peace to France

• 1610 – He was killed by a religious fanatic Francois Ravaillac.

Page 4: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

King Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu• Louis XIII (1624-1643) = weak king• Cardinal Richelieu, head of Cath. church,

was his minister• To increase Bourbon power he removed

walls from Huguenot cities & increased power of gov’t agents from middle class (intendants) to curb power of nobles who had to take down fortified castles

• He wanted to make France the greatest power in Eur. vs. Hapsburgs as a result he involved France in the Thirty Years War (1618-1648)

Page 5: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Louis XIV (1643-1715) = The Sun King

• Louis XIV became king at 4 so Cardinal Mazarin who followed Richelieu actually ruled

• Mazarin’s greatest triumph- brought Thirty Years War to an end in 1643

• He was hated by nobles b/c he taxed & strengthened central gov’t (violent riots 1648-53 & even threatened little Louis).

• Riots failed b/c nobles didn’t trust each other, gov’t was ruthless, & peasants grew tired of violence

Page 6: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Louis XIV Weakens the Nobility

• 1661-Louis (22 yrs) takes control• Excluded nobles from his councils• Appointed intendants who taxed,

adm. law, & recruited soldiers for the king

• Reorganized army & assigned ranks; it went from 100 K to 400 K

• He kept intendants in touch with him on a regular basis

Page 7: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

How did Henry of Navarre end the religious wars in France?

A. Edict of NantesB. SkepticismC. Asked the Pope

Page 8: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Who was Louis XIII’s minister who worked to strengthen the Bourbon monarchy?

A. Cardinal MazarinB. Cardinal RichelieuC. Colbert

Page 9: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

How old was Louis XIV when he began his reign?

A. 4B. 12C. 31

Page 10: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Louis XIV increased the power of the ________ to improve communication through the empire.

A. NoblesB. CardinalsC. Intendants

Page 11: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

France’s Economy Under Louis XIV• Louis’ goal was to make Fr. an economic

power• Jean Baptiste Colbert – finance minister &

mercantilist worked to make France become self-sufficient

• Expanded manufacturing by financing & giving tax breaks to Fr. companies

• Set tariffs high on imported goods• Raised taxes & reduced corruption• Emphasized importance of colonies & fur

trade in New France• He died in 1683 & Louis repealed the Edict of

Nantes & exodus hurt growth

Page 12: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Stylin’ & Profilin’ w/ The Sun King

• 500 cooks, waiters, & servants!• Each meal was a feast! (4 soups, 1

pheasant, 1 partridge in garlic, 2 slices of ham, 1 salad, pastries, fruit, & 2 boiled eggs for 1 meal!

• 8:30 AM – 100 of most privileged nobles at bed side to wait on him!

• Only 4 allowed to help dress him.• If nobles didn’t show to flatter him

Louis turned against them.

Page 13: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

The Palace of Versailles • 11 miles SW of Paris; & cost $ 2.5 B today’s $!• 36 K workers & 6 K horses 27 yrs. to build it!• 5,000 acres of gardens, lawns, & woods!• 1,400 fountains and Hall of Mirrors (17 huge mirrors

opposite 17 windows looking on gardens) considered most impressive room.

• 4 K candles & silver + crystal chandeliers in Hall were lit on special occasions.

• King’s BR furniture contained 1 ton of silver!• Cost more than 50% of all taxes collected in Fr!

Page 15: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Wars Are Disastrous to France

• 1667 (after death of Mazarin) Louis invades Sp. Neth. & took several Dutch towns by 1678.

• 1689 – Wm. of Orange became King of England and joined League of Augsburg – an alliance to protect each other from France (Austria, Sweden, Spain, & smaller states) = France’s strength.

Page 16: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

The War of the Spanish Succession (1701 – 1714)

• 1700 – King Charles II (Spain) died childless & Louis XIV’s grandson, Phillip of Anjou (16 yrs) promised throne. This would join Fr. & Sp.

• 1701 – Eng., Austria, Dutch R., Portugal & several Ger. & Itl. States said no.

• Treaty of Utrecht (1714) said Phillip could be king if thrones not united.

• Eng. got Gibraltar and slave trade + N. Scotia & Newfoundland

• Austrian Hapsburgs took Sp. Neth.• France was ruined & Louis died 1715.Spanish Musketeers

Page 17: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

The Legacy of Louis XIV• People of France rejoiced

when he died• France did become a world

power and a showcase for art, lit. & culture in Europe

• $21 Billion in debt!• He advised his great gr. son

(Louis XV) “Do not imitate me”• Planted the seeds for the

French Revolution (1789)

Page 18: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Which castle did Louis XIV have built?

A. VersaillesB. FountainebleuC. Gibralter

Page 19: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Who tried to help Louis XIV restore the economy of France?

A. Cardinal RichelieuB. Henry of NavarreC. Jean-Baptiste Colbert

Page 20: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

What is a Huguenot?

A. French PriestB. French ProtestantC. French Catholic

Page 21: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

Which best describes the legacy of Louis XIV?

A. BankruptB. Vast WealthC. Left France the strongest country in Europe

Page 22: Unit 3 – The Age of Absolute Monarchs (1500 – 1800) Section 2 - The Reign of Louis XIV.

EXIT SLIP

• Describe the impact of Louis XIV’s extravagant lifestyle and disastrous wars on the economy of France.– You must answer in a complete paragraph!– 3-5 sentences minimum!