Essay On Louis Xiv Absolutism

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The French monarchy’s absolutism was laid out by two powerful ministers, Cardinal Richelieu and Cardinal Mazarin. Both tried to impose royal administration on France. The Fronde was widespread rebellions due to consolidated monarchy power which angered aristocracy and nobles between 1649 and 1652. The unsuccessful rebellions from French nobles convinced Louis XIV that heavy policies would endanger the throne. His plan was to create a monarchial institution on France while assuring the nobles and wealthy their influence on the locals. Louis worked through existing political administrations rather than destroying them. Louis XIV assumed the throne after his chief minister, Cardinal Mazarin, died in 1661. He pursued personal rule by establishing …show more content…

His concept of royal authority was the divine right to rule absolute power. His declaration, “L’état, c’est moi” (“I am the State”) illustrated his status that God’s chosen regents cannot be bound to parliaments. However, he kept local authority loyal to him and satisfied by not limiting their power. He and his ministers supported financial privileges of local institutions. Louis consulted parlements with economic regulations before coming to conclusions that would affect them. Many regional parlements supported the monarch in this way. Louis clashed with Paris’ parlement and subsequently, he reduced the parlement’s power by placing the policy to register laws before questioning them; this is an example of his supremacy in the court. In the palace of Versailles, nobles struggled for sovereign favor than disputing in individual wars. His absolute monarchy stabilized France and centralized a strong government that would endure for many …show more content…

He repressed Jansenists by persecuting them which fostered opposition to royal power. This fostered a long-term political stance. After Louis XIV died, Paris’ Parlement and other judicial bodies sympathized Jansenists and reassert their authority within the French monarchy. Louis XIV sought to bring France under Roman Catholicism which launched a campaign against Huguenots (French Protestants). Louis’s public reputation was destroyed by bullying Huguenots to Catholicism publicly by banning them from government positions, excluding them from professions, and using financial ways to convert them. He revoked the Edict of Nantes that Henry IV installed for religious tolerance in October 1685. Protestants who were highly skilled left France and joined the resistance against Louis in other countries. This revocation and ongoing persecution led France to be the symbol of religious oppression in Europe while Europe was reputed as complete religious

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