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France - Historical Biography, France - Political Biography, 1589 - 1789 (Bourbon Dynasty) - French History
Louis XIV by Anthony Levi — book cover

Louis XIV

by Anthony Levi
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Overview

A nation exceedingly rich and extraordinarily powerful, its arts unparalleled in elegance and excellence, France in the seventeenth century mirrored the monarch who ruled it: Louis XIV, heritor not only to the throne of his country but also, supposedly, to the powers of the mythological sun god Apollo. Known as le roi soleil—the sun king—and vested with unprecedented power and privilege, for fifty years Louis epitomized the glory that was France. On the dark underside of the monarchy's grand, gilded looking glass, however, lurked peasant starvation, financial bankruptcy, military defeat, and the deaths of thousands—all of which would plague the conscience of the king. It is in the struggle of the lofty sun king, who at least half-believed in his quasi divinity, to reconcile his extravagant persona with the shortcomings, flaws, miscalculations, and failures of an ordinary mortal that the fascination of this new, intricate, and controversial illustrated biography lies. Indeed, at the heart of Anthony Levi's probing study brews the conflict between Louis XIV's regal infallibility and his human, often tragic and far-reaching errors. Out of it emerges a complex personal portrait of one of the most politically effective monarchs ever to reign in Europe.

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Editorials

Kirkus Reviews

A slow-moving, thorough life of the French monarch by a noted literary historian. Levi extends the narrative begun in his Cardinal Richelieu (2000) to the son of the weak-willed, out-of-touch Louis XIII. It'll be tempting for some to read XIV's life as a 16th-century analog of the current American president's, for Louis was callow and proud of it. Writes Levi, he "is reliably thought to have disliked studying from books" and acquired only a little knowledge of Latin, the language of learning and-tellingly-international diplomacy; moreover, on attaining the throne, he surrounded himself with his father's cronies, many of whom had grown up under the long shadow of Cardinal Richelieu, and spent a lot of time governing from the distance of Versailles, which he imagined to be a sort of typical village. The French people were dispirited by his myriad missteps in office, but, for all that, "his charm could inspire popularity in the midst of the anguish his policies were inflicting on them"-policies in part caused by the monarch's "inclination to the pursuit of military glory as conferring or demonstrating the highest form of human honor." Yet Louis XIV was more than an ingenue, and by Levi's account the Sun King, who half believed in his own divinity, sought to perform at least some good deeds to lessen the suffering of the most unfortunate of France's people. Levi paints a thorough warts-and-all portrait of Louis, though the prose is sometimes thick and plodding, as with this representative aside: "He was in the 1680s still trapped in the role in which the painters and sculptors of the baroque had cast him, exaggerated, magnified, distorted to maximum tension in the interests of inspiring awe,status, and grandeur, in as strongly lit and unachievable and certainly as unsustainable a pose as any to be found in a van Dyck painting." General readers may prefer to dip into the pages of Laclos or Hugo for a taste of the time. Levi's take is mainly for specialists.

Book Details

Published
March 10, 2004
Publisher
Carroll & Graf Publishers
Pages
320
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780786713097

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