FRONDE

frôNd, 1648–53, series of outbreaks during the minority of King Louis XIV, caused by the efforts of the Parlement of Paris (the chief judiciary body) to limit the growing authority of the crown; by the personal ambitions of discontented nobles; and by the grievances of the people against the financial burdens suffered under cardinals Richelieu and Mazarin.

The Fronde of the Parlement

This period (1648–49) began when the parlement rejected a new plan for raising money, proposed by Anne of Austria, mother of and regent for Louis XIV, and her adviser, Cardinal Mazarin. The scheme would have required that the magistrates of the high courts (except the parlement) give up four years' salary. The high courts, including the parlement, opposed the proposal and drafted a reform document limiting the royal prerogative. The government, in retaliation, arrested several members of the parlement, notably Pierre Broussel, but the Parisian populace rose in protest and barricaded the streets (Aug., 1648). Anne and Mazarin were forced to yield and Broussel was released.

Meanwhile, the Peace of Westphalia (Oct., 1648), which ended the Thirty Years War, freed the royal army to take action against the Fronde. Anne, the king, and Mazarin secretly left Paris (Jan., 1649), and the city was blockaded by royal troops under Louis II, prince de Condé (see Condé, Louis II de Bourbon, prince de). Louis's brother, Armand de Conti (see under Conti, family) and his sister Mme de Longueville were among the leaders of the Fronde. Other leaders were Frédéric Maurice de Bouillon and Paul de Gondi (later Cardinal de Retz). A compromise peace was arranged between the parlement and the regent at Rueil in Mar., 1649.

The Fronde of the Princes

The prince de Condé, having aided Cardinal Mazarin and Louis XIV's regent Anne, expected to control them. His overbearing attitude and intrigues caused his arrest in Jan., 1650, and precipitated a second outbreak, the Fronde of the Princes, or the New Fronde. Mme de Longueville called on Marshal Turenne for aid in releasing her brother. Government troops defeated Turenne and his Spanish allies at Rethel (1650), but Mazarin was forced to yield when Retz, Mme de Chevreuse, Gaston d'Orléans, and François de Beaufort all united in demanding Condé's release.

Mazarin fled to Germany in Feb., 1651, but the victorious nobles soon quarreled among themselves, and Condé left Paris to take up open warfare against the government. Although joined by Gaston d'Orléans, Beaufort, Conti, and the provincial parlements of S France, Condé lost the principal support of Turenne, who went over to the government's side after Louis XIV reached his majority. In Dec., 1651, Mazarin was recalled. Condé concluded an alliance with Spain, but was defeated by Turenne at the Faubourg Saint-Antoine beneath the walls of Paris; he was saved by Mlle de Montpensier, who admitted him and his army into Paris. His arrogant conduct there alienated the people.

As the Fronde disintegrated, Mazarin once more left France to clear the air for a reconciliation. In October the king returned to Paris; Mazarin followed in Feb., 1653. The princes soon made peace with the government, except for Condé, who commanded the Spanish forces against France until the Peace of the Pyrenees (1659; see Pyrenees, Peace of the). The Fronde was the last attempt of the nobility to resist the king by arms. It resulted in the humiliation of the nobles, the strengthening of royal authority, and the further disruption of the French economy.

Bibliography

See A. L. Moote, The Revolt of the Judges: The Parlement of Paris and the Fronde, 1643–1652 (1972).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Fronde  - 1045 results

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...PARISIAN CURES AND THE RELIGIOUS FRONDE, 1652-1662 RICHARD M. GOLDEN THE...5. The End of the Religious Fronde 62 CHAPTER TWO A NEW ORDER...PARISHES OF PARIS DURING THE RELIGIOUS FRONDE 97 I. The Regular-Secular...
...Boy-King 23 4 The "Fronde" I: Parlementary, 1648-49 32 5 The "Fronde" II: The Princes 43...aroused Paris against the king during the Fronde. After Beaufort discovered that his...
...end that allowed their manipulation to productive effect by such challengers to the hegemony of the mainstream press as La Fronde . Indeed, in such a field of fixed rules of engagement, what Robert terms "cultural illegibility"--the positive decision to...
...II. From the Fronde to Absolutism 19...seventeenth century was the age of the Fronde ; the attempt to establish and realize...frame of mind. CHAPTER II FROM THE FRONDE TO ABSOLUTISM 1 The theoretical...
...successes in 1648--Beginning of the Fronde movement-- The Peace of Westphalia--The parliamentary Fronde-- The Treaty of Rueil, April 1, 1649...Longueville, January 18, 1650--The new Fronde --Retirement of Mazarin from France...
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journal articles on: Fronde  - 57 results

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...Debat Politique En France Au Temps De la Fronde, 1648-1653. by Jill R. Fehleison...debat politique en France au temps de la Fronde (1648-1653). Bibliotheque dhistoire moderne...early modern France too often dismiss the Fronde because it failed to halt the increasing...
Mazarin and the Fronde by Geoffrey Treasure Cardinal...Lieutenant-Governor, for eight years, and well into the Fronde, he was to show that he could be loyal...Cardinals service. Holding on through the Fronde, whether ministers, or unofficial agents...
...of political discontent led up to the Fronde, with an outburst of pamphleteering in...women played a significant role in the Fronde and in the literature surrounding it...French translation. (37) The leaders of the Fronde were ready to make common cause with civic...
...dominante tijaniyya et, dautre part, la fronde tijaniyya, des affrontements islamiques...supplementaires, cette nouvelle exigence suscita une fronde, personne ne voulant plus verser de sous...tijaniyya. Des lors, on assistera a leur fronde contre lautorite royale et aux affrontements...
...high point of its achievement during the Fronde. Great care should be taken not to exaggerate...the words of one pamphleteer during the Fronde who asserted that `it is simply not possible...never completely vanquished and during the Fronde received lucid expression in the famous...
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magazine articles on: Fronde  - 16 results

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...through the political and social crisis known as the Fronde (1648-53). Fronde means sling - the weapon used by Paris urchins against...religious wars and the revolution of 1789. After the Frondeurs had been defeated Mazarin devoted himself to the...
...lifetime, but circulated in the salons he frequented after the Fronde, the revolt against the regency of Anne of Austria in the years...year 1598 in 1651, when Mezeray was writing in the midst of the Fronde, with which, in some aspects, he sympathised. Mezerays analysis...
...serious crisis to face the Bourbon monarchy before 1789, the Fronde, was inaugurated by the officers of the Paris sovereign courts...income. When the office-holders of Paris revolted during the Fronde, one of their motives was fear that the annual would be discontinued...
...themselves -- royal princes and great nobles, financiers, officials, members of the parlements. The confused civil wars called the Fronde, which began in 1648 in Paris with violent protests against high taxes, were attempts to gain control of the government. Anne...
...crises around Europe threatened the very existence of monarchy. England actually executed its king. The French civil wars of the Fronde posed a smaller, but still significant danger for the French monarchy. Other nations of Europe also saw a new tendency to identify...
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newspaper articles on: Fronde  - 1 result

 
 
...Buckinghamshire; 39 Tyson Gay; 40 Ferrari; 41 Ethiopia; 42 The Cheviot; 43 China; 44 Celery; 45 The wren; 46 Leprosy; 47 The Fronde; 48 Senegal; 49 Brian Blessed; 50 Bridget Jones: The Edge Of Reason. Jamelia had a hit single with a song recorded for which...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Fronde  - 34 results

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FRONDE froNd, 1648 53, series of outbreaks during the minority...suffered under cardinals Richelieu and Mazarin . The Fronde of the Parlement This period (1648 49) began when the...Years War, freed the royal army to take action against the Fronde. Anne, the king, and Mazarin secretly left Paris (Jan...
FRONDIZI, ARTURO artoo ro fronde se, 1908 95, president of Argentina (1958 62). A lawyer and economist, he opposed Juan Peron and rose to prominence after the...
...the series of outbreaks known as the Fronde he was at first loyal to the court, but...arrest in 1650. This precipitated the Fronde of the Princes against Cardinal Mazarin...France. After the disintegration of the Fronde and the return to power of Mazarin, Conde...
DUQUESNE, ABRAHAM abra-am duken , 1610 88, French naval officer. In the Fronde outbreaks, he suppressed a revolt at Bordeaux (1650). As commander of the new French fleet, he distinguished himself in the third...
...Rochefoucauld and joined him as a leader of the Fronde . A determined enemy of Cardinal Mazarin...prince de Conti , during the first Fronde, and that of the Vicomte de Turenne and...brother, the Great Conde, during the second Fronde. She made her peace with the court in...
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