LOUIS XVI, King of France

1754–93, king of France (1774–92), third son of the dauphin (Louis) and Marie Josèphe of Saxony, grandson and successor of King Louis XV. In 1770 he married the Austrian archduchess Marie Antoinette. His early attempts to enact reforms and to appoint competent and upright ministers met with general approval, but his character was unsuited to provide the leadership needed to control the complex social and political conflict smoldering in France. Shy, dull, and corpulent, he preferred the hunting field and his locksmith's workshop to the council chamber; indecisiveness made him subject to the poor advice of his intimates.

The reforms begun by his able ministers A. R. J. Turgot and Chrétien de Malesherbes were opposed by the court faction, including Marie Antoinette. A more important obstacle to Turgot's plans was the opposition of the parlements, which were revived after the dismissal of René de Maupeou. Turgot was dismissed in May, 1776, and Louis appointed (Oct., 1776) Jacques Necker director of the treasury. The king supported most of Necker's reforms and economies, but the costly French intervention in the American Revolution more than canceled the savings, and Necker's borrowing greatly swelled the debt. Necker's attempt to gain greater control over policy by courting public opinion was rebuffed at court, and he resigned in protest in May, 1781.

Necker's successors, Charles Alexandre de Calonne (1783–87) and Étienne Charles Loménie de Brienne (1787–88), were unable to ward off bankruptcy. When the interest-bearing debt had risen to a huge figure, the king convoked (1787) the Assembly of Notables and asked their consent to tax the privileged classes. The notables made a few minor reforms but refused to consent to taxation, referring this to the States-General.

Louis finally convoked the States-General in 1789. Necker, restored in 1788, prevailed upon Louis to double the number of deputies from the third, or popular estate. This increase, however, would be meaningless if the estates met separately and voted as units rather than as individuals; the nobles (first estate) and the clergy (second estate), could still outvote the third estate. The king's opposition to the combined meeting of the estates and his procrastination on this issue led the third estate to proclaim itself a National Assembly, thus signaling the end of absolutism in France. Louis ordered the estates to meet and vote separately, but he was forced (June 27, 1789) to yield and allow the estates to sit together and vote by head.

Shortly afterward Louis sent troops to Paris, where he suspected the French Guards of being too sympathetic to the assembly. Rumors circulated that the king intended to suppress the assembly, and the dismissal of the popular Necker provoked the storming of the Bastille (July 14, 1789). Louis again had to capitulate; he ordered the withdrawal of the royal troops, reinstated Necker, and accepted the new national red, white, and blue cockade. Despite his outward acceptance of the revolution, Louis allowed reactionary plotting of the queen and court, and in August refused to approve the abolition of feudal rights.

In Oct., 1789, a crowd marched on Versailles and forced the royal family to return to Paris, where they were confined in the Tuileries palace. Louis's position, further compromised by the plots of émigré circles, was definitively ruined when the royal family attempted (June, 1791) to flee France in disguise. They were apprehended at Varennes, and their attempted flight was considered proof of their treasonable dealings with foreign powers. Louis was forced to accept the constitution of 1791, which limited his power, but preserved the royal veto and his power to appoint ministers.

After his return he was in communication with Austria and Prussia, urging them to rescue him. In 1792 the early reverses of the French army in the war with Austria and Prussia and the duke of Brunswick's threat to destroy Paris if the royal family were harmed infuriated the Paris sans-culottes. The king and his family were imprisoned in the Temple (Aug 10, 1792). In September, simultaneously with the defeat of the Prussians at Valmy, the Convention declared a Republic. Incriminating evidence against Louis was later found, and he was tried (Dec.–Jan.) by the Convention. Found guilty by a unanimous vote, he was sentenced to death by a vote of 361 to 288, with 72 calling for a delay. He was guillotined on Jan. 21, 1793, facing death with courage.

See biographies by S. K. Padover (new ed. 1963) and B. Fay (tr. 1968); M. Walzer, Regicide and Revolution: Speeches at the Trial of Louis XVI (1974); D. Jordan, The Trial of Louis XVI (1980).

____________________

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: Louis XVI King of France  - 16557 results

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...became King Louis XVI, he made...spectacle of the laughing...the future king of France howled with...ages. Louis XVI was hardly...the grace of God and...he became king of France. His physical...monarch. A king of France, bearing...the timid Louis XVI feared violence...
...between pages xvi and 1. George...Douglas, first Earl of Dumbarton, K...Scottish soldiers in France and the Netherlands...armies of the Sun King was indeed small...the reign of Louis XIV, but it played...Paris, 1824). 9 Louis XIV, King of France, Mimoirs de Louis...
...offered by the King of France; they promised...June 29, Louis XIV. signed...Empire, and the King of France, the second...and Spain. Louis XIV., during...reserve upon the King of France. Such was not the case; and Louis XIV., who...
...7. Mack P. Holt, The King in Parlement: the Problem of the Lit de Justice in Sixteenth-Century France, The Historical Journal...lits de justice under Louis XIV, see Olivier Lefevre...1822-1833), XIV, 190-191; XVI, 239; XVI, 529-535...
...as the old king had predicted...subject of the present...reign of Louis XVI, which includes...litteraire de la France . RLC...and, when Louis XVI was detained...to leave France, Rozoi sought...make for the king a list of hostages...
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journal articles on: Louis XVI King of France  - 299 results

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...subjects, that Louis XVI met his end...was unaware of how momentous...the former king had been...had ruled France since 21...christian king of France, the argument...blood (that of St. Louis - King Louis IX...and Louis XVI throughout...
...resuscitate Louis XVI, Redoux is less...with the idea of recounting his...Revolutionary France. 18 Even more...as the mention of Louis XVI accurately reflect...hypocritical pity for Louis XVI" (111). Raitt...Castexs discussion of the deemphasis...
...revolt in medieval Europe, !200-1425. Italy, France, and Flanders (Cambridge Mass., 2006), passim. (26.) D. Nicholas, The van Arteveldes of Ghent. The varieties of vendetta and the...Vivere en eenige andere mnteekenaars der XVI. en XVUe eeuvj, F. de Potter, ed. (Ghent...
...and the orphaning of her children. Here...arranged marriage, Louis XVI "unquestionably loved...she emasculated the king and made feminine...influence the real locus of power in France. Her court was "not...description of the court of Louis XVI and those found in...
...each Christian King / To make their...fleet, made up of Spanish and...of Spain and France and the Protestant...authority on the king. Edmund Spensers...construction of himself in...dedication page, as Louis A. Montrose...Apparently the King, when copying...later copy of the poem (he...Commission, Part XVI 1933, 393...
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magazine articles on: Louis XVI King of France  - 75 results

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Birth of Louis XVI of France: August 23rd...grandfather, King Louis XV, who...would ever be king. He was the third soil of the Dauphin Louis-Ferdinand and...Louis-Anguste in memory of the sainted King Louis XII and the little...
...and Louis XVI attended...Chapelle Royale of Versailles...to Saint Louis, that is...Louis IX of France, the French...crusader king. The first...Louis XV and Louis XVI. At first glance, the use of plainsong...Mercure de France. Thus in...cantors of the king, as well...
...her husband, Louis XVI, whom she married...simplistic tale of how a frivolous...18th-century France, this documentary...married to the King of France at...the future Louis XVI, and still...Queen. In spite of her wrong-headedness...marriage with King Louis for seven...
...It is necessary to look beyond France to find a statesman, composer and...patron comparable with the stature of Philippe: Frederic II of Prussia...establish the opera seria, whereas Louis XV and Louis XVI were hardly interested in music at...
...Talleyrand ever really saved France. What he did do on every...against him was "the frivolity of the French," which might...Autun in January 1789 by Louis XVI, to whom he had sworn allegiance...wrote the speech that the King delivered to the National...
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...Spain again, and only became part of France, for once and all, late in the 17th...to rent a car for touring the rest of the region). Founded by the Romans...planned community. Commissioned by King Louis XVI, who needed as much salt as he could...
...Now, in a riveting study of France between the final fall of Napoleonin 1815 and the revolution...remarkablepartnership between Louis-Philippe, chosen King of the French after 1830, andhis...senior Bourbon line of Louis XVI failed. Louis-Philippe was...
...daughter of the martyred King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette...witness - and a victim - of the French Revolutions...XVIII and Charles X of France. Named for her maternal...Bordeaux: "When apprized of his nieces actions, King Louis XVII, now in Ghent...
...Marie Anotinette and King Louis XVI. In "The Lost King of France," Deborah Cadbury, a journalist...born 1781 to great fanfare. King Louis XVI approached his wife with...fulfilled my wishes and those of France. You are the mother of a...
...to Versailles to set their plaints before the king himself. Louis XVI, faced with these hoards of angry, wet women, yielded to their demands...from a 29-year-old actress from the south of France and a 35-year-old chocolate seller named Pauline...
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encyclopedia articles on: Louis XVI King of France  - 29 results

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LOUIS XVI , king of France 1754 93, king...1791) to flee France in disguise. They...considered proof of their treasonable...foreign powers. Louis was forced to...sans-culottes . The king and his family...Trial of Louis XVI (1974); D. Jordan...
ELIZABETH , sister of King Louis XVI of France 1764 94, sister of King Louis XVI of France, known as Madame Elizabeth. Deeply loyal to her...
...1795?, titular king of France (1793 95), known in popular...dauphin." The second son of King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette...After the execution (1793) of Louis XVI, the comte de Provence (later King Louis XVIII) proclaimed...
LOUIS XVIII , king of France 1755 1824, king of France (1814 24), brother of King Louis XVI . Known as the comte de Provence, he fled (1791) to Koblenz from the French Revolution and intrigued to bring about foreign intervention...
...flood, wrongly attributed to the king himself. The failure of the monarchy to solve its fiscal...the reign of Louiss successor, Louis XVI . Bibliography See P. Gaxotte...Cobban, A History of Modern France, Vol. I (1957, repr. 1969...
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