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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
March 5, 2019 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781643131054
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781643131054
- File size: 28895 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
December 15, 2018
A new biography of "the most legendary king ever to sit on the throne of France."In this surprisingly dry treatment, British biographer Wilkinson (The Princes in the Tower: Did Richard III Murder His Nephews, Edward V & Richard of York?, 2015, etc.) focuses more on the king's romantic entanglements than on his acts and legacy. For a staggering 72 years, Louis XIV (1638-1715) reigned over an efflorescent France, inheriting the throne at age 4 in 1643 and ruling until just shy of age 77 in 1715. Early on during his reign, he was under the wing of his regent mother, Anne, and influential minister Cardinal Mazarin, and he saw France through numerous costly wars with his European neighbors, conflicts that allowed the country to enjoy political predominance, key annexations, and a flourishing French culture. Schooled by the Jesuits and in the statecraft of the crafty Mazarin, Louis liked the work of running a country and decided to do it himself, breaking with precedent and dispensing with a first minister. He had learned that his noble sycophants, such as the superintendent of finances, Nicolas Fouquet, were robbing him blind, and he embraced his kingly role with relish. Moreover, he desired that France be self-sufficient in various industries and became a fervent patron of French arts and culture, establishing royal academies of dance and letters and subsidizing the work of playwright Molière and composer Jean-Baptiste Lully. Too much of Wilkinson's plodding narrative details the romantic court intrigues, including Louis' extramarital affairs with Louise de La Vallière and Madame de Montespan, and his happy late-life second marriage to the governess of the royal children, Madame de Maintenon. Sadly, the romance rarely sizzles, and the author doesn't provide enough big-picture analysis of significant points in his subject's life--e.g., his stoking of the War of Spanish Succession.Wilkinson offers little in the way of passion or illumination to enliven this account of the dazzling reign of the Sun King.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
February 1, 2019
Before the French Revolution and the terror that followed, before Marie Antoinette and Napoleon, there was Louis XIV (1638-1715), the Sun King. Arguably, no monarch before or after him exemplified absolutism so lavishly. During Louis's more than seven decades leading France, the country became the political and cultural center of Europe. These were the years of dramatists Molière and Jean Racine and the expansion of Versailles, along with near continual warfare, religious conflicts, and the subjugation of an unruly nobility. It was also a time of courtiers and masked balls, palace intrigue and gossip, and extravagance beyond belief. Relying on the king's memoirs, as well as an array of secondary sources, Wilkinson (The Princes in the Tower) focuses more on the skirmishes among the aristocracy, glorious military campaigns, and romantic liaisons of Louis's reign than the administrative or economic functions of state. What is lacking in academic tone and research, however, is more than made up for by a historical account that is both entertaining and informative. VERDICT An enjoyable read for armchair history fans, especially those with an interest in the golden age of monarchy.--Linda Frederiksen, formerly with Washington State Univ. Lib., Vancouver
Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly
March 18, 2019
This biography of Louis XIV, king of France (1643–1715), from historian Wilkinson (The Princes in the Tower), is an entertaining, if unnecessary, work that brings no new understanding of the thoroughly studied royal. Wilkinson traces Louis’s life in chronological order, from his ascent to the throne at age four upon his father’s death, through his education, first loves, and the initial signs of his weakness for women other than his wife. Wilkinson identifies the traumatic experience of the Fronde, a series of civil wars in which Louis was challenged by and prevailed over members of the nobility, as the cause of the young king’s fear of nobles; “Louis therefore entrapped his nobility within a gilded cage and controlled them with court ceremonial” while expanding his power abroad, affirming his dominance through his lifelong renovations of the palace at Versailles. The Louis XIV that emerges is by turns pious and pitiably impulsive, though there’s little examination of either state. And Wilkinson’s text requires of the reader a level of historical knowledge that would render this book redundant. Readers hoping for a new authoritative biography of the Sun King will be left wanting. -
Booklist
January 1, 2019
When it comes to European monarchs, France's Louis XIV leads the field absolutely. The Sun King acceded the throne when only four years old. Due to careful tutelage from Cardinal Mazarin and his regent mother, the young Louis learned the arts of government and diplomacy, so that as an adult, he was ready to rule. Thanks to sound financing from his minister Colbert and military successes, he made France the continent's dominant nation. Wilkinson well describes Louis' love life, his peripatetic infatuations and longer-term affairs that made for court intrigues. Louis' patronage of the arts extended not only to the architectural achievements of his palace at Versailles but also to his encouragement of the playwright Moli�re, despite Moli�re's withering observations of French aristocracy and clergy. Louis' artistic triumphs included his own serious talents as a ballet dancer well into his reign. Wilkinson's attention to detail and her ability to create individual personalities of the seemingly endless parade of Louis' courtiers mark this as a thorough political and cultural account of a long and complicated reign.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.) -
Kirkus
December 15, 2018
A new biography of "the most legendary king ever to sit on the throne of France."In this surprisingly dry treatment, British biographer Wilkinson (The Princes in the Tower: Did Richard III Murder His Nephews, Edward V & Richard of York?, 2015, etc.) focuses more on the king's romantic entanglements than on his acts and legacy. For a staggering 72 years, Louis XIV (1638-1715) reigned over an efflorescent France, inheriting the throne at age 4 in 1643 and ruling until just shy of age 77 in 1715. Early on during his reign, he was under the wing of his regent mother, Anne, and influential minister Cardinal Mazarin, and he saw France through numerous costly wars with his European neighbors, conflicts that allowed the country to enjoy political predominance, key annexations, and a flourishing French culture. Schooled by the Jesuits and in the statecraft of the crafty Mazarin, Louis liked the work of running a country and decided to do it himself, breaking with precedent and dispensing with a first minister. He had learned that his noble sycophants, such as the superintendent of finances, Nicolas Fouquet, were robbing him blind, and he embraced his kingly role with relish. Moreover, he desired that France be self-sufficient in various industries and became a fervent patron of French arts and culture, establishing royal academies of dance and letters and subsidizing the work of playwright Moli�re and composer Jean-Baptiste Lully. Too much of Wilkinson's plodding narrative details the romantic court intrigues, including Louis' extramarital affairs with Louise de La Valli�re and Madame de Montespan, and his happy late-life second marriage to the governess of the royal children, Madame de Maintenon. Sadly, the romance rarely sizzles, and the author doesn't provide enough big-picture analysis of significant points in his subject's life--e.g., his stoking of the War of Spanish Succession.Wilkinson offers little in the way of passion or illumination to enliven this account of the dazzling reign of the Sun King.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
February 1, 2019
Before the French Revolution and the terror that followed, before Marie Antoinette and Napoleon, there was Louis XIV (1638-1715), the Sun King. Arguably, no monarch before or after him exemplified absolutism so lavishly. During Louis's more than seven decades leading France, the country became the political and cultural center of Europe. These were the years of dramatists Moli�re and Jean Racine and the expansion of Versailles, along with near continual warfare, religious conflicts, and the subjugation of an unruly nobility. It was also a time of courtiers and masked balls, palace intrigue and gossip, and extravagance beyond belief. Relying on the king's memoirs, as well as an array of secondary sources, Wilkinson (The Princes in the Tower) focuses more on the skirmishes among the aristocracy, glorious military campaigns, and romantic liaisons of Louis's reign than the administrative or economic functions of state. What is lacking in academic tone and research, however, is more than made up for by a historical account that is both entertaining and informative. VERDICT An enjoyable read for armchair history fans, especially those with an interest in the golden age of monarchy.--Linda Frederiksen, formerly with Washington State Univ. Lib., Vancouver
Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Formats
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- OverDrive Read
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