Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-qlrfm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T23:16:28.016Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Power, Status and Precedence: rivalries among the provincial élites of Louis XIV'S France*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

During the past thirty years most historians have acknowledged that it is anachronistic to describe Louis XIV as an absolute monarch. Many of them have turned their attention towards the various elite groups whose power and privileges coexisted with those of the crown in the very different, and sometimes fiercely separatist, provinces which formed the kingdom of France. A few have attributed such great influence to local nobles and institutions that the royal government seems to have been reduced to impotence. This impression, clearly too extreme, has been created first by a preoccupation with those issues and periods where the crown was in conflict with many, or in the case of the Frondes with almost all, of its leading subjects, and a disregard for the more numerous occasions when the king and at least some élite groups had identical or compatible purposes. Secondly, it has arisen from a neglect of the informal channels of communication which were often more important than the formal administrative structure for linking the court and the provinces, and for conducting the everyday routine of government. The most important of these was the network of ‘brokers’, often influential governors and bishops, by which provincial requests for highly prized royal patronage—whether titles, orders, offices, privileges or pensions— were conveyed to the ministers and to the king himself. The possibility of personal advancement was a vital consideration for members of the upper social échelons as they calculated their responses to ministerial instructions and enquiries.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Louis XIV: Mémoires for the instruction of the dauphin, intro., trans, and notes by Sonnino, Paul (New York, 1970) 24, 31–7Google Scholar.

2 Apostolidés, Jean-MarieLe roi machine: spectacle et politique au temps de Louis XIV (Paris, 1981)Google Scholar

3 Facsimiles of letters by the maréchal de Vauban relating to the fortresses of Roussillon, in the collection of the fortress at Collioure.

4 Poullet, M.-F., avec contribution de C. Cosneau et B. Sournia, Laplace royale (Paris, 1984)Google Scholar.

5 I am indebted for some of the factual detail on the construction of the Dijon palais des états and the place royale, although not for the interpretation of its significance, to Beauvalot, Yves, La construction du palais des états de Bourgogne et de la place royale à Dijon—de Daniel Giltard à Robert de Cotte: I'oeuvre de Jules Hardouin-Mansart (Dijon, 1981)Google Scholar.

6 All the designs of Hardouin-Mansart for the Dijon palais and place royale are collected as Ms 1501, Bibliothèque de la Sorbonne.