Louis Xiv
Louis Xiv
Louis XIV ruled as King of France and of Navarre. Louis XIV is also known as Louis the Great (in French Louis le Grand or Le Grand Monarque, “the Great Monarch”), because, following his victory in the Franco-Dutch War and the Treaty of Nijmegen, the Parlement de Paris decreed that all public inscriptions and statues of the king should carry that epithet attached to his name.
He is also popularly known as The Sun King (in French Le Roi Soleil) because of the idea that, just as the planets revolve around the Sun, so too should France and the court revolve around him. As a result, he was commonly associated with Apollo Helios, the Greco-Roman god of the Sun. As a patron of the arts, this association was fitting because Louis was, like Apollo Musagetes, the “leader of the Muses”.
He acceded to the throne a few months before his fifth birthday, but did not assume actual personal control of the government until the death of his First Minister (“premier ministre”), the Italian Jules Cardinal Mazarin, in 1661.[1] Louis would