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The world's most magnificent palace
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is about to become its most notorious.
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Home to decadence on a truly royal scale.
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Prostitution and gluttony.
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Gambling and torture.
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And enough sex to scandalised even the French.
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This is the story of a king who took Versailles,
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turned it into his palace of pleasure,
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and brought the monarchy to the brink of collapse.
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The waking ceremony of the Duke of Anjou,
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by grace of God, King Louis XV, Monarch of France and Navarre,
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and just an 11-year-old boy.
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Louis will reign for 58 years,
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but his whole life will be lived in the shadow of another man's glory,
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his predecessor, Louis XIV.
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Louis XIV was an incredibly tough act to follow.
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He is seen as The Great.
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He is the Conqueror of Europe.
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He adds to France.
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He is the greatest monarch
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of the 17th century.
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He was the first act on the stage of Versailles.
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He was the sun,
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he was Apollo the sun god.
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Everything orbited around him.
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The etiquette of the court, the day of the court,
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the extraordinary life lived entirely in the public gaze.
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In his patronage of the arts, in his building projects,
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in his personal conduct,
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in the way he dressed,
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the way he ate, the way he looked,
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the way he walked...
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From the fountains in his gardens to the silver by his bed,
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he had established a form of etiquette
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with the sole view of making the whole country of France
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entirely focused upon his person
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and his power.
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Louis XV never expected to be king, but both his father
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and grandfather died before they could reach the throne.
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Louis XV loses his parents and his grandparents
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when he's two years old.
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He's an orphan brought up by people
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that he doesn't know very well,
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some of whom are probably fairly
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terrifying as courtiers.
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He is a sickly child very early on.
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Wherever he went,
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Louis was surrounded by the legacy of his great-grandfather,
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the man who first built the extraordinary palace
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that was his home.
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Certainly, one would imagine Louis XV has been traumatised
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by the death of all his near family,
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and is a lonely and probably
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slightly disturbed child in his youth,
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and I think this carries through the rest of his life.
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Louis had been called the King of France since he was five,
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but others ran the country in his name.
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On his 12th birthday, it was time for him to take his crown,
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and his place on the world stage.
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The coronation of Louis XV was a moment of great hope
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and expectation for the French people.
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They'd had long years of war,
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and now the country was at peace,
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and it had a young king,
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in whom it was possible to invest every conceivable hope.
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So, they could project their ambitions
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and expectations for the new reign on this young, as yet, untested king.
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But, there was a shadow over Louis's inheritance,
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cast not by an eclipse, but by a mountain of debt.
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Despite all his success in war and diplomacy,
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Louis XIV never managed to balance the books,
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or even pay for the building of his enormous palace.
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Louis XIV, when he died, left France in absolutely dire straits.
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After a long war he, of course, left France,
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something like, 20 years revenue in debt,
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2 billion livres in debt, at least.
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And this was going to be an absolutely massive problem.
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2 billion livres. That's £160 billion in today's money.
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But, before he could start work on that problem,
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there was one other thing that demanded
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the new King's immediate attention,
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marriage.
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Louis XV was more than ready to get married.
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When he was 15, his original fiance,
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who was the little Infanta of Spain, was still only five years old.
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And, since 15-year-old boys loathe sweet, little girls,
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he was rather embarrassed to have her around the place.
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Also, the ministers were terribly keen to get him breeding,
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so the little Infanta and her dolls were packed off back to Madrid,
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and a new wife had to be found.
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They cast about for princesses,
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and they eventually settled on Marie Leszczynska,
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who wasn't the most obvious choice,
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since her father was the deposed king of Poland,
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and she really had no money.
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She was 22, quite pretty,
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although, as the female courtiers disparagingly remarked,
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"Her complexion had never known any other cosmetic than snow."
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Nonetheless, 15-year-old boys aren't really very choosy,
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and Louis fell madly in love with her at once.
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Royal sex lives were public property,
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and Louis's was much discussed in the corridors of Versailles,
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if not always believed.
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Louis was now a husband, but he had yet to truly become a ruler.
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So, he set out to copy his great-grandfather.
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Louis XIV had begun his reign by becoming his own Prime Minister.
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So, now, number 15 decided to do exactly the same.
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It would have been very simple for Louis XV to choose a prime minister,
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which would have been a much better solution for him,
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because he could have then had someone
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picked and appointed for the job.
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He's got this sense of,
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he has to follow in the footsteps of his great grandfather,
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Louis XIV, and to be a real king, he has to be a new Louis XIV.
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Louis was living just like his great-grandfather,
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ruling as an absolute monarch,
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enjoying the hunting in the forests around Versailles,
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and soon fulfilling the first and most important
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of all his Royal roles,
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fathering an heir.
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The relationship between Louis XV and his wife,
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Marie Leszczynska, started very well, really.
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They managed to put together a relationship,
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which, over a period of ten years, certainly, was quite a happy one.
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They had a string of children and they seemed to have found a certain,
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you know, sort of, emotional support in each other's company.
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More children followed, at regular intervals,
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over the next ten happy years.
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Eight girls and two boys.
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Louis may have enjoyed being a father, but the Queen,
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after a decade of non-stop pregnancies,
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was fed up with it all.
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The Queen began to complain that she was either pregnant, in bed,
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or being brought to bed.
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Eventually, they had ten children by the time Louis, himself, was 27.
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The Queen had really had enough.
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So, she began to tell the king
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that he wasn't allowed to come into her bedroom on certain saints days,
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because she was a very pious woman.
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Gradually the saints days got more frequent,
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and the saints, themselves, became increasingly obscure until,
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finally, Louis lost his temper and asked Lebel,
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who was the concierge of Versailles, to bring him a woman, any woman.
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Louis only had to ask,
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and just about anything and anyone could be provided, and was.
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The King gradually got into the habit of first having dalliances
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with the court ladies and then full-blown affairs.
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Louis began a life of carnal adventures
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that would turn him into one of history's greatest libertines.
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He was a great womaniser, but there was nothing unusual about that.
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French kings were expected to be womanisers.
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This was seen as a sign that they were virile,
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and we're going to produce an heir, and were, in fact,
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acting in an aristocratic and masculine way.
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Indeed, within the aristocratic society
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that the King had been raised,
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the idea of marriage or fidelity was seen as laughable.
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Louis's first illicit amour was Louise Julie de Nesle,
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a beautiful young aristocrat
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and the eldest of five equally attractive sisters.
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What was interesting was that he proceeded
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to take all the other sisters in her family as his mistresses, too.
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And, although it's slightly doubtful
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that he had an affair with the fourth,
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it's probable that he did.
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It was rumoured that one of the sisters, the Duchesse de Chateauroux,
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would ask her other sister to come along
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and give matters a helping hand, occasionally.
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In some senses, it was a scandal,
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but I think people thought it was funny, rather than disgraceful.
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Both Louis XIV and Louis XV had huge sexual appetites
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and perhaps four women were really what the Bourbon blood needed.
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Louis's affairs with his favourite sisters,
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and his simultaneous flings with many other women,
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produced the inevitable consequences.
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In the course of his reign,
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the King would father a whole brood of illegitimate children.
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We're not actually sure how many,
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but certainly in the region of 30, I think, would be a decent guess.
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But as the rooms of Versailles filled up with Louis's offspring,
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the King's mind moved to affairs of state.
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He decided to copy his illustrious predecessor in another way,
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by taking France to war.
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The decision of Louis XV to go to war in 1744 was hugely popular.
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This was what the King of France should do.
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He should be seen at the head of his armies,
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fighting and leading his troops.
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Louis's declaration of war against France's traditional enemies,
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of Britain, and Austria, made him a hero on the streets.
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And so did his decision to lead his armies in person, accompanied,
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of course, by two of the de Nesle sisters.
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But war was to bring Louis his first brush with death.
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While he was at Metz,
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he fell terribly ill, and it was considered that he was going to die.
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Certainly the doctors had given up hope,
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and back in France, the population were shocked, genuinely,
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absolutely frozen with fear that they would lose their king.
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In order, as a Catholic, to receive the last sacraments,
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he had to confess.
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And, in order to confess, he had to send away his mistress
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and renounce her.
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Louis didn't think much of his marriage vows,
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but like most people of his age, he did believe in heaven and hell.
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And he knew which one he wanted to avoid.
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The King,
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like the least of his subjects,
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was afraid of dying
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without absolution,
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and was afraid for the state of his immortal soul.
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He knew that one day he would have to face God,
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and give an account of himself,
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and then he would just be a man before God,
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like any other man.
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The mistresses were sent away, but they refused to go completely.
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They hung around in the town of Metz,
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until the bishops were obliged to send a message
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saying that, "Our Lord wasn't really going to wait upon their pleasure,
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"and would they please get out."
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So, the de Nesle sisters were dispatched,
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the King promised that if he were saved,
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he would dedicate the rest of his life
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to the well-being of religion and his subjects.
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The King received the last rites, but then, miraculously recovered.
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And, it's from this period that his name
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"Bien-Aime", the Well-Beloved, dates,
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because the people were so pleased that their young king
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had recovered from his illness.
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But Louis's new-found piety didn't last long.
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As soon as he possibly could, he went back to his old ways.
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And, within a few months,
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Madame de Chateauroux was back in his bed.
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Louis, the beloved, became even more popular in 1745.
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He was present on the battlefield as the French army crushed
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the Austrians and the British at the Battle of Fontenoy.
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France was the dominant power in Europe, once again,
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just as she had been in the time of Louis XIV.
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It was the perfect moment for Louis to meet the love of his life.
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He's out hunting in the forests outside Versailles,
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and he comes across, in her carriage, this very beautiful,
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very striking young woman.
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Everyone knows he's taken by her.
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People referred to her as Louis XV's latest piece of game.
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She was called Jeanne Antoinette Poisson,
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the future Marquise de Pompadour,
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and she was much more than a piece of game.
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In fact, Madame de Pompadour is a rather well-connected woman,
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with one of the key factions at the heart of power,
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who formed part of a big financial clique.
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What everyone says, she's strikingly beautiful.
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And her beauty is really the key to her initial success.
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She uses her beauty. She uses her very considerable political acumen
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to establish herself at the heart of the King's power.
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00:19:13,240 --> 00:19:17,160
She was nicknamed Reinette, the little queen, as a child,
254
00:19:17,160 --> 00:19:19,720
because when she was eight she had gone to see a fortune teller,
255
00:19:19,720 --> 00:19:22,560
who had told her that the King of France would fall in love with her.
256
00:19:22,560 --> 00:19:24,680
So, she and her family were absolutely convinced
257
00:19:24,680 --> 00:19:25,840
that this was her destiny.
258
00:19:25,840 --> 00:19:30,240
SPEAKS FRENCH
259
00:19:33,120 --> 00:19:35,840
She sang, she danced, she had a beautiful voice,
260
00:19:35,840 --> 00:19:38,720
she was very well read, marvellous conversationist,
261
00:19:38,720 --> 00:19:41,080
extremely charming woman.
262
00:19:57,240 --> 00:20:01,480
Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour were really very much in love,
263
00:20:01,480 --> 00:20:03,600
and, at first, in fact, for some years,
264
00:20:03,600 --> 00:20:05,600
their relationship was sexually passionate.
265
00:20:07,040 --> 00:20:08,880
He found her very desirable.
266
00:20:08,880 --> 00:20:10,840
Not so much, I think, because she was as sexy
267
00:20:10,840 --> 00:20:12,720
as the de Nesle sisters had been,
268
00:20:12,720 --> 00:20:15,200
but because she understood him very well.
269
00:20:15,200 --> 00:20:18,000
She knew how to amuse him, to captivate him, to charm him,
270
00:20:18,000 --> 00:20:19,040
and to divert him.
271
00:20:33,400 --> 00:20:36,400
She was a very emotionally intelligent woman,
272
00:20:36,400 --> 00:20:39,680
Madame de Pompadour, and I think it was this that Louis loved in her.
273
00:20:43,960 --> 00:20:47,760
Unfortunately, she herself said that she was physically a cold woman.
274
00:20:47,760 --> 00:20:50,760
She didn't really derive any pleasure from lovemaking.
275
00:20:50,760 --> 00:20:54,520
She didn't have the temperament for it. But, she tried very hard.
276
00:20:54,520 --> 00:20:57,880
She put herself on all these sorts of ridiculous diets of, you know,
277
00:20:57,880 --> 00:21:00,760
egg yolks, and red wine with gold flakes sprinkled on it
278
00:21:00,760 --> 00:21:04,400
to try and build herself up and increase the heat of her temperament,
279
00:21:04,400 --> 00:21:08,320
in order to satisfy Louis in bed, but her maid, Madame du Hausset,
280
00:21:08,320 --> 00:21:09,800
pointed out that
281
00:21:09,800 --> 00:21:13,200
she would kill herself rather than please Louis by doing this,
282
00:21:13,200 --> 00:21:14,360
and so she gave it up.
283
00:21:19,880 --> 00:21:23,560
Madame Pompadour may have been a favourite with her lover, the King,
284
00:21:23,560 --> 00:21:26,840
but most other inhabitants of Versailles
285
00:21:26,840 --> 00:21:29,120
were not impressed with her.
286
00:21:33,840 --> 00:21:39,400
The courtiers loathed Madame de Pompadour, because she was bourgeois.
287
00:21:40,680 --> 00:21:44,280
They could not forgive her for being middle class.
288
00:21:44,280 --> 00:21:48,080
It was just about acceptable for a king to have liaisons
289
00:21:48,080 --> 00:21:50,240
with lower class prostitutes,
290
00:21:50,240 --> 00:21:53,680
but a maitresses en titres had always been an aristocratic woman.
291
00:21:54,880 --> 00:21:57,920
Ignoring the snobs at court, Pompadour used all her charm
292
00:21:57,920 --> 00:21:59,240
and intelligence
293
00:21:59,240 --> 00:22:02,640
to advance the interests of her small group of friends,
294
00:22:02,640 --> 00:22:04,920
and do down her rivals.
295
00:22:06,760 --> 00:22:09,640
She was associated with a cabal, a cabal at court,
296
00:22:09,640 --> 00:22:12,720
who were constantly trying to promote the interests
297
00:22:12,720 --> 00:22:14,320
of such and such a general.
298
00:22:14,320 --> 00:22:17,080
So, she had a kind of political baggage that she carried.
299
00:22:22,960 --> 00:22:26,480
Children are rarely keen on their father's new girlfriend,
300
00:22:26,480 --> 00:22:29,160
and the same was true at Versailles.
301
00:22:29,160 --> 00:22:31,880
Especially when Louis's many children
302
00:22:31,880 --> 00:22:33,640
saw him spending a fortune on her.
303
00:22:37,480 --> 00:22:41,120
They felt, rightly or wrongly, that her presence, somehow,
304
00:22:41,120 --> 00:22:42,880
demeaned their father.
305
00:22:43,880 --> 00:22:46,960
As a consequence, of course, they famously dubbed her...
306
00:22:49,600 --> 00:22:50,880
..mummy whore.
307
00:22:52,200 --> 00:22:53,800
Louis's children may have loathed her,
308
00:22:53,800 --> 00:22:57,560
but their mother, the Queen, was rather impressed.
309
00:22:58,760 --> 00:23:00,520
She was particularly nice to the Queen,
310
00:23:00,520 --> 00:23:03,080
which poor old Marie Leszczynska was very grateful for,
311
00:23:03,080 --> 00:23:05,680
because until Madame de Pompadour arrived,
312
00:23:05,680 --> 00:23:08,040
nobody had ever taken any notice of her, at all.
313
00:23:08,040 --> 00:23:10,960
In fact, the first time she was ever sent flowers
314
00:23:10,960 --> 00:23:13,680
was at Madame de Pompadour's instigation.
315
00:23:13,680 --> 00:23:16,760
And, although, obviously, the difference in their positions
316
00:23:16,760 --> 00:23:19,280
meant that they could never be anything like friends,
317
00:23:19,280 --> 00:23:21,520
the Queen was heard to say, if there must be a mistress,
318
00:23:21,520 --> 00:23:22,880
better that it is this one.
319
00:23:25,720 --> 00:23:28,880
Louis was victorious in war and lucky in love.
320
00:23:28,880 --> 00:23:31,400
And it made him grow over confident.
321
00:23:33,400 --> 00:23:38,400
In a grand personal gesture, he agreed to a peace deal with Austria.
322
00:23:38,400 --> 00:23:40,600
One that handed back most of the territory
323
00:23:40,600 --> 00:23:42,400
his generals had just won for him.
324
00:23:42,400 --> 00:23:46,320
His ministers thought it was a terrible idea, and told him so.
325
00:24:05,480 --> 00:24:08,360
The peace is not a very good peace for France,
326
00:24:08,360 --> 00:24:11,040
because France gets absolutely nothing for it,
327
00:24:11,040 --> 00:24:13,360
except enormous debts from its participation in the war.
328
00:24:13,360 --> 00:24:18,320
The French public, having dispensed millions of livres,
329
00:24:18,320 --> 00:24:21,080
and lost countless men dead,
330
00:24:21,080 --> 00:24:24,040
could not understand why their king was giving up his conquests.
331
00:24:24,040 --> 00:24:26,320
As a result, schoolchildren and fishwives
332
00:24:26,320 --> 00:24:28,080
were said to be running around in Paris
333
00:24:28,080 --> 00:24:30,080
with a line, "You're as stupid as the peace."
334
00:24:32,600 --> 00:24:35,200
Just as Louis's popularity began to wane,
335
00:24:35,200 --> 00:24:37,600
his love affair with Madame Pompadour
336
00:24:37,600 --> 00:24:40,120
was also drawing to a close.
337
00:24:40,120 --> 00:24:43,960
His solution was a private harem in the town of Versailles,
338
00:24:43,960 --> 00:24:45,440
known as the Deer Park.
339
00:24:47,200 --> 00:24:49,720
When Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour
340
00:24:49,720 --> 00:24:52,320
ceased to have a sexual relationship,
341
00:24:52,320 --> 00:24:54,960
Louis XV didn't really want to replace her with another mistress,
342
00:24:54,960 --> 00:24:56,080
they got onto well for that,
343
00:24:56,080 --> 00:24:57,800
and from now on,
344
00:24:57,800 --> 00:25:01,280
his sexual appetite was catered for
345
00:25:01,280 --> 00:25:06,840
by a series of young women who were brought out from Paris.
346
00:25:06,840 --> 00:25:09,520
Teenage nymphets, uneducated,
347
00:25:09,520 --> 00:25:12,520
often they had no idea who their powerful lover was.
348
00:25:18,920 --> 00:25:20,640
Young, virginal,
349
00:25:20,640 --> 00:25:23,200
beautiful girls are brought in for his sexual gratification.
350
00:25:23,200 --> 00:25:26,160
But, this is developed into something
351
00:25:26,160 --> 00:25:30,240
altogether more salacious by the press at this time.
352
00:25:32,000 --> 00:25:34,560
When things had been going well, Louis was forgiven,
353
00:25:34,560 --> 00:25:36,760
even praised, for indulging his royal lust.
354
00:25:36,760 --> 00:25:39,920
But after his hated peace treaty,
355
00:25:39,920 --> 00:25:43,280
people saw their king's behaviour very differently.
356
00:25:44,280 --> 00:25:47,280
There's a, sort of, gutter press, effectively,
357
00:25:47,280 --> 00:25:49,000
which just amplifies this,
358
00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:51,320
makes him an absolute sexual debauchee
359
00:25:51,320 --> 00:25:53,120
of the worst imaginable kind.
360
00:25:55,320 --> 00:25:59,520
The Deer Park, obviously, did create rumours, at the time.
361
00:25:59,520 --> 00:26:01,040
It was, according to them,
362
00:26:01,040 --> 00:26:02,960
the scene of these terrible orgies,
363
00:26:02,960 --> 00:26:06,440
in which underage girls would be shipped in droves from Paris
364
00:26:06,440 --> 00:26:08,800
for wicked Louis XV to enjoy.
365
00:26:10,680 --> 00:26:12,720
And one of the worst things that was said,
366
00:26:12,720 --> 00:26:16,920
was that Madame de Pompadour acted as a sort of procuress,
367
00:26:16,920 --> 00:26:19,320
that she would find the girls for Louis
368
00:26:19,320 --> 00:26:22,200
and entice them to the Deer Park.
369
00:26:22,200 --> 00:26:24,040
It couldn't have been less true.
370
00:26:24,040 --> 00:26:28,000
Madame de Pompadour knew about it, and she accepted it as a necessity.
371
00:26:33,600 --> 00:26:36,880
Faced with a deluge of criticism,
372
00:26:36,880 --> 00:26:39,880
Louis turned to the one person he could trust completely.
373
00:26:54,080 --> 00:26:58,840
Ironically, the influence of Madame de Pompadour actually increases
374
00:26:58,840 --> 00:27:01,760
as she stops sharing the King's bed.
375
00:27:04,880 --> 00:27:07,800
She grew more important to him, because she was his friend.
376
00:27:07,800 --> 00:27:11,200
She was one of the few people, almost the only person,
377
00:27:11,200 --> 00:27:13,960
that he could actually trust at court.
378
00:27:13,960 --> 00:27:16,120
You have to remember that the court
379
00:27:16,120 --> 00:27:18,280
is a place of intrigue and masks and pretence,
380
00:27:18,280 --> 00:27:22,720
and nobody tells the truth to the King, so he really needed her.
381
00:27:22,720 --> 00:27:24,720
He needed her in his life as his friend.
382
00:27:28,600 --> 00:27:31,000
As the top powerbroker in Versailles,
383
00:27:31,000 --> 00:27:35,080
Pompadour was drawn more and more into the business of government.
384
00:27:35,080 --> 00:27:38,800
Madame de Pompadour's excursion into politics
385
00:27:38,800 --> 00:27:42,720
is not something that would make a feminist proud.
386
00:27:42,720 --> 00:27:45,520
She was a clever woman, but she really didn't understand politics.
387
00:27:51,680 --> 00:27:53,520
Louis, very foolishly,
388
00:27:53,520 --> 00:27:58,120
entrusted her as a go-between with the Austrian ambassador,
389
00:27:58,120 --> 00:28:00,800
and Madame de Pompadour was so proud of herself,
390
00:28:00,800 --> 00:28:02,640
being given this important role,
391
00:28:02,640 --> 00:28:05,520
she took it terribly seriously, and was very excited,
392
00:28:05,520 --> 00:28:08,680
and she was completely manipulated by the ambassador.
393
00:28:22,880 --> 00:28:24,720
Louis's peace with Austria was unpopular,
394
00:28:24,720 --> 00:28:27,920
but his decision to allow Madame Pompadour to secure an actual
395
00:28:27,920 --> 00:28:30,640
alliance with the old enemy was downright detested.
396
00:28:30,640 --> 00:28:36,080
Madame de Pompadour certainly is in favour of an alliance with Austria.
397
00:28:36,080 --> 00:28:38,560
So, it's an absolute shock to courtiers,
398
00:28:38,560 --> 00:28:41,120
many of whom have long-term loyalties,
399
00:28:41,120 --> 00:28:43,000
and, no doubt, family connections,
400
00:28:43,000 --> 00:28:46,120
to find that France is now allied with a traditional enemy.
401
00:28:50,720 --> 00:28:53,440
Criticism of Louis and Pompadour became even more lurid,
402
00:28:53,440 --> 00:28:56,000
and it reached every corner of Versailles.
403
00:28:56,000 --> 00:28:57,280
They would accuse her
404
00:28:57,280 --> 00:28:58,520
of sexual diseases.
405
00:28:58,520 --> 00:29:00,600
They would accuse her of procuring
406
00:29:00,600 --> 00:29:02,120
young girls for the King,
407
00:29:02,120 --> 00:29:04,400
they would say anything they wanted.
408
00:29:04,400 --> 00:29:09,000
There were secret pamphlets, secret poems,
409
00:29:09,000 --> 00:29:13,640
extremely rude poems about her physique and her body.
410
00:29:13,640 --> 00:29:16,400
Poems would be left in Versailles by court officials,
411
00:29:16,400 --> 00:29:19,160
perhaps even members of his family.
412
00:29:34,640 --> 00:29:38,960
Some of the secret notes even threatened the King with death.
413
00:29:41,720 --> 00:29:44,640
One of the most famous of these contained the phrase,
414
00:29:44,640 --> 00:29:47,920
"Wake-up," or, "Stir yourselves, the sons of Ravaillac!"
415
00:29:47,920 --> 00:29:50,920
which was a direct reference to the man
416
00:29:50,920 --> 00:29:55,000
who had assassinated Henry IV in 1610,
417
00:29:55,000 --> 00:29:57,280
and so, for the first time,
418
00:29:57,280 --> 00:29:59,800
we start to see references in these pamphlets
419
00:29:59,800 --> 00:30:02,240
to calls for the killing of the King.
420
00:30:42,560 --> 00:30:47,760
In 1750, there is the extraordinary episode where there is a rumour,
421
00:30:47,760 --> 00:30:50,920
and there are riots, that Louis XV is having his police force
422
00:30:50,920 --> 00:30:54,480
kidnap children so that he can cure himself of some horrible illness
423
00:30:54,480 --> 00:30:57,800
by bathing in the blood of these kidnapped Parisian children.
424
00:30:57,800 --> 00:31:01,760
So, this is a very serious, and very shocking state of affairs.
425
00:31:19,640 --> 00:31:24,200
Louis's one-man diplomacy was supposed to bring peace to Europe,
426
00:31:24,200 --> 00:31:29,120
but instead, in 1756, he joined his new ally, Austria,
427
00:31:29,120 --> 00:31:31,720
in a war against Britain and Prussia.
428
00:31:31,720 --> 00:31:32,880
It started well,
429
00:31:32,880 --> 00:31:35,720
but messengers were soon arriving at Versailles
430
00:31:35,720 --> 00:31:37,440
with bad news from the front.
431
00:31:40,840 --> 00:31:44,760
As the tide of war changed against the French,
432
00:31:44,760 --> 00:31:47,680
the Parisian public actually got into the habit
433
00:31:47,680 --> 00:31:51,360
of dancing in the streets to celebrate their defeats,
434
00:31:51,360 --> 00:31:55,560
and by doing so, showing how much they detested that Austrian alliance.
435
00:32:00,720 --> 00:32:04,440
The war was not going well for Louis or for France,
436
00:32:04,440 --> 00:32:07,760
and public frustration with the King took a dangerous turn.
437
00:32:14,280 --> 00:32:18,680
In January, 1757, Louis XV is going to his carriage,
438
00:32:18,680 --> 00:32:20,560
going down the steps,
439
00:32:20,560 --> 00:32:24,920
and a certain individual called Damiens rushes up.
440
00:32:33,640 --> 00:32:35,880
And then he feels blood and he says,
441
00:32:35,880 --> 00:32:39,080
"I've been hit. That's the man that did it."
442
00:32:49,560 --> 00:32:54,720
Damiens is immediately arrested, tortured on his feet
443
00:32:54,720 --> 00:32:59,160
by the Chancellor, although Louis XV did not want him to be tortured,
444
00:32:59,160 --> 00:33:00,840
to see whether he had any accomplices,
445
00:33:00,840 --> 00:33:03,640
and whether the knife was, in fact, a poison knife,
446
00:33:03,640 --> 00:33:06,040
which is the great fear that they have at the time.
447
00:33:16,920 --> 00:33:19,960
As far as we can see, he seems to be a nobody.
448
00:33:19,960 --> 00:33:22,720
He's a Lee Harvey Oswald figure, if you like,
449
00:33:22,720 --> 00:33:27,320
but what makes people suspicious is that he's a "nobody"
450
00:33:27,320 --> 00:33:29,800
connected to some quite important "somebodies".
451
00:33:29,800 --> 00:33:33,120
He's worked as a servant for a number of members of the Paris Parlement.
452
00:33:33,120 --> 00:33:37,640
People are never quite certain whether he's not part of a, sort of,
453
00:33:37,640 --> 00:33:40,160
wave of hostility towards Louis XV.
454
00:33:40,160 --> 00:33:44,240
Louis took this amateurish attempt on his life very badly.
455
00:33:44,240 --> 00:33:46,320
Although his doctors promised a full recovery,
456
00:33:46,320 --> 00:33:49,800
he was convinced that this was the end of him.
457
00:34:00,000 --> 00:34:03,640
It's a flesh wound, the mildest of cuts, effectively,
458
00:34:03,640 --> 00:34:06,000
but it has a disproportionate effect on Louis XV.
459
00:34:06,000 --> 00:34:10,040
He goes into a very deep depression after this because he feels that,
460
00:34:10,040 --> 00:34:12,120
you know, he has become, instead of the Well-Beloved,
461
00:34:12,120 --> 00:34:13,680
he's become the Well-Hated.
462
00:34:33,560 --> 00:34:36,480
Rather amusingly, an old marshal comes along
463
00:34:36,480 --> 00:34:38,760
and asks him to cough, spit, and piss,
464
00:34:38,760 --> 00:34:41,320
and he says, "Well, you're OK, my lad.
465
00:34:41,320 --> 00:34:44,120
"There's nothing important been touched."
466
00:34:44,120 --> 00:34:47,120
But that's not, of course, the way Louis XV sees it.
467
00:34:57,440 --> 00:35:00,840
The psychological shock of one of his own subjects attacking him,
468
00:35:00,840 --> 00:35:03,800
this situation is the culmination
469
00:35:03,800 --> 00:35:06,440
of his lack of virtue,
470
00:35:06,440 --> 00:35:09,400
so he's bound to feel that it's his own fault,
471
00:35:09,400 --> 00:35:10,920
he's bound to feel guilty,
472
00:35:10,920 --> 00:35:15,280
and it's bound to give rise to a great deal of self-questioning.
473
00:35:15,280 --> 00:35:19,040
Hearing the grim details of the punishment
474
00:35:19,040 --> 00:35:23,200
planned for his would-be assassin did nothing to improve Louis's mood.
475
00:35:32,560 --> 00:35:35,240
He's going to pay for this very, very dearly,
476
00:35:35,240 --> 00:35:37,280
in that he's not merely going to be executed.
477
00:35:37,280 --> 00:35:41,480
He's going to be put to death in the most horrible way that can be
478
00:35:41,480 --> 00:35:43,560
devised by judicial cruelty.
479
00:35:48,760 --> 00:35:51,240
He's executed in the most extraordinarily gory way
480
00:35:51,240 --> 00:35:54,880
on the Place de Greve, in Paris.
481
00:35:54,880 --> 00:35:56,560
Strapped down to the wheel,
482
00:35:56,560 --> 00:35:58,320
and the executioner goes round
483
00:35:58,320 --> 00:36:01,280
breaking most bones in his body with an iron bar.
484
00:36:01,280 --> 00:36:04,120
He is burnt with tongs
485
00:36:04,120 --> 00:36:08,040
and his flesh is knowingly pulled away from his body.
486
00:36:08,040 --> 00:36:11,120
And it goes on and on and on, but at the end of it,
487
00:36:11,120 --> 00:36:15,040
four horses are attached to each of his limbs, and they're encouraged
488
00:36:15,040 --> 00:36:18,000
to gallop off in different directions,
489
00:36:18,000 --> 00:36:20,000
pulling his body to pieces.
490
00:36:20,000 --> 00:36:22,080
Well, they do that and it's not working,
491
00:36:22,080 --> 00:36:24,920
so the executioner goes back and he starts hacking at various pieces,
492
00:36:24,920 --> 00:36:27,920
so, effectively, he can be pulled to pieces.
493
00:36:27,920 --> 00:36:31,800
Damiens stays alive and conscious for much of this operation.
494
00:36:31,800 --> 00:36:35,360
He finally dies after four hours of absolute torment,
495
00:36:35,360 --> 00:36:40,760
which is going to disgust people by its reports.
496
00:36:44,680 --> 00:36:48,400
Louis had had nothing to do with the grisly execution,
497
00:36:48,400 --> 00:36:52,800
but accounts of it stained his reputation right across Europe.
498
00:36:55,720 --> 00:36:59,280
It gives the reign of Louis XV this incredibly ghastly,
499
00:36:59,280 --> 00:37:05,760
sort of, backward, sort of, feeling to it.
500
00:37:05,760 --> 00:37:09,160
Although his physical suffering was nothing
501
00:37:09,160 --> 00:37:11,720
compared to that meted out to Damiens,
502
00:37:11,720 --> 00:37:15,840
Louis's mental stability was badly shaken by the affair.
503
00:37:15,840 --> 00:37:20,440
His closest aides described him as troubled and depressed.
504
00:37:22,960 --> 00:37:25,720
For a monarch who takes being a king extremely seriously,
505
00:37:25,720 --> 00:37:27,000
this is a big thing,
506
00:37:27,000 --> 00:37:29,480
and all the court talk about, over the next couple of years,
507
00:37:29,480 --> 00:37:35,200
is this depression, this, sort of, melancholic vein to Louis XV.
508
00:37:46,320 --> 00:37:49,200
To make matters worse,
509
00:37:49,200 --> 00:37:52,640
the conflict with Britain was proving to be disastrous.
510
00:37:52,640 --> 00:37:55,120
By the end of what's called the Seven Years War,
511
00:37:55,120 --> 00:37:58,400
the French were driven out of Canada, India,
512
00:37:58,400 --> 00:38:00,400
and much of the Caribbean.
513
00:38:00,400 --> 00:38:03,520
The British, largely because of their Navy,
514
00:38:03,520 --> 00:38:08,840
were able, completely, to turn the tables on France.
515
00:38:08,840 --> 00:38:11,360
France has really lost all her pretensions
516
00:38:11,360 --> 00:38:15,120
to becoming a global superpower,
517
00:38:15,120 --> 00:38:17,280
and she has lost that to England, basically.
518
00:38:17,280 --> 00:38:19,720
If the world is speaking English today,
519
00:38:19,720 --> 00:38:23,160
it is partly because of the outcome of the Seven Years War
520
00:38:23,160 --> 00:38:24,440
in the 18th century.
521
00:38:24,440 --> 00:38:29,240
It was a disaster for France, it was a disaster for the French monarchy.
522
00:38:33,720 --> 00:38:35,280
For a king
523
00:38:35,280 --> 00:38:39,480
whose greatest hope was to live up to the glory of his predecessor,
524
00:38:39,480 --> 00:38:41,760
this was almost too much to bear.
525
00:39:01,600 --> 00:39:04,920
The main thing that a King of France was supposed to do,
526
00:39:04,920 --> 00:39:07,600
which is sometimes forgotten, le metier du roi,
527
00:39:07,600 --> 00:39:10,080
was the conduct of foreign policy.
528
00:39:10,080 --> 00:39:13,160
Now, he wasn't really supposed to mess around
529
00:39:13,160 --> 00:39:16,720
with things like the Parlement, internal politics.
530
00:39:16,720 --> 00:39:19,120
That wasn't his job. It was foreign policy.
531
00:39:19,120 --> 00:39:22,200
And, if you can't even get that right, you're going to be hated.
532
00:39:28,880 --> 00:39:32,120
Badly shaken by the assassination attempt,
533
00:39:32,120 --> 00:39:36,600
and widely blamed for a each fresh military disaster,
534
00:39:36,600 --> 00:39:40,720
Louis hid himself away at Versailles.
535
00:39:40,720 --> 00:39:45,720
The Seven Years War was, undoubtedly, the nadir for Louis XV.
536
00:39:45,720 --> 00:39:48,160
He withdrew into himself,
537
00:39:48,160 --> 00:39:52,280
and instead of doing what he had done during the Austrian War,
538
00:39:52,280 --> 00:39:55,440
of getting to the front and leading his troops,
539
00:39:55,440 --> 00:39:59,240
instead he spent his time hunting, and if he wasn't hunting,
540
00:39:59,240 --> 00:40:03,000
he was with the girls in the Deer Park.
541
00:40:07,760 --> 00:40:09,640
Louis may have lost a war,
542
00:40:09,640 --> 00:40:14,480
but he was still the absolute ruler of France.
543
00:40:14,480 --> 00:40:17,680
And when the criticism of him became too much to bear,
544
00:40:17,680 --> 00:40:21,160
he came up with a suitably absolutist response.
545
00:40:21,160 --> 00:40:23,880
Even the first Encyclopaedia in the French language,
546
00:40:23,880 --> 00:40:26,600
one of the great intellectual achievements of the age,
547
00:40:26,600 --> 00:40:29,440
went on to the bonfire.
548
00:40:31,800 --> 00:40:34,360
Unfortunately, Louis XV was, by nature,
549
00:40:34,360 --> 00:40:37,400
suspicious of anything he saw as unorthodox,
550
00:40:37,400 --> 00:40:39,200
and as a consequence,
551
00:40:39,200 --> 00:40:41,120
he just didn't associate himself
552
00:40:41,120 --> 00:40:44,640
with this great outpouring of French culture and knowledge.
553
00:40:44,640 --> 00:40:48,440
Louis was still close to Madame Pompadour,
554
00:40:48,440 --> 00:40:51,040
who tried to change his mind.
555
00:40:51,040 --> 00:40:53,920
At a dinner party one evening in Versailles,
556
00:40:53,920 --> 00:40:58,200
a Duke said, "What is gunpowder made of?"
557
00:40:58,200 --> 00:41:01,000
And Madame de Pompadour seized the moment, and said,
558
00:41:01,000 --> 00:41:03,360
"It's true, we don't know what gunpowder is.
559
00:41:03,360 --> 00:41:07,080
"What a pity it is that your Majesty, in his wisdom,
560
00:41:07,080 --> 00:41:09,760
"you've banned the encyclopaedia,
561
00:41:09,760 --> 00:41:12,920
"otherwise we could have looked in the encyclopaedia
562
00:41:12,920 --> 00:41:16,040
"and found out what gunpowder is constituted from."
563
00:41:16,040 --> 00:41:18,160
So, they sent for a copy of the banned encyclopaedia,
564
00:41:18,160 --> 00:41:20,520
which, of course, the King had in his private library,
565
00:41:20,520 --> 00:41:22,800
and they spent the rest of the evening reading articles
566
00:41:22,800 --> 00:41:24,080
from the encyclopaedia,
567
00:41:24,080 --> 00:41:26,120
and of course, he was intrigued by this,
568
00:41:26,120 --> 00:41:30,120
and this was supposed to be one of the reasons why he had it reinstated.
569
00:41:32,920 --> 00:41:36,400
Getting Louis to rescind the ban on the encyclopaedia was to be
570
00:41:36,400 --> 00:41:39,560
one of Madame Pompadour's last contributions to his life.
571
00:41:39,560 --> 00:41:42,480
In 1764 she contracted tuberculosis.
572
00:42:01,680 --> 00:42:06,160
She's shifted out of Versailles, and courtiers record that,
573
00:42:06,160 --> 00:42:09,320
I think, as he's seeing the carriage taking her out of Versailles,
574
00:42:09,320 --> 00:42:14,200
he weeps a tear. So, he is upset, undoubtedly, by it.
575
00:42:22,400 --> 00:42:24,480
He stood on the balcony and he cried,
576
00:42:24,480 --> 00:42:28,280
because he had lost the person he had trusted the most in the world,
577
00:42:28,280 --> 00:42:30,120
and he felt very alone without her.
578
00:42:35,720 --> 00:42:40,440
Her death in 1764 is followed by the death of his son, the Dauphin,
579
00:42:40,440 --> 00:42:43,680
in 1765, and a couple of years later in 1768,
580
00:42:43,680 --> 00:42:47,040
the death of his Queen, Marie Leszczynska,
581
00:42:47,040 --> 00:42:51,240
so, this is the removal of some very important people in his life.
582
00:42:55,360 --> 00:42:59,040
The deaths of these people who are close to him,
583
00:42:59,040 --> 00:43:02,800
in the mid-1760s, undoubtedly has a very big impact on him emotionally.
584
00:43:04,760 --> 00:43:07,160
The death of his closest confidant began the worst
585
00:43:07,160 --> 00:43:10,000
period of Louis's life.
586
00:43:10,000 --> 00:43:12,280
He spent days lost in introspection,
587
00:43:12,280 --> 00:43:17,400
or deep in discussion with philosophers and astronomers.
588
00:43:40,840 --> 00:43:45,320
You can see that he did have a clear tendency
589
00:43:45,320 --> 00:43:47,280
towards some sort of depression.
590
00:43:47,280 --> 00:43:51,400
For the rest of his life, he remains withdrawn, somewhat depressive,
591
00:43:51,400 --> 00:43:54,120
and obsessed with death.
592
00:44:16,280 --> 00:44:20,080
Just as his courtiers were almost giving up hope for Louis,
593
00:44:20,080 --> 00:44:22,120
he recovered his lust for life.
594
00:44:22,120 --> 00:44:26,320
The reason was a new mistress, nearly 40 years younger than him.
595
00:44:26,320 --> 00:44:28,760
I'm rather fond of Madame du Barry.
596
00:44:28,760 --> 00:44:33,080
She was as beautiful as an angel, and as stupid as a basket,
597
00:44:33,080 --> 00:44:36,280
but she made Louis very happy. She was utterly, utterly gorgeous.
598
00:44:36,280 --> 00:44:39,760
I mean, all the King's mistresses were always described as ravishing,
599
00:44:39,760 --> 00:44:42,800
but I think she was the one who truly was.
600
00:44:42,800 --> 00:44:44,800
She was fabulously sexy.
601
00:44:48,480 --> 00:44:54,200
She was, I suppose, the 18th-century version of the tart with a heart.
602
00:44:56,360 --> 00:45:01,240
Madame du Barry had an instant effect on the ageing King.
603
00:45:01,240 --> 00:45:03,600
He could think of nothing else but her.
604
00:45:03,600 --> 00:45:05,520
She was extremely beautiful.
605
00:45:05,520 --> 00:45:08,120
She was supposed to have looked like a kind of debauched angel.
606
00:45:12,800 --> 00:45:15,040
Not too bright, but very good fun.
607
00:45:19,440 --> 00:45:23,280
Madame du Barry sort of gives him a bit of a,
608
00:45:23,280 --> 00:45:25,480
a bit of a perk up, really.
609
00:45:30,680 --> 00:45:34,560
Madame du Barry has an enormous effect upon Louis XV.
610
00:45:34,560 --> 00:45:38,240
He's a man of 60 at this point, and she has been a kept woman.
611
00:45:38,240 --> 00:45:40,560
I wouldn't necessarily say she's been a prostitute,
612
00:45:40,560 --> 00:45:43,640
but she suddenly learnt a thing or two in the long periods
613
00:45:43,640 --> 00:45:47,320
that she spent with a certain number of particular individuals.
614
00:45:50,640 --> 00:45:53,840
And, I think, Louis XV is delighted with the various tricks
615
00:45:53,840 --> 00:45:57,320
that she's learned to keep him young,
616
00:45:57,320 --> 00:46:00,000
and so, it is very good for his mental health, we might say.
617
00:46:00,000 --> 00:46:04,360
Madame du Barry may have perked up the ageing Louis,
618
00:46:04,360 --> 00:46:08,040
but that did not make her, or him, any more popular.
619
00:46:09,920 --> 00:46:12,080
She was absolutely loathed. Everyone hated her.
620
00:46:12,080 --> 00:46:14,720
The Parisians hated her because she wasn't an aristocrat.
621
00:46:14,720 --> 00:46:16,400
The aristocrats hated her
622
00:46:16,400 --> 00:46:18,920
because she was really little better than a streetwalker.
623
00:46:18,920 --> 00:46:22,200
But, the King adored her, and he made her very happy.
624
00:46:27,440 --> 00:46:31,800
Louis XV went far too far, and he was seen, really, as slumming it.
625
00:46:32,840 --> 00:46:37,160
It was beneath the dignity of the king to have these sorts of liaisons.
626
00:46:37,160 --> 00:46:41,320
There is no doubt that Louis XV was somebody who was seen as becoming
627
00:46:41,320 --> 00:46:44,320
increasingly dissolute, even degenerate,
628
00:46:44,320 --> 00:46:45,840
and who was just failing
629
00:46:45,840 --> 00:46:49,360
to live up to the standards expected of a man who was king.
630
00:46:52,840 --> 00:46:56,600
Whatever people said about him, the new relationship
631
00:46:56,600 --> 00:47:00,960
gave Louis the confidence to embark on a grand project,
632
00:47:00,960 --> 00:47:03,800
to give his new heir, the future Louis XVI,
633
00:47:03,800 --> 00:47:07,240
the greatest wedding of the century.
634
00:47:07,240 --> 00:47:10,120
The young Louis was due to marry Marie Antoinette of Austria,
635
00:47:10,120 --> 00:47:12,560
and Louis wanted the ceremony to take place
636
00:47:12,560 --> 00:47:15,480
in a brand-new theatre inside Versailles,
637
00:47:15,480 --> 00:47:19,200
a project abandoned years before by Louis XIV.
638
00:47:38,120 --> 00:47:40,920
Louis XV felt the Crown was under threat from the Parlement,
639
00:47:40,920 --> 00:47:43,480
from different sections of society.
640
00:47:43,480 --> 00:47:46,560
It had suffered the defeats of the Seven Years War,
641
00:47:46,560 --> 00:47:50,160
therefore, he wanted a spectacular royal wedding
642
00:47:50,160 --> 00:47:53,760
to assert the splendour and power of the monarchy.
643
00:48:03,400 --> 00:48:06,600
The politicians grumbled about the crippling cost of the Royal wedding,
644
00:48:06,600 --> 00:48:08,040
but Louis just kept on spending.
645
00:48:25,880 --> 00:48:29,160
Parlement becomes an endless thorn in the side of the Crown.
646
00:48:29,160 --> 00:48:32,720
Sometimes the King is conciliatory towards them,
647
00:48:32,720 --> 00:48:35,440
at other times he's very repressive against them.
648
00:48:35,440 --> 00:48:41,200
But in 1770 he decides to tackle the problem in a different way.
649
00:48:41,200 --> 00:48:44,040
He basically tries to abolish the Parlement.
650
00:48:44,040 --> 00:48:48,720
Louis's decision to remove the one organisation in France
651
00:48:48,720 --> 00:48:51,800
that could challenge him for authority
652
00:48:51,800 --> 00:48:54,520
was a flagrant abuse of royal power.
653
00:49:19,160 --> 00:49:21,600
So, this is coups d'etat in the sense that
654
00:49:21,600 --> 00:49:24,880
one of the things that is absolutely key
655
00:49:24,880 --> 00:49:27,880
for the self-image of the French monarchy is that it is a legitimate,
656
00:49:27,880 --> 00:49:31,800
absolute monarchy that rules according to the laws,
657
00:49:31,800 --> 00:49:33,840
so to abolish the law courts, themselves,
658
00:49:33,840 --> 00:49:37,080
is a very powerful signal,
659
00:49:37,080 --> 00:49:40,160
and a very blatant act of royal despotism.
660
00:49:50,680 --> 00:49:54,360
Louis believed he was acting in the best interests of France,
661
00:49:54,360 --> 00:49:58,240
whose outdated legal system stood in the way of progress.
662
00:50:06,960 --> 00:50:11,200
So, he introduced wholesale reforms, for example, free justice.
663
00:50:11,200 --> 00:50:12,920
Also the judges, themselves,
664
00:50:12,920 --> 00:50:15,880
were now to be appointed by the Crown for life.
665
00:50:15,880 --> 00:50:18,760
And they would no longer buy their position as judge,
666
00:50:18,760 --> 00:50:20,480
as had been the case before.
667
00:50:21,520 --> 00:50:24,040
So, for many, including Voltaire,
668
00:50:24,040 --> 00:50:27,280
this was seen as an enlightened reform.
669
00:50:28,320 --> 00:50:32,520
Unfortunately for Louis XV, by silencing the Parlement,
670
00:50:32,520 --> 00:50:35,480
the King unleashed opposition on a scale
671
00:50:35,480 --> 00:50:38,320
that had not been seen for generations.
672
00:50:46,480 --> 00:50:50,280
It was too late for Louis to play the reformer.
673
00:50:50,280 --> 00:50:55,240
Years of erotic self-indulgence, along with failed wars
674
00:50:55,240 --> 00:51:00,720
and bungled diplomacy, had cemented his subjects' opinion of him,
675
00:51:00,720 --> 00:51:03,520
a bad king and a bad man.
676
00:51:07,400 --> 00:51:10,880
Louis XV, towards the end of his reign, is sunk in vice,
677
00:51:10,880 --> 00:51:13,520
and the people of Paris and the courtiers
678
00:51:13,520 --> 00:51:15,840
are all very well aware that he has, somehow,
679
00:51:15,840 --> 00:51:19,160
taken the path of personal pleasure and not been a very successful king.
680
00:51:19,160 --> 00:51:21,760
His reforms are falling flat,
681
00:51:21,760 --> 00:51:24,880
he's got a mistress who is, frankly,
682
00:51:24,880 --> 00:51:27,000
not of courtly rank,
683
00:51:27,000 --> 00:51:29,880
and he's simply not kingly.
684
00:51:29,880 --> 00:51:35,880
On top of it all, on Easter Sunday, 1774,
685
00:51:35,880 --> 00:51:40,000
The Abbe Beauvais, the most eloquent sermoniser at the court of Louis XV,
686
00:51:40,000 --> 00:51:42,000
makes this devastating sermon.
687
00:51:56,440 --> 00:51:58,840
This is really scandalous.
688
00:51:58,840 --> 00:52:01,520
It is such a direct attack on the morality of the King
689
00:52:01,520 --> 00:52:05,120
that's never been witnessed at court.
690
00:52:26,840 --> 00:52:29,560
Louis XV, himself, must be intensely mortified
691
00:52:29,560 --> 00:52:34,120
by the fact that he is not loved, that he faces opposition at court,
692
00:52:34,120 --> 00:52:37,200
and for the fact that he is so isolated
693
00:52:37,200 --> 00:52:40,320
within his own courtly environment.
694
00:52:40,320 --> 00:52:42,520
If the Abbe intended to wound Louis,
695
00:52:42,520 --> 00:52:45,280
he could not have expected what happened next.
696
00:52:53,360 --> 00:52:56,720
Weeks after this humiliating dressing down
697
00:52:56,720 --> 00:53:00,680
by the Abbe Beauvais at Easter, Louis XV falls ill.
698
00:53:09,440 --> 00:53:13,240
Nobody knows what's wrong with him.
699
00:53:13,240 --> 00:53:16,720
And it takes the doctors, gathered around him,
700
00:53:16,720 --> 00:53:19,800
several days to work out what's going on.
701
00:53:19,800 --> 00:53:23,400
They bleed him, which can only weaken him, to my mind,
702
00:53:23,400 --> 00:53:26,480
and then, suddenly, one of the doctor sees familiar blotches,
703
00:53:26,480 --> 00:53:28,560
and they realise that he has smallpox.
704
00:53:31,680 --> 00:53:35,480
It is a complete bolt out of the blue.
705
00:53:35,480 --> 00:53:39,360
Smallpox, in the 18th-century, is still an absolute killer disease.
706
00:53:42,840 --> 00:53:46,480
He had a particularly unpleasant form of it,
707
00:53:46,480 --> 00:53:48,920
which was the black variety,
708
00:53:48,920 --> 00:53:53,320
that changed the entire colour of the face to a sort of dark copper mask.
709
00:53:57,520 --> 00:54:00,120
And so, he was completely disfigured.
710
00:54:00,120 --> 00:54:01,880
Even as he approached death,
711
00:54:01,880 --> 00:54:05,720
Louis's enemies spread stories about his sex life.
712
00:54:05,720 --> 00:54:11,280
It was suggested that he may have caught his smallpox
713
00:54:11,280 --> 00:54:14,520
from a prostitute, but the whole idea of a corrupt body of a corrupt king
714
00:54:14,520 --> 00:54:19,080
were very resonant, and it is thought that this was a fitting punishment.
715
00:54:19,080 --> 00:54:25,400
The outward and visible sign of an inward, invisible damnation.
716
00:54:27,360 --> 00:54:30,480
It riddles his body and it produces a horrible stench
717
00:54:30,480 --> 00:54:32,800
as his inner organs start decaying.
718
00:54:52,920 --> 00:54:55,560
Underneath it all, he is very devout.
719
00:54:55,560 --> 00:54:57,400
And he goes into ultra-devout mode.
720
00:54:57,400 --> 00:55:00,360
He sends away Madame du Barry from the court
721
00:55:00,360 --> 00:55:01,880
in the same way that he sent away
722
00:55:01,880 --> 00:55:04,480
the Duchesse de Chateauroux in 1744 at Metz.
723
00:55:14,200 --> 00:55:15,720
Once she had left, it was possible
724
00:55:15,720 --> 00:55:21,280
for him to receive the last rites of the church, and, in his final hours,
725
00:55:21,280 --> 00:55:25,360
he made a great effort, I think, to die as a Christian.
726
00:55:25,360 --> 00:55:27,040
Messieurs.
727
00:55:53,880 --> 00:55:58,000
In fact, he did face it, the last few days, with considerable courage.
728
00:55:58,000 --> 00:56:03,440
He goes about dying like a good Christian, like a good king,
729
00:56:03,440 --> 00:56:05,320
dying, in fact, like Louis XIV.
730
00:56:28,320 --> 00:56:32,200
When the announcement came, no-one seemed to care.
731
00:56:40,360 --> 00:56:43,160
When he actually dies, you can hear a stampede,
732
00:56:43,160 --> 00:56:45,160
almost a thunder of running feet,
733
00:56:45,160 --> 00:56:48,640
as everybody abandons the antechamber where he's lying.
734
00:56:51,040 --> 00:56:53,240
The death of every king, you had to have an autopsy,
735
00:56:53,240 --> 00:56:56,040
and the King's physician offers this to the ceremonial offices,
736
00:56:56,040 --> 00:56:57,600
and they don't want to know, at all.
737
00:56:57,600 --> 00:57:02,400
They turned their back and run rather fast, clutching their noses,
738
00:57:02,400 --> 00:57:06,360
as they do so, and the King is sealed into an iron coffin.
739
00:57:09,200 --> 00:57:15,280
Once the news of his death was known, there was great celebration.
740
00:57:15,280 --> 00:57:18,360
There was a general sense of relief that the man who had once been
741
00:57:18,360 --> 00:57:21,640
Louis the Well-Beloved, had gone.
742
00:57:21,640 --> 00:57:25,680
The population had just lost any hope or confidence in their king,
743
00:57:25,680 --> 00:57:27,160
and indeed, I think it's fair to say,
744
00:57:27,160 --> 00:57:28,920
they'd fallen out of love with their king.
745
00:57:33,080 --> 00:57:37,480
It has been argued that the monarchy could never recover
746
00:57:37,480 --> 00:57:41,920
from the harm engendered by Louis XV.
747
00:57:41,920 --> 00:57:46,000
He had dragged it into such disrepute that there was no recovery.
748
00:57:49,520 --> 00:57:52,720
The abiding memory of Louis XV
749
00:57:52,720 --> 00:57:54,760
is a man who is morally corrupt
750
00:57:54,760 --> 00:57:58,280
and is unable to rise above his melancholy into any kind of grandeur.
751
00:57:58,280 --> 00:58:01,720
He is the least grand of the French monarchs, surely.
752
00:58:06,640 --> 00:58:09,920
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd
65196
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