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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,280 --> 00:00:08,360 The world's most magnificent palace 2 00:00:08,360 --> 00:00:11,560 is about to become its most notorious. 3 00:00:13,200 --> 00:00:16,120 Home to decadence on a truly royal scale. 4 00:00:17,360 --> 00:00:20,360 Prostitution and gluttony. 5 00:00:20,360 --> 00:00:24,640 Gambling and torture. 6 00:00:24,640 --> 00:00:29,000 And enough sex to scandalised even the French. 7 00:00:31,280 --> 00:00:35,720 This is the story of a king who took Versailles, 8 00:00:35,720 --> 00:00:38,440 turned it into his palace of pleasure, 9 00:00:38,440 --> 00:00:41,720 and brought the monarchy to the brink of collapse. 10 00:00:59,280 --> 00:01:02,440 The waking ceremony of the Duke of Anjou, 11 00:01:02,440 --> 00:01:07,720 by grace of God, King Louis XV, Monarch of France and Navarre, 12 00:01:07,720 --> 00:01:09,760 and just an 11-year-old boy. 13 00:01:29,040 --> 00:01:30,800 Louis will reign for 58 years, 14 00:01:30,800 --> 00:01:35,800 but his whole life will be lived in the shadow of another man's glory, 15 00:01:35,800 --> 00:01:38,800 his predecessor, Louis XIV. 16 00:01:44,400 --> 00:01:46,400 Louis XIV was an incredibly tough act to follow. 17 00:01:49,240 --> 00:01:50,600 He is seen as The Great. 18 00:01:50,600 --> 00:01:51,960 He is the Conqueror of Europe. 19 00:01:51,960 --> 00:01:53,000 He adds to France. 20 00:01:53,000 --> 00:01:54,200 He is the greatest monarch 21 00:01:54,200 --> 00:01:55,240 of the 17th century. 22 00:01:57,880 --> 00:02:00,280 He was the first act on the stage of Versailles. 23 00:02:01,400 --> 00:02:02,560 He was the sun, 24 00:02:02,560 --> 00:02:04,560 he was Apollo the sun god. 25 00:02:04,560 --> 00:02:07,120 Everything orbited around him. 26 00:02:09,560 --> 00:02:11,600 The etiquette of the court, the day of the court, 27 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:17,040 the extraordinary life lived entirely in the public gaze. 28 00:02:19,760 --> 00:02:22,680 In his patronage of the arts, in his building projects, 29 00:02:22,680 --> 00:02:24,560 in his personal conduct, 30 00:02:24,560 --> 00:02:26,200 in the way he dressed, 31 00:02:26,200 --> 00:02:28,120 the way he ate, the way he looked, 32 00:02:28,120 --> 00:02:29,720 the way he walked... 33 00:02:31,520 --> 00:02:35,320 From the fountains in his gardens to the silver by his bed, 34 00:02:35,320 --> 00:02:37,560 he had established a form of etiquette 35 00:02:37,560 --> 00:02:40,280 with the sole view of making the whole country of France 36 00:02:40,280 --> 00:02:41,880 entirely focused upon his person 37 00:02:41,880 --> 00:02:44,280 and his power. 38 00:03:00,480 --> 00:03:04,360 Louis XV never expected to be king, but both his father 39 00:03:04,360 --> 00:03:07,680 and grandfather died before they could reach the throne. 40 00:03:09,240 --> 00:03:12,920 Louis XV loses his parents and his grandparents 41 00:03:12,920 --> 00:03:15,400 when he's two years old. 42 00:03:17,200 --> 00:03:19,320 He's an orphan brought up by people 43 00:03:19,320 --> 00:03:21,000 that he doesn't know very well, 44 00:03:21,000 --> 00:03:23,160 some of whom are probably fairly 45 00:03:23,160 --> 00:03:24,960 terrifying as courtiers. 46 00:03:24,960 --> 00:03:27,520 He is a sickly child very early on. 47 00:03:32,080 --> 00:03:34,120 Wherever he went, 48 00:03:34,120 --> 00:03:37,280 Louis was surrounded by the legacy of his great-grandfather, 49 00:03:37,280 --> 00:03:40,600 the man who first built the extraordinary palace 50 00:03:40,600 --> 00:03:41,840 that was his home. 51 00:03:44,880 --> 00:03:49,040 Certainly, one would imagine Louis XV has been traumatised 52 00:03:49,040 --> 00:03:51,320 by the death of all his near family, 53 00:03:51,320 --> 00:03:53,280 and is a lonely and probably 54 00:03:53,280 --> 00:03:55,760 slightly disturbed child in his youth, 55 00:03:55,760 --> 00:03:59,000 and I think this carries through the rest of his life. 56 00:04:03,680 --> 00:04:07,320 Louis had been called the King of France since he was five, 57 00:04:07,320 --> 00:04:09,920 but others ran the country in his name. 58 00:04:10,920 --> 00:04:14,760 On his 12th birthday, it was time for him to take his crown, 59 00:04:14,760 --> 00:04:17,280 and his place on the world stage. 60 00:04:18,960 --> 00:04:23,040 The coronation of Louis XV was a moment of great hope 61 00:04:23,040 --> 00:04:25,960 and expectation for the French people. 62 00:04:25,960 --> 00:04:28,080 They'd had long years of war, 63 00:04:28,080 --> 00:04:30,200 and now the country was at peace, 64 00:04:30,200 --> 00:04:31,640 and it had a young king, 65 00:04:31,640 --> 00:04:35,440 in whom it was possible to invest every conceivable hope. 66 00:04:35,440 --> 00:04:38,720 So, they could project their ambitions 67 00:04:38,720 --> 00:04:44,000 and expectations for the new reign on this young, as yet, untested king. 68 00:04:46,080 --> 00:04:48,880 But, there was a shadow over Louis's inheritance, 69 00:04:48,880 --> 00:04:53,960 cast not by an eclipse, but by a mountain of debt. 70 00:04:53,960 --> 00:04:57,080 Despite all his success in war and diplomacy, 71 00:04:57,080 --> 00:05:00,160 Louis XIV never managed to balance the books, 72 00:05:00,160 --> 00:05:03,720 or even pay for the building of his enormous palace. 73 00:05:17,960 --> 00:05:22,280 Louis XIV, when he died, left France in absolutely dire straits. 74 00:05:22,280 --> 00:05:25,160 After a long war he, of course, left France, 75 00:05:25,160 --> 00:05:27,400 something like, 20 years revenue in debt, 76 00:05:27,400 --> 00:05:29,560 2 billion livres in debt, at least. 77 00:05:29,560 --> 00:05:32,840 And this was going to be an absolutely massive problem. 78 00:05:32,840 --> 00:05:38,320 2 billion livres. That's £160 billion in today's money. 79 00:05:38,320 --> 00:05:40,960 But, before he could start work on that problem, 80 00:05:40,960 --> 00:05:43,240 there was one other thing that demanded 81 00:05:43,240 --> 00:05:45,240 the new King's immediate attention, 82 00:05:45,240 --> 00:05:47,080 marriage. 83 00:05:47,080 --> 00:05:51,240 Louis XV was more than ready to get married. 84 00:05:51,240 --> 00:05:53,000 When he was 15, his original fiance, 85 00:05:53,000 --> 00:05:57,200 who was the little Infanta of Spain, was still only five years old. 86 00:05:57,200 --> 00:06:00,600 And, since 15-year-old boys loathe sweet, little girls, 87 00:06:00,600 --> 00:06:03,680 he was rather embarrassed to have her around the place. 88 00:06:04,800 --> 00:06:07,760 Also, the ministers were terribly keen to get him breeding, 89 00:06:07,760 --> 00:06:10,800 so the little Infanta and her dolls were packed off back to Madrid, 90 00:06:10,800 --> 00:06:14,960 and a new wife had to be found. 91 00:06:14,960 --> 00:06:16,800 They cast about for princesses, 92 00:06:16,800 --> 00:06:19,400 and they eventually settled on Marie Leszczynska, 93 00:06:19,400 --> 00:06:21,720 who wasn't the most obvious choice, 94 00:06:21,720 --> 00:06:24,800 since her father was the deposed king of Poland, 95 00:06:24,800 --> 00:06:26,520 and she really had no money. 96 00:06:26,520 --> 00:06:28,000 She was 22, quite pretty, 97 00:06:28,000 --> 00:06:31,640 although, as the female courtiers disparagingly remarked, 98 00:06:31,640 --> 00:06:35,400 "Her complexion had never known any other cosmetic than snow." 99 00:06:35,400 --> 00:06:38,880 Nonetheless, 15-year-old boys aren't really very choosy, 100 00:06:38,880 --> 00:06:41,720 and Louis fell madly in love with her at once. 101 00:06:56,640 --> 00:06:59,520 Royal sex lives were public property, 102 00:06:59,520 --> 00:07:02,280 and Louis's was much discussed in the corridors of Versailles, 103 00:07:02,280 --> 00:07:03,520 if not always believed. 104 00:07:27,480 --> 00:07:31,920 Louis was now a husband, but he had yet to truly become a ruler. 105 00:07:33,360 --> 00:07:36,880 So, he set out to copy his great-grandfather. 106 00:07:39,840 --> 00:07:44,080 Louis XIV had begun his reign by becoming his own Prime Minister. 107 00:07:44,080 --> 00:07:47,640 So, now, number 15 decided to do exactly the same. 108 00:07:52,880 --> 00:07:58,360 It would have been very simple for Louis XV to choose a prime minister, 109 00:07:58,360 --> 00:08:00,840 which would have been a much better solution for him, 110 00:08:00,840 --> 00:08:03,880 because he could have then had someone 111 00:08:03,880 --> 00:08:06,560 picked and appointed for the job. 112 00:08:31,760 --> 00:08:33,400 He's got this sense of, 113 00:08:33,400 --> 00:08:36,760 he has to follow in the footsteps of his great grandfather, 114 00:08:36,760 --> 00:08:42,520 Louis XIV, and to be a real king, he has to be a new Louis XIV. 115 00:08:46,320 --> 00:08:49,160 Louis was living just like his great-grandfather, 116 00:08:49,160 --> 00:08:51,480 ruling as an absolute monarch, 117 00:08:51,480 --> 00:08:55,680 enjoying the hunting in the forests around Versailles, 118 00:08:55,680 --> 00:08:59,120 and soon fulfilling the first and most important 119 00:08:59,120 --> 00:09:01,920 of all his Royal roles, 120 00:09:00,760 --> 00:09:01,920 fathering an heir. 121 00:09:21,600 --> 00:09:24,840 The relationship between Louis XV and his wife, 122 00:09:24,840 --> 00:09:28,080 Marie Leszczynska, started very well, really. 123 00:09:28,080 --> 00:09:30,800 They managed to put together a relationship, 124 00:09:30,800 --> 00:09:34,720 which, over a period of ten years, certainly, was quite a happy one. 125 00:09:36,440 --> 00:09:40,760 They had a string of children and they seemed to have found a certain, 126 00:09:40,760 --> 00:09:43,520 you know, sort of, emotional support in each other's company. 127 00:09:48,320 --> 00:09:51,640 More children followed, at regular intervals, 128 00:09:51,640 --> 00:09:54,280 over the next ten happy years. 129 00:09:54,280 --> 00:09:56,360 Eight girls and two boys. 130 00:10:05,000 --> 00:10:07,880 Louis may have enjoyed being a father, but the Queen, 131 00:10:07,880 --> 00:10:09,960 after a decade of non-stop pregnancies, 132 00:10:09,960 --> 00:10:12,000 was fed up with it all. 133 00:10:14,240 --> 00:10:17,480 The Queen began to complain that she was either pregnant, in bed, 134 00:10:17,480 --> 00:10:20,760 or being brought to bed. 135 00:10:20,760 --> 00:10:24,080 Eventually, they had ten children by the time Louis, himself, was 27. 136 00:10:24,080 --> 00:10:26,600 The Queen had really had enough. 137 00:10:26,600 --> 00:10:27,840 So, she began to tell the king 138 00:10:27,840 --> 00:10:30,880 that he wasn't allowed to come into her bedroom on certain saints days, 139 00:10:30,880 --> 00:10:32,440 because she was a very pious woman. 140 00:10:34,360 --> 00:10:37,320 Gradually the saints days got more frequent, 141 00:10:37,320 --> 00:10:41,600 and the saints, themselves, became increasingly obscure until, 142 00:10:41,600 --> 00:10:44,320 finally, Louis lost his temper and asked Lebel, 143 00:10:44,320 --> 00:10:47,800 who was the concierge of Versailles, to bring him a woman, any woman. 144 00:10:47,800 --> 00:10:49,880 Louis only had to ask, 145 00:10:49,880 --> 00:10:55,040 and just about anything and anyone could be provided, and was. 146 00:10:55,040 --> 00:10:58,640 The King gradually got into the habit of first having dalliances 147 00:10:58,640 --> 00:11:02,320 with the court ladies and then full-blown affairs. 148 00:11:04,160 --> 00:11:06,760 Louis began a life of carnal adventures 149 00:11:06,760 --> 00:11:11,000 that would turn him into one of history's greatest libertines. 150 00:11:12,280 --> 00:11:16,280 He was a great womaniser, but there was nothing unusual about that. 151 00:11:16,280 --> 00:11:18,720 French kings were expected to be womanisers. 152 00:11:18,720 --> 00:11:21,760 This was seen as a sign that they were virile, 153 00:11:21,760 --> 00:11:23,920 and we're going to produce an heir, and were, in fact, 154 00:11:23,920 --> 00:11:27,400 acting in an aristocratic and masculine way. 155 00:11:27,400 --> 00:11:29,720 Indeed, within the aristocratic society 156 00:11:29,720 --> 00:11:31,400 that the King had been raised, 157 00:11:31,400 --> 00:11:34,480 the idea of marriage or fidelity was seen as laughable. 158 00:11:35,760 --> 00:11:38,480 Louis's first illicit amour was Louise Julie de Nesle, 159 00:11:38,480 --> 00:11:41,640 a beautiful young aristocrat 160 00:11:41,640 --> 00:11:44,800 and the eldest of five equally attractive sisters. 161 00:11:52,520 --> 00:11:55,160 What was interesting was that he proceeded 162 00:11:55,160 --> 00:11:59,280 to take all the other sisters in her family as his mistresses, too. 163 00:11:59,280 --> 00:12:01,040 And, although it's slightly doubtful 164 00:12:01,040 --> 00:12:02,760 that he had an affair with the fourth, 165 00:12:02,760 --> 00:12:03,920 it's probable that he did. 166 00:12:16,960 --> 00:12:22,200 It was rumoured that one of the sisters, the Duchesse de Chateauroux, 167 00:12:22,200 --> 00:12:24,760 would ask her other sister to come along 168 00:12:24,760 --> 00:12:27,920 and give matters a helping hand, occasionally. 169 00:12:37,600 --> 00:12:39,760 In some senses, it was a scandal, 170 00:12:39,760 --> 00:12:44,280 but I think people thought it was funny, rather than disgraceful. 171 00:12:47,080 --> 00:12:51,120 Both Louis XIV and Louis XV had huge sexual appetites 172 00:12:51,120 --> 00:12:56,200 and perhaps four women were really what the Bourbon blood needed. 173 00:12:56,200 --> 00:12:59,040 Louis's affairs with his favourite sisters, 174 00:12:59,040 --> 00:13:02,520 and his simultaneous flings with many other women, 175 00:13:02,520 --> 00:13:05,720 produced the inevitable consequences. 176 00:13:05,720 --> 00:13:08,000 In the course of his reign, 177 00:13:08,000 --> 00:13:11,600 the King would father a whole brood of illegitimate children. 178 00:13:11,600 --> 00:13:13,880 We're not actually sure how many, 179 00:13:13,880 --> 00:13:18,080 but certainly in the region of 30, I think, would be a decent guess. 180 00:13:22,360 --> 00:13:26,360 But as the rooms of Versailles filled up with Louis's offspring, 181 00:13:26,360 --> 00:13:29,960 the King's mind moved to affairs of state. 182 00:13:29,960 --> 00:13:34,200 He decided to copy his illustrious predecessor in another way, 183 00:13:34,200 --> 00:13:35,920 by taking France to war. 184 00:13:41,880 --> 00:13:47,560 The decision of Louis XV to go to war in 1744 was hugely popular. 185 00:13:47,560 --> 00:13:49,520 This was what the King of France should do. 186 00:13:49,520 --> 00:13:51,880 He should be seen at the head of his armies, 187 00:13:51,880 --> 00:13:54,080 fighting and leading his troops. 188 00:13:55,800 --> 00:13:59,200 Louis's declaration of war against France's traditional enemies, 189 00:13:59,200 --> 00:14:01,920 of Britain, and Austria, made him a hero on the streets. 190 00:14:03,600 --> 00:14:08,440 And so did his decision to lead his armies in person, accompanied, 191 00:14:08,440 --> 00:14:10,200 of course, by two of the de Nesle sisters. 192 00:14:12,960 --> 00:14:16,960 But war was to bring Louis his first brush with death. 193 00:14:18,280 --> 00:14:19,320 While he was at Metz, 194 00:14:19,320 --> 00:14:23,200 he fell terribly ill, and it was considered that he was going to die. 195 00:14:28,480 --> 00:14:30,760 Certainly the doctors had given up hope, 196 00:14:30,760 --> 00:14:35,480 and back in France, the population were shocked, genuinely, 197 00:14:35,480 --> 00:14:39,320 absolutely frozen with fear that they would lose their king. 198 00:14:53,320 --> 00:14:55,960 In order, as a Catholic, to receive the last sacraments, 199 00:14:55,960 --> 00:14:57,520 he had to confess. 200 00:14:57,520 --> 00:15:00,360 And, in order to confess, he had to send away his mistress 201 00:15:00,360 --> 00:15:01,480 and renounce her. 202 00:15:03,360 --> 00:15:06,120 Louis didn't think much of his marriage vows, 203 00:15:06,120 --> 00:15:11,040 but like most people of his age, he did believe in heaven and hell. 204 00:15:11,040 --> 00:15:13,680 And he knew which one he wanted to avoid. 205 00:15:22,560 --> 00:15:23,600 The King, 206 00:15:23,600 --> 00:15:25,440 like the least of his subjects, 207 00:15:25,440 --> 00:15:26,840 was afraid of dying 208 00:15:26,840 --> 00:15:28,480 without absolution, 209 00:15:28,480 --> 00:15:30,800 and was afraid for the state of his immortal soul. 210 00:15:35,960 --> 00:15:39,360 He knew that one day he would have to face God, 211 00:15:39,360 --> 00:15:41,720 and give an account of himself, 212 00:15:41,720 --> 00:15:44,680 and then he would just be a man before God, 213 00:15:44,680 --> 00:15:46,120 like any other man. 214 00:16:10,520 --> 00:16:14,560 The mistresses were sent away, but they refused to go completely. 215 00:16:14,560 --> 00:16:16,200 They hung around in the town of Metz, 216 00:16:16,200 --> 00:16:18,400 until the bishops were obliged to send a message 217 00:16:18,400 --> 00:16:21,760 saying that, "Our Lord wasn't really going to wait upon their pleasure, 218 00:16:21,760 --> 00:16:23,240 "and would they please get out." 219 00:16:25,960 --> 00:16:29,360 So, the de Nesle sisters were dispatched, 220 00:16:29,360 --> 00:16:31,920 the King promised that if he were saved, 221 00:16:31,920 --> 00:16:34,360 he would dedicate the rest of his life 222 00:16:34,360 --> 00:16:37,600 to the well-being of religion and his subjects. 223 00:16:48,960 --> 00:16:53,440 The King received the last rites, but then, miraculously recovered. 224 00:16:53,440 --> 00:16:56,600 And, it's from this period that his name 225 00:16:56,600 --> 00:16:58,480 "Bien-Aime", the Well-Beloved, dates, 226 00:16:58,480 --> 00:17:01,040 because the people were so pleased that their young king 227 00:17:01,040 --> 00:17:02,560 had recovered from his illness. 228 00:17:18,400 --> 00:17:21,800 But Louis's new-found piety didn't last long. 229 00:17:24,480 --> 00:17:27,360 As soon as he possibly could, he went back to his old ways. 230 00:17:27,360 --> 00:17:28,640 And, within a few months, 231 00:17:28,640 --> 00:17:30,840 Madame de Chateauroux was back in his bed. 232 00:17:32,960 --> 00:17:37,600 Louis, the beloved, became even more popular in 1745. 233 00:17:37,600 --> 00:17:41,120 He was present on the battlefield as the French army crushed 234 00:17:41,120 --> 00:17:44,600 the Austrians and the British at the Battle of Fontenoy. 235 00:17:44,600 --> 00:17:47,640 France was the dominant power in Europe, once again, 236 00:17:47,640 --> 00:17:50,920 just as she had been in the time of Louis XIV. 237 00:17:50,920 --> 00:17:55,720 It was the perfect moment for Louis to meet the love of his life. 238 00:17:55,720 --> 00:17:58,680 He's out hunting in the forests outside Versailles, 239 00:17:58,680 --> 00:18:03,080 and he comes across, in her carriage, this very beautiful, 240 00:18:03,080 --> 00:18:05,200 very striking young woman. 241 00:18:05,200 --> 00:18:07,320 Everyone knows he's taken by her. 242 00:18:09,360 --> 00:18:14,240 People referred to her as Louis XV's latest piece of game. 243 00:18:16,200 --> 00:18:18,400 She was called Jeanne Antoinette Poisson, 244 00:18:18,400 --> 00:18:20,120 the future Marquise de Pompadour, 245 00:18:20,120 --> 00:18:23,960 and she was much more than a piece of game. 246 00:18:23,960 --> 00:18:29,440 In fact, Madame de Pompadour is a rather well-connected woman, 247 00:18:29,440 --> 00:18:32,760 with one of the key factions at the heart of power, 248 00:18:32,760 --> 00:18:36,040 who formed part of a big financial clique. 249 00:18:36,040 --> 00:18:40,240 What everyone says, she's strikingly beautiful. 250 00:18:40,240 --> 00:18:43,960 And her beauty is really the key to her initial success. 251 00:18:45,480 --> 00:18:49,800 She uses her beauty. She uses her very considerable political acumen 252 00:18:49,800 --> 00:18:54,320 to establish herself at the heart of the King's power. 253 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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