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Versailles Century - dedicated to the arts, events, ideas, and people of the period 1682-1789
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On This Day

On This Day in the Versailles Century (12-16 February)

The following events occurred in different years of the Versailles Century (1682-1789) between 12 February and 16 February.  I compile these events mainly from the English and French wikipedias.  Whenever possible, I link to further reading or suggest a print work.

Death of Le Brun on 12 February, 1690

It was on this day 328 years ago that Charles Le Brun, Premier Peintre du Roi (First Painter to the King), died. Le Brun was born into a family of artists and showed early signs of great promise. He came to Louis XIV’s notice in the early 1660s, perhaps because of his work at Vaux-le-Vicomte. He was soon commissioned to work at the royal chateau of St. Germain and at the Louvre. His masterpieces, however, are the ceilings of the Hall of Mirrors, the Salon de Paix, and the Salon de Guerre at Versailles. He died rich and ennobled.

Further reading: An organization called ‘Friends of Charles Le Brun’ maintains a website dedicated to the artist.

http://www.charleslebrun.com/index.htm

Image: A portrait of Le Brun by Largillière, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Proclamation of William and Mary on 13 February, 1689

It was on this day 329 years ago that William of Orange and his cousin-wife Mary Stuart were proclaimed joint sovereigns of England as William III and Mary II. Though Mary’s father, James II, whom she and her husband had deposed, was quite unpopular, he was nonetheless regarded by many as the rightful ruler. The Jacobite (i.e. pro-James) movement would make trouble for William and Mary, and their successors, until the middle of the next century.

Further reading: A good one-volume survey of William and Mary’s reign is the one by John Miller, which was part of a series on British monarchs edited by Antonia Fraser.

Image: Posthumous engraving of William and Mary by R White, engraver, died 1703.  Private Collection of S. Whitehead, Public Domain, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Birth of the Future Louis XV on 15 February, 1710

It was on this day 308 years ago that Louis de France, promptly titled Duc d’Anjou, was born at Versailles. At the time, his elder brother, father, and grandfather were still alive and it seemed unlikely that he would ever be called to the throne. Fate had other plans, however. Within 3 years of his birth all of the above-mentioned people would be dead of smallpox, thus leaving little Anjou the sole successor in the direct line of his great-grandfather Louis XIV, whom he duly succeeded in September, 1715, when he was only 5 years old.

Further reading: There are numerous biographies of Louis XV, but my favourite account of him has always been in Nancy Mitford’s Madame de Pompadour, which is almost a dual biography.

Image: Portrait of Louis XV at his accession, aged five, by Hyacinthe Rigaud (detail). © RMN-Grand Palais (Château de Versailles)/Gérard Blot.

Birth of the Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna on 16 February, 1786

It was on this day 232 years ago that the Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna was born to the Tsarevich Paul and his wife Maria Feodorovna. The baby was their third daughter and fifth child. At this time, her grandmother, Catherine II the Great, was still on the throne of Russia, and would remain so for another decade. The little girl grew up to marry the Grand Duke of Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach and became a patroness of the arts, employing Liszt for a time. She was one of the longest-lived of the Emperor Paul’s children, dying in 1859.

Further reading: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Duchess_Maria_Pavlovna_of_Russia_(1786–1859)

Image: Maria Pavlovna in youth, painted by Vladimir Borovikovsky, courtesy of WikiCommons.

Are you enjoying the ‘On This Day in the Versailles Century’ feature?  If so, please bookmark the blog, and follow the Versailles Century page on Facebook for updates several times weekly.

February 16, 2018by David Gemeinhardt
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On This Day

On This Day in the Versailles Century (5-9 February)

The following events took place from  5-9 February in different years in the Versailles Century (1682-1789).

5 February, 1782

It was on this day 245 years ago that the British forces under General Murray agreed to surrender to the Spanish forces under the Duc de Crillon, who was in fact a Frenchman. They duly abandoned Fort St. Philip the next day and Minorca effectively returned to Spanish rule. They had lost Minorca to the British in the Seven Years’ War (1757-1763), and the desire to regain it was a major factor in Carlos III’s decision to join France in supporting the nascent United States in its war of independence against Britain.

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February 10, 2018by David Gemeinhardt
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Events, On This Day

On This Day: War of the Quadruple Alliance Declared

It was 299 years ago today, on 8 January, 1719, that France formally declared war on Spain, having 5 days earlier concluded a treaty of alliance with Britain, Austria, and the United Provinces (as the Netherlands was then known). The was took its English name from this alliance, being known as the War of the Quadruple Alliance.

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January 9, 2018by David Gemeinhardt
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On This Day

On This Day: Marie-Antoinette’s Execution

It was 224 years ago today (16 October) that Marie-Antoinette was led to the scaffold and decapitated. The death sentence had been passed the day before at the conclusion of her show trial. Although this event technically falls outside the Versailles Century (1682-1789), I feel moved to include it today by Axel von Fersen‘s broken-hearted letter on the subject to his friend Lady Elizabeth Foster.

Axel von Fersen in later life. Credit: Wikipedia.

Axel von Fersen, of course, was famously the (probably) platonic lover of Marie-Antoinette.  He played one of the principal roles in planning and carrying out the royal family’s attempted escape from Paris that ended in failure at Varennes.

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October 16, 2017by David Gemeinhardt
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On This Day

On This Day: Potemkin’s Birth

It was on this day (11 October) in 1739 that Grigory Potemkin, future lover and perhaps secret husband of Catherine the Great, was born.  His name has lived on in popular parlance mainly thanks to the “Potemkin village,” which has obscured his true achievements.

Grigory Potemkin painted late in life by Johann Baptist von Lampi the Elder. Credit: Wikipedia.

Born in the provinces into a petty noble family, Potemkin first attracted Catherine’s notice during the coup in 1762 that brought her to the throne.  Appearing on horseback and in uniform before a guards regiment, the story goes, Catherine found herself unable to take the salute properly because she was without a sword.  The young Potemkin saw her difficulty and spurred forward to offer her his own sword.  He evidently made an impression because she singled him out for promotion and reward throughout the next decade while she was still with Grigory Orlov, and then briefly with a handsome dullard named Vassilchikov.

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October 11, 2017by David Gemeinhardt
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On This Day, Statesmen

On This Day: Abbé de Bernis Appointed Cardinal

The Abbé de Bernis is one of those fascinating, worldly prelates, more at home in the drawing room than the confessional, who inhabited the haut monde of pre-Revolution Paris and Versailles.  It was on 2 October in 1758 that the red biretta was bestowed on him.

The Cardinal de Bernis (1715-1794). Credit: Wikipedia.

The future Cardinal de Bernis was born in 1715 and took minor orders after finishing his studies at a seminary in Paris.  Before embarking on his political and diplomatic career he was known as a writer, indeed he was elected to the Académie Française at age 29. He was a friend and protégé of Mme de Pompadour, and through her influence was appointed ambassador to Venice (1752-1755).  He remarked on his appointment to this post, which was not one of the more important or prestigious ones, that the worst thing that could happen to him there would be to be forgotten.

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October 2, 2017by David Gemeinhardt
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On This Day

On This Day: First Atlas of Russia Published

It was on 13 September, 1745, that the first-ever atlas of Russia was published by the Russian Academy of Sciences.  It contained 19 regional maps as well as an overall map of the empire within its borders of that time.  This map is reproduced below thanks to Russia Beyond, which published an article on it today.

Atlas of Russia (1745).

According to the article, the atlas was also translated into French, German, and Latin, which would have given it wide currency in Europe.

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September 13, 2017by David Gemeinhardt
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On This Day

On This Day: The Wedding of Louis XV and Marie Leczinska

It was on this day in 1725 that the wedding of Louis XV and Marie Leczinska took place at the Château de Fontainebleau.

It was a union that no one would ever have predicted.  Louis was the 15-year-old king of the largest and richest kingdom in Europe, while Marie was the 22-year-old daughter of a deposed and exiled King of Poland.  An old maid by the standards of the day, she was also not considered a beauty.

Marie Leczinska in 1730 by Alexis Simon Belle. Credit: Wikipedia.

How did this penniless princess land the most eligible crowned head in Europe (never mind that he was a teenager)?

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September 5, 2017by David Gemeinhardt
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Events, Historical Events, On This Day, Rulers

On This Day: The Birth of Louis XVI

It was on this day in 1754 that the future Louis XVI was born.

His parents were Louis, Dauphin of France (1729-1765), and Marie-Josèphe, Dauphine of France, née princess of Saxony-Poland (1731-1767).  The infant prince was immediately named Duc de Berri by his grandfather, Louis XV, and was soon christened Louis-Auguste to distinguish him from his elder brother, Louis-Joseph.

Louis, Dauphin de France (1729-1765). I photographed this bust of him in his sister Victoire’s drawing room at Versailles in March, 2016.

Louis-Auguste was in fact the third child in the family.

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August 22, 2017by David Gemeinhardt
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Events, Museums, On This Day, Rulers

On This Day: Louis-Philippe Takes Power

It was on this day in 1830 that Louis-Philippe, Duc d’Orléans, took power in the wake of the so-called July Revolution that toppled his cousin, Charles X, who had abdicated in favour of his grandson.  Charles had intended for Louis-Philippe to rule as regent for the little boy, but the latter had other ideas and raised no objection when the National Assembly offered to make him king in his own right.  Departing from tradition, he proclaimed himself Louis-Philippe, King of the French, rather than Louis XIX (or XX, depending on your point of view), King of France.

Louis-Philippe as photographed in 1842. Credit: By Lerebours et Claudet – page, image, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8462011

Here at Versailles Century we take a dim view of this wily monarch, mainly because of his ham-handed interventions at Versailles.  Three years into his reign, Louis-Philippe decided to undertake a partial restoration of the Château de Versailles and also to create a museum of French history in it.  We’ve previously touched on one of his modifications, namely the eponymous staircase in the King’s private apartments.

The Louis-Philippe Staircase in March, 2017.

I actually like this staircase, which brings some much-needed light into this part of the Château.

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August 9, 2017by David Gemeinhardt
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“France, indeed, had at that time an empire over mankind such as even the Roman Republic never attained: for, when Rome was politically dominant, she was in arts and letters the humble servant of Greece. France had over the surrounding countries at once the ascendancy which Rome had over Greece and the ascendancy which Greece had over Rome.” -- Lord Macaulay


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