The Children of Adam and Eve

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Wikigenealogy

Louis XV King of France, 17101774 (aged 64 years)

Name
Louis XV // King of France
Given names
Louis XV
Name suffix
King of France
Family with parents
father
himself
Family with Maria Leszcyrka
himself
wife
Marriage Marriage1725
son
Birth
Death of a paternal grandfather
Marriage
1725 (aged 15 years)
Death of a wife
Death of a father
Death
1774 (aged 64 years)
Unique identifier
37600D3B07874342B0707BA7EB2BE5033285
Last change
6 December 201119:48:24
Author of last change: Danny
Note

Louis XV (1710-74), king of France (1715-74), whose failure to provide strong leadership and badly needed reforms contributed to the crisis that Brought on the French Revolution.

Louis was born at Versailles on February 15, 1710, the great-grandson of Louis XIV, whom he succeeded at the age of five. Philippe II, duc d'Orleans, governed as regent until Louis reached his legal majority in 1723. In 1725 the king marriedMaria Leszczy (1703-68), daughter of Stanislas I of Poland. The following year he appointed his former tutor, Andre Hercule de Fleury (1653-1743), as prime minister. Fleury gave France a stable administration until his Death 17 years later.Thereafter Louis himself was in nominal control, but he took only a sporadic interest in government and never followed any consistent policy at home or aBroad. He was frequently influenced by his mistresses, the most powerful of whom was themarquise de Pompadour.

France was involved in three wars during Louis's reign. As a result of the first, the War of the Polish Succession (1733-35), France gained the province of Lorraine. The second, the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-48), which marked thebeginning of a colonial struggle with Great Britain, was indecisive. In the last, the Seven Years' War (1756-63), France, crippled by corruption and mismanagement, lost most of its overseas possessions to the British. French foreign policy inthis period was made chaotic by Louis's secret diplomacy, as his agents in other countries sometimes pursued aims that were in conflict with those of his own ministers. The situation improved somewhat in the 1760s, when a new minister, the ducde Choiseul, restored some order to the government and tried to repair the damage done by the Seven Years' War. In the last years of his reign, Louis Cooperated with his chancellor, Rene Maupeou (1714-92), in an effort to reform the country'sinequitable and inefficient system of taxation. In 1771 the parlements, or sovereign courts, which had opposed reform, were reorganized and stripped of their power to obstruct royal decrees. Measures were then implemented to tax the previouslyexempt nobility and clergy, but these were reversed after the king's Death at Versailles on May 10, 1774. Louis XV's reported prophecy, After me, the deluge, was fulfilled in the overthrow of the French monarchy less than two decades later.