cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
In the previous post Charles II found AITA:

Look, I, m, believe in live and let live. (And in not going on my travels again. Had enough of that to last a life time.) Why can't everyone else around me be more chill? Instead, my wife refuses to employ my girlfriend, my girlfriend won't budge and accept another office, my brother is set on a course to piss off everyone (he WILL go on his travels again), and my oldest kid shows signs of wanting my job which is just not on, sorry to say. And don't get me started about Mom (thank God she's living abroad). What am I doing wrong? AITA?

Re: Louis XIV gossip

Date: 2022-03-20 03:16 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
I can reccommend Antonia Fraser's "Love and Louis XIV".

Nice, thanks. I'll add it to my ever-growing list. Though it may make you laugh to know that in the Louis bio I'm reading, I've been impatiently reading the personal life parts and/or skipping ahead to the military/geopolitical chapters. I really just want to know more about the Nine Years' War! :P (There's a whole book on the sack of Heidelberg that I've read the sample for and that I'm eyeing.)

Reminds me of "only Voltaire ever accused Fritz of gayness!" from writers as late as Charlotte Panglatz,

Yep, me too! I first encountered this in MacDonogh, who is a faithful student of the Pangels school.

ETA: I might add that MacDonogh's bio was published in 1999, thus some 20 years *later* than Pangels.

Yet again we see the result of biographers copying each other instead of doing primary sources research

I mean, ALL Schultz ever does is copy other biographers, but in this case, at least he's in the position to copy biographers writing in 2005, unlike 197-something McKay.

proving again that envoy reports are where it's at!

Indeed! Envoy reports are a gold mine.

Maybe she was his source!

Could be, or the reverse, since he would have been able to go to all-male outings she did not


Ah, yes, you're right. Just because I encountered her as a source first doesn't mean she has primacy in any other sense!

The king replied, “One makes his fortune in my brother’s service by certain means which would make one lose favour if employed in mine”.

=> Maybe Louis' job refusal wasn't just because of lingering bad feeling re: Eugene's mother


OOH. Very interesting! See, this is why [personal profile] cahn and I were saying a few days ago in my DW that I need to study German harder so I can pass on more gossip!

Hannover cousins, thinking of the spectacular fountains at Herrenhausen: We don't.
Wilhelmine, thinking about the functioning fountain at the Eremitage: *stays tactfully silent*


Hee, yep, I was thinking of them! It all depends on where you build your palace vis-a-vis a major source of water. Too high or too far away and the technology doesn't exist until the 19th century. Close enough, and it does.
Edited Date: 2022-03-20 04:14 pm (UTC)

Re: Louis XIV gossip

Date: 2022-03-20 05:55 pm (UTC)
selenak: (Voltaire)
From: [personal profile] selenak
LOL, well, the late Dame Antonia (who was made a Damem for her literary efforts) doesn't do detailed war analysis, but she brings on the gossip, and she's good with getting across all the personalities of the gigantic ensemble that is Versailles. Also, since she wrote the most popular biography of Charles II., she really knows the period very well, not just the French part of it, and can create context.


ETA: I might add that MacDonogh's bio was published in 1999, thus some 20 years *later* than Pangels.


He really has no excuse. Incidentally, does he quote Zimmermann and the broken penis theory? Because Zimmermann - in his mind - defending Fritz against the "accusation" of gayness by declaring it was all a cunning strategy involving pretending to be gay that even fooled Zimmermann himself for a while to disguise the horrible STD and penis operation trauma would not make sense if there weren't a bunch of contemporaries convinced that Fritz is less than straight that he needed "defending" from.

OOH. Very interesting!

I thought so.:) I only browsed through the Chevalier de Lorraine article, but it's very interesting in general, and I'll read it more slowly for a second time now and will probably find more to report. I ssee the author footnotes all his quotes very well. Even the footnotes look like they contain new-to-me info, like the fact that the Chevalier, when he was briefly in exile because he had pissed off Louis too much (and when Philippe made Minette's life hell on the general princple of blaming her for this state of affairs and thought she could make Louis call the Chevalier back), the Chevalier actually had a great time in Rome, which included an affair with.... drumroll.... Marie Mancini, aka Louis' first love (and as the sister of Eugene's mother Olympe the aunt of Eugene; source for this: Marie Mancini, who also said he was feted in Roman society). I mean, I was already amused when Versailles in its first season depicted the royal disgrace interlude as the Chevalier suffering in the Bastille, and I knew he hadn't actually been living badly (not with all the money Philippe was always giving him!), but I hadn't expected the fling with Louis' ex!

Re: Louis XIV gossip

Date: 2022-03-20 07:12 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Also, since she wrote the most popular biography of Charles II., she really knows the period very well, not just the French part of it, and can create context.

Good to know! I definitely read (and indeed owned) some Antonia Fraser books back in the day, but none of my long-ago reading has left my present-day self with any confidence about which authors were reliable.

I only browsed through the Chevalier de Lorraine article, but it's very interesting in general, and I'll read it more slowly for a second time now and will probably find more to report.

Oh, excellent! I saw it in the Google hits but didn't click on it. I'm glad you did!

I hadn't expected the fling with Louis' ex!

The great thing about salon is the way we build on each other's findings, and gossip always leads to MOAR GOSSIP. (Hi, [personal profile] cahn!)

Incidentally, does he quote Zimmermann and the broken penis theory?

Let me check.

Hmm, not that I can see from my quick searches for "Zimmermann," "penis", "operation", and "venereal". He cites Zimmermann on other things, but is mum on any gayness discussion.

The closest he comes that I can see is: "Some people insist that he caught a venereal infection, that it went untreated and with time rendered him impotent," which is one of the rumors that Zimmermann is at pains to refute.

Re: Louis XIV gossip

Date: 2022-03-23 08:09 am (UTC)
selenak: (Voltaire)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Antonia Fraser's book: here's a quote from the introduction which I thought would amuse you. It comes after she lays out her goals for the book, mentions that she won't just focus on the mistresses, but also on the other women in Louis' life he was emotionally attached to and who impacted his life, to wit, his mother, the two Madames (Minette and Liselotte), his illegitimate daughters, and his granddaughter-in-law (and daughter of Victor Amadeus), Adelaide, who was the favourite relation of his old age.

Inevitably, therefore, the story also reflects something of the condition of women of a certain sort in seventeeth century France. What were their choices and how far were they, mistresses and wives, mothers and daughters, in control of their own destinies? A portrait will, I trust, emerge of Louis XIV himself, the Sun King and like the sun the centre of his univierse. But as the title and subtitle indicate, this is not a full study of the reign, so fruitfully dealt with elsewhere, in studies both ancient and modern, to all of which I acknwoledge my deeep gratitude. It was Voltaire, in the first brilliant study of 'le grand siècle, published twenty-odd years after the King's death, who wrote: "It must not be expected to meet here with a minute detail of the wars carried on in this age. Everything that happens is not worthy of the record.' This is a sentiment which one can only humbly echo.

Consider me entirely unsurprised battles weren't Voltaire's priority in "The Age of Louis XIV", which I really must read one of these days.

and here's a quote from a Louis-attached lady - not Liselotte - on Eugene from late in the book:

(Marlborough) had the assistance of Prince Eugene, who, as the son of Olympe Mancini, was regarded at Versailles as some kind of spiritual traitor even if, as a Savoyard, he was not technically one: 'I hate Prince Eugene in the most Christian way I can', observed Madame de Maintenon some years later.

Should have offered him a job while he was still in France, then. Anyway, browsing through the book reminded me of something which I think I've brought up before, to wit, Dame Antonia adding a footnote to the brief tale of Sophie Charlotte/Figuelotte being promoted as a possible second Mrs. Louis XIV for a short while by her parents. The footnote points out that she married F1 instead and thus became the grandmother of Fritz, leading one to speculate what warrior descendants would have resulted from a marriage between her and Louis. To which I say, since any such kid would have lacked not just the FW type parenting but the FW introduced military schooling, starting essentially at age 7, and definitely would have lacked the well cared for, well drilled Prussian army and the nicely filled treasury: none?


Re: Louis XIV gossip

Date: 2022-03-26 11:23 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
"It must not be expected to meet here with a minute detail of the wars carried on in this age. Everything that happens is not worthy of the record.' This is a sentiment which one can only humbly echo.

Hahaha. There is a lot of military history out there, it's true, but good military history is harder to come by. I have opinions.

Consider me entirely unsurprised battles weren't Voltaire's priority in "The Age of Louis XIV", which I really must read one of these days.

Same, it's on my list if I make to studying French! And I have to say, reading all these Schultz bios is leading me back to sources in French that I can't read, thus supplying me with more motivation... :)

'I hate Prince Eugene in the most Christian way I can'

LOL, that is so great. Maintenon, if you think that's bad, just wait until his cousin Victor Amadeus defects again! (again again) :D

To which I say, since any such kid would have lacked not just the FW type parenting but the FW introduced military schooling, starting essentially at age 7, and definitely would have lacked the well cared for, well drilled Prussian army and the nicely filled treasury:

Yeah, as you and I have agreed, recreating the army and filling the treasury were not a thing that Fritz, for all his military genius, was going to do on his own.

Re: Louis XIV gossip

Date: 2022-03-21 08:15 am (UTC)
selenak: (Default)
From: [personal profile] selenak
A tv series about Algarotti would be great and would offer plenty of actors from various nationalities awesome character roles. Also it would be bound to infuriate The Worst Fanboys and generally right wingers who'd protest that clearly, bisexuals came into existence only in the 20th century and the tv series was falsifying history, so that's a plus, too.

Re: Louis XIV gossip

Date: 2022-03-26 11:18 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
the Chevalier suffering in the Bastille, and I knew he hadn't actually been living badly (not with all the money Philippe was always giving him!)

For [personal profile] cahn, you may or may not have picked up from your French historical fiction (and/or salon) that the Bastille experience varied drastically based on how much money and family ties you had. If you had a lot of money/someone like Philippe bankrolling you, the Bastille could be a very luxurious house arrest experience where you had a fancy apartment and fancy food and guests.

If you only had *some* money, then you could maybe be comfortable...and if you didn't have any, then sucks to be you.

Schultz tells me that the Chevalier started out in the Bastille, was transferred to an a fortress on an island off the coast of Marseilles, and finally ended up in exile in Rome. But even when he was in the Bastille, it wouldn't have been the damp dungeon with rats that the name "Bastille" conjurs up.

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