CAPTURE OF TOURNAI AND COURTRAI

? :  France, 1667, Bronze, 89 mm
Obv:   Louis XIV       LVDOVICVS. XIV. D. G. FRAN. ET NAV. REX.
Rev: Louis crowned by Victory. Personifications of the cities kneel before him, watched by River Gods    CIVITATES. TORNACENSIS. ET CVRTRACENSIS (The Cities of Tournay and Courtray)
Ref: see Monnaie De Paris, Vol I; Obv:33rd Effigy; Rev: p.180(B);  Europese Penningen # 34

Starting in 1667 and lasting until the turn of the century, Louis fought a series of wars to accomplish his goals of expanding the French empire. The first was the so-called War of Devolution (1667-1668). The Spanish king, Philip IV, had recently died, and Louis saw his chance to expand into the Spanish Netherlands. Using an old custom of Brabant and Hainaut in which the children of a first marriage supersede those of the second, he claimed the Spanish Netherlands had devolved to him in the name of his wife, Maria Therese, daughter of the deceased King by his first marriage. The French army, led by Marshal de Turenne, overran Flanders prompting the United Provinces, England and Sweden to form the Triple Alliance. Louis succeeded in retaining a number of captured cities, including Tournai and Courtrai, the subject of this medal. The capture of Tournai by Louis XIV in 1667 caused it to have as bishops a series of Frenchmen. After the Treaty of Utrecht (1713) the French bishops were replaced by Germans.

PAINTING OF THE ARMY OF LOUIS XIV AT TOURNAI in 1667 by Adam Frans van der MEULEN (from Web Gallery of Art)

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