LOUIS XV ON HIS ACCESSION


ROETTIERS, J.C. / MAUGER, J.: France, ca.1715, Silver, 41 mm
Obv: Bust of young King Louis XV with laurel LUDOVICUS XV. D.G. FR. ET. NAV. REX
Rev: Bust of Louis XIV the Sun King LUDOVICUS MAGNUS REX CHRISTIANISSIMUS.
Signed: J.C. ROETTIER (in script) / J. MAVGER F.

Louis XV (1710–1774), King of France (1715–74), was the great-grandson and successor of King Louis XIV, and the son of Louis, titular duke of Burgundy, and Marie Adelaide of Savoy. Louis succeeded to the throne in 1715 at the age of five (the occasion for this medal), with Philippe II, duc d’Orléans as regent. After the regent died (1723), the king was guided by André Hercule de Fleury until Fleury died in 1743. Louis lacked both the will and interest to govern forcefully, and his reign was influenced by a succession of favorites. Of these, Mme de Pompadour and her adherents were the most important and were in favor from the 1730s until 1764.

While Louis was king, France was involved in a series of wars. As a result of the king’s marriage in 1725 to Marie Leszcynska, France took part in the War of the Polish Succession, eventually obtaining the duchy of Lorraine. Louis also involved France in the War of the Austrian Succession against Austria and, after a switch of alliances that realigned France with Austria, in the Seven Years War. The Treaty of Paris, ending the Seven Years War, marked the loss of most of France’s colonial empire and a low point in French prestige on the Continent.

Throughout the reign of Louis XV, the aristocracy asserted more influence, and the upper bourgeoisie gained more financial power. The country knew general prosperity, but the government was near bankruptcy because of its extravagances. The apathy of Louis XV in the face of these problems found expression in the saying "Après moi le déluge" [after me, the flood], wrongly attributed to the king himself. The failure of the monarchy to solve its fiscal difficulties led directly to the French Revolution during the reign of Louis’ successor, Louis XVI. (From The Columbia Encyclopedia)

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