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  1. Mornings. 8.30 am: the First Valet de Chambre woke the king with “Sire, it’s time to get up”. After a visit from the First Doctor and First Surgeon, the first getting-up ceremony began.

  2. 4 de feb. de 2019 · Louis XIV, King of France. While the mornings were a time for business and state matters, the afternoons were usually reserved for outdoor entertainment. After lunch, Louis might decide to walk around the grounds at Versailles, go hunting, or play other kinds of outdoor games.

  3. Louis XIV looked out at his father’s old hunting lodge and envisioned a stronger, more unified and more magnificent France than the one he had inherited at the age of four. Now in his twenties and ruling on his own as an absolute monarch, he dreamed of building a palace of unparalleled opulence.

  4. At Versailles, Louis XIV strictly imposed courtly etiquette, the corpus of tacit rules by which noble courtiers were expected to abide, passed down since the reign of Henri III. Each day at court was strictly codified, as Madame Palatine explains in a letter to her aunt Sophie from 1676: " First I went to Versailles, where we were kept busy all ...

  5. www.britannica.com › summary › Louis-XIV-king-of-FranceLouis XIV summary | Britannica

    Louis weakened the nobles’ power by making them dependent on the crown. A patron of the arts, he protected writers and devoted himself to building splendid palaces, including the extravagant Versailles, where he kept most of the nobility under his watchful eye.

  6. Once at court, he could hand out official roles and duties in the court to the various nobles, which he did with abandon; by the end of his reign, it took 200 noble lords to help him get up and get dressed in the morning (officially, anyway—unofficially, he woke up two hours earlier to handle the royal paperwork).

  7. 22 de mar. de 2022 · The French monarchy was repeatedly attacked by French nobles, reluctant to surrender local power to the throne. Two movements, one straight after another (th eFronde parlementaire, 1648-1649, and the Fronde des princes, 1650-1653) rocked the monarchy, resulting in Anne fleeing Paris with her son.