Drabble, Margaret, editor. The Oxford Companion to English Literature. Oxford University Press.
Louis XVI, King of France
Standard Name: Louis XVI,, King of France
Used Form: Lewis the Sixteenth
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Honoré de Balzac | For many years HB
was romantically linked to Madame de Berny
, a god-daughter of Louis XVI
and Marie-Antionette
. He was devastated by her death in 1836. |
Travel | Frances Burney | |
Family and Intimate relationships | Frances Burney | |
Family and Intimate relationships | Grace Elliott | GE
's relationship with the duc d'Orléans
is known to her readers only from her account of him in the days when he had moved on to other women and was increasingly showing a sympathy... |
politics | Grace Elliott | She smuggled the duc d'Orléans to his house by giving her name instead of his to those who challenged them. She went home on foot, then, hearing that many thought the duc would lead a... |
Literary Setting | Catherine Gore | The title-page quotes Shakespeare
's Richard II about the deposing of a king. The novel opens with precision: at five o'clock on 22 June 1791, with aristocrats fearful for their fate in the aftermath of... |
Material Conditions of Writing | Anne Grant | After the guilloting of the French king Louis XVI
, AG
formulated an explicit statement of the political nature of female virtue, as she asserted the responsibility of (upper-class) women for the Revolution. I... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Harcourt | He was the opposite of his wife in one respect. In 1770 his father had said of him (in connection with letters): so great is his aversion to writing that without an absolute necessity he... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Margaret Holford | Selima is a writing heroine: her poems are interspersed in the text, since as she says, As I grow sick or unhappy, I grow poetical. Holford, Margaret. Selima; or, The Village Tale. Hookham; P. Broster. 2: 73 |
Material Conditions of Writing | Elizabeth Inchbald | Every One Has His Fault, a comedy by EI
, opened at Covent Garden
, after being postponed for a week for fear of coinciding with the guillotining of Louis XVI of France
. The London Stage 1660-1800. Southern Illinois University Press. 5: 1516-17 O’Quinn, Daniel. “Bread: The Eruption and Interruption of Politics in Elizabeth Inchbald’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Every One Has His Fault</span>”;. European Romantic Review, Vol. 18 , No. 2, pp. 149-57. O'Quinn 149 |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Ann Jebb | In 1789 and 1790, still in correspondence with Cartwright and also in letters to Thomas Brand Hollis
, she discussed the issues involved in the Regency in Britain and the agreement between Louis XVI
and... |
politics | Ann Jebb | Her obituarist wrote that her zeal in the cause of civil and religious liberty was unabated by her husband's death. Meadley, George William. “Memoir of Mrs. Jebb”. The Monthly Repository, Vol. 7 , pp. 597 - 604, 661. 661 |
Textual Features | Ann Jebb | This pamphlet and Jebb's follow-up to it are both witty and down-to-earth. William Bull here tells his brother you know they talk of a war . . . of a war without fresh taxes; but... |
Travel | Ellis Cornelia Knight | They first spent some time in Paris, where a highlight of their stay was a sight of Louis XVI
and Marie Antoinette
at the Palace of Versailles. Knight, Ellis Cornelia. The Autobiography of Miss Knight. Editor Fulford, Roger, William Kimber & Co. 37 |
Friends, Associates | Ellis Cornelia Knight | Wherever they went the Knights always met, and always admired, members of the relevant royal family. On a visit to the Palace of Versailles during their time in Paris, they were able to see Louis XVI |
Timeline
19 January 1771: French parlements, the sovereign court of...
National or international item
19 January 1771
French parlements
, the sovereign court of Justice in Paris and thirteen other centres, were abolished by Louis XV
.
20 March 1778: Louis XVI of France received American commissioners...
National or international item
20 March 1778
Louis XVI
of France received American commissioners Benjamin Franklin
, Silas Deane
, and Arthur Lee
.
20 August 1786: Calonne, French Finance Minister, informed...
National or international item
20 August 1786
Calonne
, French Finance Minister, informed Louis XVI
that the state was in financial crisis and submitted proposals for economic reforms to him.
27 December 1788: Louis XVI consented to public demands and...
National or international item
27 December 1788
Louis XVI
consented to public demands and overuled the Parlement
of Paris to double the size of the Third Estate.
January 1789: In France Emmanuel Sieyès published an immensely...
National or international item
January 1789
In FranceEmmanuel Sieyès
published an immensely influential pamphlet, whose title in English is What is the Third Estate?
5 May 1789: The Estates-General met at Versailles for...
National or international item
5 May 1789
The Estates-General
met at Versailles for the first time since 1614.
27 June 1789: Louis XVI ordered the First and Second Estates...
National or international item
27 June 1789
Louis XVI
ordered the First and Second Estates (nobility and clergy) to sit with the Third Estate in the French National Assembly.
11 July 1789: Louis XVI dismissed Necker from the post...
National or international item
11 July 1789
Louis XVI
dismissed Necker
from the post of Director of Finances and Minister of State.
5-6 October 1789: French market women marched on Versailles...
National or international item
5-6 October 1789
French market women marched on Versailles to demand that the king
put an end to bread shortages and relocate to Paris, closer to his people.
20-25 June 1791: Louis XVI fled with Marie-Antoinette and...
National or international item
20-25 June 1791
Louis XVI
fled with Marie-Antoinette
and their family, intending to leave France and raise a counter-revolution; they were captured at Varennes near Vichy, and brought back to Paris.
14 September 1791: Louis XVI accepted the new French consti...
National or international item
14 September 1791
Louis XVI
accepted the new French constitution.
10 August 1792: The Palace of the Tuileries in Paris was...
National or international item
10 August 1792
The Palace of the Tuileries in Paris was invaded (for the second time), and Louis XVI
was removed from his throne.
11 December 1792: Louis XVI went on trial before the National...
National or international item
11 December 1792
21 January 1793: Louis XVI was executed by guillotine in Paris...
National or international item
21 January 1793
Texts
No bibliographical results available.