Louis XVI - definizione. Che cos'è Louis XVI
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Cosa (chi) è Louis XVI - definizione

KING OF FRANCE AND NAVARRE (1754-1793)
Louis XVI of France; King Louis XVI; Louis xvi; Louis the Sixteenth; Sophie-Beatrix; Louis Capet; Louis-Auguste (Louis XVI); Louis Seize; Louis-Auguste de France; King Louis 16; Louis 16 of France; Louis XVI of france; Louis Bourbon; Louis the XVI; King Louis XVI of France; Louis The Sixteenth; Louis Vi. of France; Louis XVI, King of the French; Louis Xvi; Louis-Auguste, Duke of Berry; Citoyen Louis Capet; Louis ⅩⅤⅠ; Louis 16; Louis Auguste de France; Louis-Auguste; Citizen Louis Capet; Louis the Last
  • [[Silver coin]]: 1 écu – Louis XVI, 1784
  • The Duc de Berry as a young boy (portrait artributed to Pierre Jouffroy)
  • The return of the royal family to Paris on 25 June 1791, coloured copperplate after a drawing of Jean-Louis Prieur
  • Louis XV]]. When the monarchy was abolished on 21 September 1792, the statue was torn down and sent to be melted.
  • One [[Louis d'or]], 1788, depicting Louis XVI
  • Comte de Provence]] (by [[François-Hubert Drouais]], 1757)
  • Posthumous portrait of Louis XVI imprisoned at the [[Tour du Temple]] (by [[Jean-François Garneray]], 1814)
  • Memorial to Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, sculptures by [[Edme Gaulle]] and [[Pierre Petitot]] in the [[Basilica of Saint-Denis]]
  • ''"Le Couronnement de Louis XVI"'', 18th century motif by Benjamin Duvivier, coins honoring the 11 June 1775 coronation of Louis XVI
  • left
  • The 7 year-old Louis XVII (1792)
  • Louis XVI distributing money to the poor of Versailles, during the brutal winter of [[1788]]
  • Tippu Sultan]] in 1788, Voyer after Emile Wattier, 19th century
  • La Pérouse]] his instructions, by [[Nicolas-André Monsiau]]
  • Cherbourg]] in June [[1786]], on the occasion of the work to put in place a dike (1817 painting)
  • Tinted etching of Louis XVI, 1792. The caption refers to the date of the [[Tennis Court Oath]] and concludes, "The same Louis XVI who bravely waits until his fellow citizens return to their hearths to plan a secret war and exact his revenge."
  • Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun]], 1787)
  • The Duchess of Angoulême at the deathbed of [[Henry Essex Edgeworth]], last confessor to Louis XVI, by Alexandre-Toussaint Menjaud, 1817
  • The Storming of the Tuileries Palace]]'', on 10 August 1792 ([[Musée de la Révolution française]])
  • left

Execution of Louis XVI         
MAJOR EVENT OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
Execution of King Louis XVI
The execution of Louis XVI by guillotine, a major event of the French Revolution, took place publicly on 21 January 1793 at the Place de la Révolution ("Revolution Square", formerly Place Louis XV, and renamed Place de la Concorde in 1795) in Paris. At a trial on 17 January 1793, the National Convention had convicted the king of high treason in a near-unanimous vote; while no one voted "not guilty", several deputies abstained.
Louis XVI and the Legislative Assembly         
The Legislative Assembly & the fall of the French monarchy; Overthrow of Louis XVI of France; The Legislative Assembly and the fall of the French monarchy
The French Revolution was a period in the history of France covering the years 1789 to 1799, in which republicans overthrew the Bourbon monarchy and the Roman Catholic Church in France perforce underwent radical restructuring. This article covers the one-year period from 1 October 1791 to September 1792, during which France was governed by the Legislative Assembly, operating under the French Constitution of 1791, between the periods of the National Constituent Assembly and of the National Convention.
Trial of Louis XVI         
  • "Louis the Last" being cross-examined by the convention.
LEGAL PROCESS
The trial of Louis XVI—officially called "Citizen Louis Capet" since being dethroned—before the National Convention in December 1792 was a key event of the French Revolution. He was convicted of high treason and other crimes, resulting in his execution.

Wikipedia

Louis XVI

Louis XVI (Louis Auguste; French: [lwi sɛːz]; 23 August 1754 – 21 January 1793), sometimes known as The Last, was the last king of France before the fall of the monarchy during the French Revolution.

The son of Louis, Dauphin of France (son and heir-apparent of King Louis XV), and Maria Josepha of Saxony, Louis became the new Dauphin when his father died in 1765. On his grandfather's death on 10 May 1774, he became King of France and Navarre, reigning until 4 September 1791, when he received the title of King of the French, reigning as king until the monarchy was abolished on 21 September 1792.

The first part of Louis XVI's reign was marked by attempts to reform the French government in accordance with Enlightenment ideas. These included efforts to abolish serfdom, remove the taille (land tax) and the corvée (labour tax), and increase tolerance toward non-Catholics as well as abolish the death penalty for deserters. The French nobility reacted to the proposed reforms with hostility, and successfully opposed their implementation. Louis implemented deregulation of the grain market, advocated by his economic liberal minister Turgot, but it resulted in an increase in bread prices. In periods of bad harvests, it led to food scarcity which, during a particularly bad harvest in 1775, prompted the masses to revolt. From 1776, Louis XVI actively supported the North American colonists, who were seeking their independence from Great Britain, which was realised in the 1783 Treaty of Paris. The ensuing debt and financial crisis contributed to the unpopularity of the Ancien Régime. This led to the convening of the Estates-General of 1789. Discontent among the members of France's middle and lower classes resulted in strengthened opposition to the French aristocracy and to the absolute monarchy, of which Louis and his wife Marie Antoinette were viewed as representatives. Increasing tensions and violence were marked by events such as the storming of the Bastille, during which riots in Paris forced Louis to definitively recognize the legislative authority of the National Assembly.

Louis's indecisiveness and conservatism led some elements of the people of France to view him as a symbol of the perceived tyranny of the Ancien Régime, and his popularity deteriorated progressively. His unsuccessful flight to Varennes in June 1791, four months before the constitutional monarchy was declared, seemed to justify the rumors that the king tied his hopes of political salvation to the prospects of foreign intervention. His credibility was deeply undermined, and the abolition of the monarchy and the establishment of a republic became an ever-increasing possibility. The growth of anti-clericalism among revolutionaries resulted in the abolition of the dîme (religious land tax) and several government policies aimed at the dechristianization of France.

In a context of civil and international war, Louis XVI was suspended and arrested at the time of the Insurrection of 10 August 1792. One month later, the monarchy was abolished and the First French Republic was proclaimed on 21 September 1792. The former king became a desacralized French citizen, addressed as Citizen Louis Capet in reference to his ancestor Hugh Capet. Louis was tried by the National Convention (self-instituted as a tribunal for the occasion), found guilty of high treason and executed by guillotine on 21 January 1793. Louis XVI was the only king of France ever to be executed, and his death brought an end to more than a thousand years of continuous French monarchy. Both of his sons died in childhood, before the Bourbon Restoration; his only child to reach adulthood, Marie Thérèse, was given over to the Austrians in exchange for French prisoners of war, eventually dying childless in 1851.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per Louis XVI
1. Louis XVI paid them off in return for the destruction of the papers.
2. Her husband, Louis XVI, had already been executed after a similar trial.
3. For with Chirac, the Louis XVI of European politics, such a compromise is impossible.
4. On this date: In 1770, Marie Antoinette, age 14, married the future King Louis XVI of France, who was 15.
5. Instead, the City‘s plutocrats live it up like self–indulgent courtiers at the Versailles of Louis XVI.