Background

Absolute monarchy, or at least its ideal, can be described as a system of rule where the monarch holds power without limits. While historians often argue about whether or not true absolute power existed in the 17th c. they usually point to examples of this style of rule as a contrast to a constitutional monarchy where the ruler’s power is limited by an assembly, such as parliament, or by custom or a written constitution. In order to understand absolutism as a broader concept, it is helpful to look at specific examples of the most famous of the absolute rulers – Louis XIV. The following documents and images highlight the concept of absolute kingship, how the king projected his power through art and architecture, and how he wielded power.

On Absolute Kingship

Jacques Benigne Bossuet – excerpts from a political treatise on Politics drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture

We have already seen that all power is of God. The ruler, adds St. Paul, “is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain : for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.” Rulers then act as the ministers of God and as his lieutenants on earth. It is through them that God exercises his empire.

. . .

Moreover, that no one may assume that the Israelites were peculiar in having kings over them who were established by God, note what is said in Ecclesiasticus: “God has given to every people its ruler, and Israel is manifestly reserved to him.” He therefore governs all peoples and gives them their kings, although he governed Israel in a more intimate and obvious manner.

It appears from all this that the person of the king is sacred, and that to attack him in any way is sacrilege. God has the kings anointed by his prophets with the holy unction in like manner as he has bishops and altars anointed. But even without the external application in thus being anointed, they are by their very office the representatives of the divine majesty deputed by Providence for the execution of his purposes.

. . .

But kings, although their power comes from on high, as has been said, should not regard themselves as masters of that power to use it at their pleasure ; . . . they must employ it with fear and self-restraint, as a thing coming from God and of which God will demand an account.

. . .

Kings should tremble then as they use the power God has granted them; and let them think how horrible is the sacrilege if they use for evil a power which comes from God. We behold kings seated upon the throne of the Lord, bearing in their hand the sword which God himself has given them. What profanation, what arrogance, for the unjust king to sit on God’s throne to render decrees contrary to his laws and to use the sword which God has put in his hand for deeds of violence and to slay his children!

. . .

The royal power is absolute. With the aim of making this truth hateful and insufferable, many writers have tried to confound absolute government with arbitrary government. But no two things could be more unlike, as we shall show when we come to speak of justice.

The prince need render account of his acts to no one. “I counsel thee to keep the king’s commandment, and that in regard of the oath of God. Be not hasty to go out of his sight: stand not on an evil thing for he doeth whatsoever pleaseth him. Where the word of a king is, there is power: and who may say unto him, What doest thou? Whoso keepeth the commandment shall feel no evil thing.” Without this absolute authority the king could neither do good nor repress evil. It is necessary that his power be such that no one can hope to escape him, and, finally, the only protection of individuals against the public authority should be their innocence. This conforms with the teaching of St. Paul: “Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? do that which is good.”

I do not call majesty that pomp which surrounds kings or that exterior magnificence which dazzles the vulgar. That is but the reflection of majesty and not majesty itself. Majesty is the image of the grandeur of God in the prince.

God is infinite, God is all. The prince, as prince, is not regarded as a private person: he is a public personage, all the state is in him; the will of all the people is included in his. As all perfection and all strength are united in God, so all the power of individuals is united in the person of the prince. What grandeur that a single man should embody so much!

The power of God makes itself felt in a moment from one extremity of the earth to another. Royal power works at the same time throughout all the realm. It holds all the realm in position, as God holds the earth. Should God withdraw his hand, the earth would fall to pieces; should the king’s authority cease in the realm, all would be in confusion.

Look at the prince in his cabinet. Thence go out the orders which cause the magistrates and the captains, the citizens and the soldiers, the provinces and the armies on land and on sea, to work in concert. He is the image of God, who, seated on his throne high in the heavens, makes all nature move.

. . .

Finally, let us put together the things so great and so august which we have said about royal authority. Behold an immense people united in a single person; behold this holy power, paternal and absolute; behold the secret cause which governs the whole body of the state, contained in a single head: you see the image of God in the king, and you have the idea of royal majesty. God is holiness itself, goodness itself, and power itself. In these things lies the majesty of God. In the image of these things lies the majesty of the prince.

So great is this majesty that it cannot reside in the prince as in its source; it is borrowed from God, who gives it to him for the good of the people, for whom it is good to be checked by a superior force. Something of divinity itself is attached to princes and inspires fear in the people. The king should not forget this. “I have said,” – it is God who speaks, – “I have said, Ye are gods; and all of you are children of the Most High. But ye shall die like men, and fall like one of the princes.” “I have said, Ye are gods”; that is to say, you have in your authority, and you bear on your forehead, a divine imprint. “You are the children of the Most High. But ye shall die like men, and fall like one of the princes.” “I have said, Ye are gods”; that is to say, you have in your authority, and you bear on your forehead, a divine imprint. “You are the children of the Most High”; it is he who has established your power for the good of mankind. But, O gods of flesh and blood, gods of clay and dust, “ye shall die like men, and fall like princes.” Grandeur seperates men for a little time, but a common fall makes them all equal at the end.

O kings, exercise your power then boldly, for it is divine and salutary for human kind, but exercise it with humility. You are endowed with it from without. At bottom it leaves you feeble, it leaves you mortal, it leaves you sinners, and charges you before God with a very heavy account.

Source: Bossuet’s treatise on “Politics drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture” in Readings in European History Vol. II by James Harvey Robinson, 1906, pp. 273-277. Available at Hathi Trust https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/102114243

Jean Domat – excerpts from The Civil Law and its Natural Order: together with the Public Law

This necessity of government over men, whom their nature makes all equal, and who are not distinguished one from the other but by the differences that God puts between them by their conditions, and by their professions, shows that it is on the divine order that government depends; and as there is none but God alone that is the Natural Sovereign of men, so it is likewise from him that they who govern derive all their power and authority, and it is God himself whom they represent in their functions.

. . .

Seeing government is necessary for the public good, and that it is God himself who has established it, it is consequently necessary also that those who live under its jurisdiction, be subject and obedient to it. For otherwise, it would be God whom they would resist; and government, which ought to be the band of peace and union from where the public good of a state is to arise, would be an occasion of division and troubles, which would end in the ruin of the state.

The first duty of obedience to government is that of obeying those who are placed in the highest station, whether they be monarchs or others who are heads of the body that is formed by the society, and to obey them in the same manner as the members of the natural body obey the head to which they are united.

This obedience ought to be considered, with respect to him who is vested with the government, as the power of God himself, who has established him as his viceregent here on earth.

. . .

It is also by the means of this Love of Justice that princes ought to be sensible, that their power should be absolute over their subjects, only in order to procure universal obedience which may contain them all in order and peace; and their power ought to be employed only for this end.

. . .

The power of the sovereign authority ought to be proportionate to the ministerial function and rank which is held in the body of the society of men who compose a state. Being the head of it, the monarch ought there to supply the place of God. For as God is the sole natural governor of men – their judge, their lawgiver, their king – there can be no lawful authority of one man over others, but what he derives from the hand of God. Thus the power of sovereigns is a branch of the power of God, as the arm and the force of justice, which ought to be the soul of the government, and which alone has the natural use of all authority over the minds and hearts of men; for it is over these two faculties of man that justice ought to have its empire.

. . .

We ought to place in the number of the rights which the law gives to the sovereign, that of having all the marks of grandeur and majesty necessary for setting off the authority and dignity of a power so great an extent and elevation, and for imprinting a veneration for it on the minds of all the subjects. For although they ought to consider in the power of the sovereign the power of God which subjects them to that of the sovereign, and to reverence it without any regard to the sensible marks of grandeur that may happen to be annexed to it, yet as God accompanies with a visible splendor his own power, which displays itself both on the Earth and in the heavens, as it were upon a throne and in a palace, the magnificence whereof strikes the beholders into admiration . . . he is willing that in proportion to the share of this power which he communicates to the sovereign, it should be set off in their hands by marks which are proper for procuring them the respect of the people. Which cannot be otherwise done than by that pomp which appears in the magnificence of their palaces and in other marks of a sensible grandeur with which they are environed, and which God himself has allowed the use of to princes who have reigned according to his mind.

Source: The Civil Law and its Natural Order: together with the Public Law written in French by Monsieur Domat . . . and translated into English by William Strahan, Volume 2, London: Printed by J. Bettenham, for E. Bell [etc.], 1722, pp. 298-300 & 311-312. Language has been modernized slightly for clarity including using modern spelling and punctuation. Available via Hathi Trust https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/010446979

 

Images of Louis XIV

Portrait of Louis XIV standing with a staff and sowrd draped in a garment covered in the flur de lis and lined with fur and wearing white tights with red high heeled shoes.
Portrait of Louis XIV of France by Hyacinthe Rigaud (1659-1743) Pubilc Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Louis_XIV_of_France.jpg

This portrait of Louis XIV was painted by Hyacinth Rigaud who painted portraits of dignitaries and Nobles at Versailles, including the king. He was the principal painter to the king who used his art, and that of others, to project his kingly image. Louis XIV, in this portrait, is dressed in his coronation robe, wears a royal sword whose sheath is encrusted with gems, and rests his right hand on the royal scepter. The royal crown rests on a cushion just below.

Louis XIV liked this portrait so well that he had several copies made in order to share the image. It is said that the image was hung over the throne when the king was absent and he forbade his courtiers from turning their backs on it, just as they would have been forbidden from turning their backs on the king.

 

Louis XIV and his family are seated in a pastoral setting and dressed as Greek gods and goddesses. Depicted people: Louis XIV of France as Apollo, Maria Theresa of Spain as Juno, Louis Grand Dauphin as Hymen, Marie Therese Madame Royale, Philippe Charles Due of Anjoy as cupid, Philippe Due of Orleans as Hesperus, Henrietta of England as Flora, Marie Louise d'Oleans as Iris, Anne of Austria as Cybele, Henriette Maria of France as Amphitrite, Anne Marie Louise d'Oleans, Elizabeth Marguerite d'Oleans, and Francoise Madeleine d'Olreans as Charities
Mythological portrait of Louis XIV and the royal family by Jean Nocret (1615-1672) on Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jean_Nocret_-_Louis_XIV_et_la_famille_royale_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg

This portrait depicts Louis XIV and his family in a pastoral setting dressed as Greek gods and goddesses. Louis XIV is depicted as Appolo, tying in nicely with his cultivated image as the “Sun King.”

Versailles

Louis XIV famously built the palace of Versailles on the site of a hunting loge, or small château, first constructed by his father. Construction occurred off and on between 1661 and 1715 after Louis XIV had been a guest at the Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte, owned by Nicolas Fouquet, the superintendent of finances. Fouquet was later arrested and tried for treason, but Louis XIV used Fouquet’s architect, Louis Le Vau, gardener, André le Nôtre, and artist, Charles le Brun, to build his own palace. Versailles became Louis XIV’s preferred seat of government and an expression of his taste, his power, and his patronage.

 

Vew of a courtyard paved with marble. The palace is lit as though it is dawn or dusk and the ornate walls and windows glow with light.
Versailles, the Marble Courtyard by Ninara on Flickr, CC BY, https://www.flickr.com/photos/ninara/24105962121

Description of Louis XIV and his court by Saint Simon

I shall pass over the stormy period of Louis XIV.‘s minority. At twenty- three years of age, he entered the great world as King, under the most favorable auspices. His ministers were the most skillful in all of Europe; his generals the best; his Court was filled with illustrious and clever men, formed during the troubles which had followed the death of Louis XIII.

Louis XIV. was made for a brilliant Court. In the midst of other men, his figure, his courage, his grace, his beauty, his grand mien, even the tone of his voice and the majestic and natural charm of all his person, distinguished him till his death as the King Bee, and showed that if he had only been born a simple private gentleman, he would equally have excelled in fetes, pleasures, and gallantry, and would have had the greatest success in love. The intrigues and adventures which early in life he had been engaged in—when the Comtesse de Soissons lodged at the Tuileries, as superintendent of the Queen’s household, and was the centre figure of the Court group—had exercised an unfortunate influence upon him: he received those impressions with which he could never after successfully struggle. From this time, intellect, education, nobility of sentiment, and high principle, in others, became objects of suspicion to him, and soon of hatred. The more he advanced in years the more this sentiment was confirmed in him. He wished to reign by himself. His jealousy on this point unceasingly became weakness. He reigned, indeed, in little things; the great he could never reach: even in the former, too, he was often governed. The superior ability of his early ministers and his early generals soon wearied him. He liked nobody to be in any way superior to him. Thus he chose his ministers, not for their knowledge, but for their ignorance; not for their capacity, but for their want of it. He liked to form them, as he said; liked to teach them even the most trifling things. It was the same with his generals. He took credit to himself for instructing them; wished it to be thought that from his cabinet he commanded and directed all his armies. Naturally fond of trifles, he unceasingly occupied himself with the most petty details of his troops, his household, his mansions; would even instruct his cooks, who received, like novices, lessons they had known by heart for years. This vanity, this unmeasured and unreasonable love of admiration, was his ruin. His ministers, his generals, his mistresses, his courtiers, soon perceived his weakness. They praised him with emulation and spoiled him. Praises, or to say truth, flattery, pleased him to such an extent, that the coarsest was well received, the vilest even better relished. It was the sole means by which you could approach him. Those whom he liked owed his affection for them to their untiring flatteries. This is what gave his ministers so much authority, and the opportunities they had for adulating him, of attributing everything to him, and of pretending to learn everything from him. Suppleness, meanness, an admiring, dependent, cringing manner—above all, an air of nothingness—were the sole means of pleasing him.

This poison spread. It spread, too, to an incredible extent, in a prince who, although of intellect beneath mediocrity, was not utterly without sense, and who had had some experience. Without voice or musical knowledge, he used to sing, in private, the passages of the opera prologues that were fullest of his praises.

He was drowned in vanity; and so deeply, that at his public suppers—all the Court present, musicians also—he would hum these self-same praises between his teeth, when the music they were set to was played!

And yet, it must be admitted, he might have done better. Though his intellect, as I have said, was beneath mediocrity, it was capable of being formed. He loved glory, was fond of order and regularity; was by disposition prudent, moderate, discreet, master of his movements and his tongue. Will it be believed? He was also by disposition good and just! God had sufficiently gifted him to enable him to be a good King; perhaps even a tolerably great King! All the evil came to him from elsewhere. His early education was so neglected that nobody dared approach his apartment. He has often been heard to speak of those times with bitterness, and even to relate that, one evening he was found in the basin of the Palais Royal garden fountain, into which he had fallen! He was scarcely taught how to read or write, and remained so ignorant, that the most familiar historical and other facts were utterly unknown to him! He fell, accordingly, and sometimes even in public, into the grossest absurdities.

It was his vanity, his desire for glory, that led him, soon after the death of the King of Spain, to make that event the pretext for war; in spite of the renunciations so recently made, so carefully stipulated, in the marriage contract. He marched into Flanders; his conquests there were rapid; the passage of the Rhine was admirable; the triple alliance of England, Sweden, and Holland only animated him. In the midst of winter he took Franche-Comte, by restoring which at the peace of Aix-la- Chapelle, he preserved his conquests in Flanders. All was flourishing then in the state. Riches everywhere. Colbert had placed the finances, the navy, commerce, manufactures, letters even, upon the highest point; and this age, like that of Augustus, produced in abundance illustrious men of all kinds,-even those illustrious only in pleasures.

. . .

Let me touch now upon some other incidents in his career, and upon some points in his character.

He early showed a disinclination for Paris. The troubles that had taken place there during his minority made him regard the place as dangerous; he wished, too, to render himself venerable by hiding himself from the eyes of the multitude; all these considerations fixed him at Saint- Germain soon after the death of the Queen, his mother. It was to that place he began to attract the world by fetes and gallantries, and by making it felt that he wished to be often seen.

His love for Madame de la Valliere, which was at first kept secret, occasioned frequent excursions to Versailles, then a little card castle, which had been built by Louis XIII.—annoyed, and his suite still more so, at being frequently obliged to sleep in a wretched inn there, after he had been out hunting in the forest of Saint Leger. That monarch rarely slept at Versailles more than one night, and then from necessity; the King, his son, slept there, so that he might be more in private with his mistress, pleasures unknown to the hero and just man, worthy son of Saint-Louis, who built the little chateau.

These excursions of Louis XIV. by degrees gave birth to those immense buildings he erected at Versailles; and their convenience for a numerous court, so different from the apartments at Saint-Germain, led him to take up his abode there entirely shortly after the death of the Queen. He built an infinite number of apartments, which were asked for by those who wished to pay their court to him; whereas at Saint-Germain nearly everybody was obliged to lodge in the town, and the few who found accommodation at the chateau were strangely inconvenienced.

The frequent fetes, the private promenades at Versailles, the journeys, were means on which the King seized in order to distinguish or mortify the courtiers, and thus render them more assiduous in pleasing him.

He felt that of real favours he had not enough to bestow; in order to keep up the spirit of devotion, he therefore unceasingly invented all sorts of ideal ones, little preferences and petty distinctions, which answered his purpose as well.

He was exceedingly jealous of the attention paid him. Not only did he notice the presence of the most distinguished courtiers, but those of inferior degree also. He looked to the right and to the left, not only upon rising but upon going to bed, at his meals, in passing through his apartments, or his gardens of Versailles, where alone the courtiers were allowed to follow him; he saw and noticed everybody; not one escaped him, not even those who hoped to remain unnoticed. He marked well all absentees from the Court, found out the reason of their absence, and never lost an opportunity of acting towards them as the occasion might seem to justify. With some of the courtiers (the most distinguished), it was a demerit not to make the Court their ordinary abode; with others ‘twas a fault to come but rarely; for those who never or scarcely ever came it was certain disgrace. When their names were in any way mentioned, “I do not know them,” the King would reply haughtily. Those who presented themselves but seldom were thus Characterise: “They are people I never see;” these decrees were irrevocable. He could not bear people who liked Paris.

Louis XIV. took great pains to be well informed of all that passed everywhere; in the public places, in the private houses, in society and familiar intercourse. His spies and tell-tales were infinite. He had them of all species; many who were ignorant that their information reached him; others who knew it; others who wrote to him direct, sending their letters through channels he indicated; and all these letters were seen by him alone, and always before everything else; others who sometimes spoke to him secretly in his cabinet, entering by the back stairs. These unknown means ruined an infinite number of people of all classes, who never could discover the cause; often ruined them very unjustly; for the King, once prejudiced, never altered his opinion, or so rarely, that nothing was more rare. He had, too, another fault, very dangerous for others and often for himself, since it deprived him of good subjects. He had an excellent memory; in this way, that if he saw a man who, twenty years before, perhaps, had in some manner offended him, he did not forget the man, though he might forget the offence. This was enough, however, to exclude the person from all favour. The representations of a minister, of a general, of his confessor even, could not move the King. He would not yield.

The most cruel means by which the King was informed of what was passing— for many years before anybody knew it—was that of opening letters. The promptitude and dexterity with which they were opened passes understanding. He saw extracts from all the letters in which there were passages that the chiefs of the post-office, and then the minister who governed it, thought ought to go before him; entire letters, too, were sent to him, when their contents seemed to justify the sending. Thus the chiefs of the post, nay, the principal clerks were in a position to suppose what they pleased and against whom they pleased. A word of contempt against the King or the government, a joke, a detached phrase, was enough. It is incredible how many people, justly or unjustly, were more or less ruined, always without resource, without trial, and without knowing why. The secret was impenetrable; for nothing ever cost the King less than profound silence and dissimulation.

. . .

He built at Versailles, on, on, without any general design, the beautiful and the ugly, the vast and the mean, all jumbled together. His own apartments and those of the Queen, are inconvenient to the last degree, dull, close, stinking. The gardens astonish by their magnificence, but cause regret by their bad taste. You are introduced to the freshness of the shade only by a vast torrid zone, at the end of which there is nothing for you but to mount or descend; and with the hill, which is very short, terminate the gardens. The violence everywhere done to nature repels and wearies us despite ourselves. The abundance of water, forced up and gathered together from all parts, is rendered green, thick, muddy; it disseminates humidity, unhealthy and evident; and an odour still more so. I might never finish upon the monstrous defects of a palace so immense and so immensely dear, with its accompaniments, which are still more so.

But the supply of water for the fountains was all defective at all moments, in spite of those seas of reservoirs which had cost so many millions to establish and to form upon the shifting sand and marsh. Who could have believed it? This defect became the ruin of the infantry which was turned out to do the work. Madame de Maintenon reigned. M. de Louvois was well with her, then. We were at peace. He conceived the idea of turning the river Eure between Chartres and Maintenon, and of making it come to Versailles. Who can say what gold and men this obstinate attempt cost during several years, until it was prohibited by the heaviest penalties, in the camp established there, and for a long time kept up; not to speak of the sick,—above all, of the dead,—that the hard labour and still more the much disturbed earth, caused? How many men were years in recovering from the effects of the contagion! How many never regained their health at all! And not only the sub-officers, but the colonels, the brigadiers and general officers, were compelled to be upon the spot, and were not at liberty to absent themselves a quarter of an hour from the works. The war at last interrupted them in 1688, and they have never since been undertaken; only unfinished portions of them exist which will immortalise this cruel folly.

At last, the King, tired of the cost and bustle, persuaded himself that he should like something little and solitary. He searched all around Versailles for some place to satisfy this new taste. He examined several neighbourhoods, he traversed the hills near Saint-Germain, and the vast plain which is at the bottom, where the Seine winds and bathes the feet of so many towns, and so many treasures in quitting Paris. He was pressed to fix himself at Lucienne, where Cavoye afterwards had a house, the view from which is enchanting; but he replied that, that fine situation would ruin him, and that as he wished to go to no expense, so he also wished a situation which would not urge him into any. He found behind Lucienne a deep narrow valley, completely shut in, inaccessible from its swamps, and with a wretched village called Marly upon the slope of one of its hills. This closeness, without drain or the means of having any, was the sole merit of the valley. The King was overjoyed at his discovery. It was a great work, that of draining this sewer of all the environs, which threw there their garbage, and of bringing soil thither! The hermitage was made. At first, it was only for sleeping in three nights, from Wednesday to Saturday, two or three times a-year, with a dozen at the outside of courtiers, to fill the most indispensable posts.

By degrees, the hermitage was augmented, the hills were pared and cut down, to give at least the semblance of a prospect; in fine, what with buildings, gardens, waters, aqueducts, the curious and well known machine, statues, precious furniture, the park, the ornamental enclosed forest,—Marly has become what it is to-day, though it has been stripped since the death of the King. Great trees were unceasingly brought from Compiegne or farther, three-fourths of which died and were immediately after replaced; vast spaces covered with thick wood, or obscure alleys, were suddenly changed into immense pieces of water, on which people were rowed in gondolas; then they were changed again into forest (I speak of what I have seen in six weeks); basins were changed a hundred times; cascades the same; carp ponds adorned with the most exquisite painting, scarcely finished, were changed and differently arranged by the same hands; and this an infinite number of times; then there was that prodigious machine just alluded to, with its immense aqueducts, the conduit, its monstrous resources solely devoted to Marly, and no longer to Versailles; so that I am under the mark in saying that Versailles, even, did not cost so much as Marly.

Such was the fate of a place the abode of serpents, and of carrion, of toads and frogs, solely chosen to avoid expense. Such was the bad taste of the King in all things, and his proud haughty pleasure in forcing nature; which neither the most mighty war, nor devotion could subdue!

Source: The Memoirs of Loius XIX and His Court and of the Regency – Complete by duc de Louis de Rouvroy Saint-Simon, Public Domain, Project Gutenberg 2004: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3875.

Questions for Discussion

Absolute Monarchy

  1. What are the similarities and differences between Bossuet and Domat’s descriptions of absolute monarchy and its justification?
  2. What might be the potential problems with such a close association of royal power with divine power? How do these author’s seem to address this (if at all)?

Portraits

  1. What specific details speak to the image Louis XIV was trying to project?
  2. What about these images is difficult for modern viewers to understand and why?

Versailles

  1. What stands out to you in the description of Louis XIV and his court by Saint-Simon and how do these contrast with the other sources in this chapter?
  2. What specific details does Saint-Simon offer as support for his assessment of the King’s character or leadership?
  3. What details does Saint-Simon give about Versailles and what do they tell us about Louis’ use of this location?

Additional Resources:

Hyacinthe Rigaud, Louis XIV by Tessa Fleming on Smarthistory, Auguts 8, 2015

Louis le Vau, André la Nôtre, and Charles le Brun, Château de Versailles by Rachel Ropeik on Smarthistory, August 8, 2015

Map of the Canal d’Eure between Pontquin and Versailles at the British Library site. This map shows the route of a canal constructed to supply water to Versialles in the late 1600s.

 

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