stocks-mostly-lower t1_izji9an wrote
Reply to comment by Danivelle in “Being Madame is a miserable job” Liselotte of the Palatinate lived at the court of the French king Louis XIV and wrote countless letters that offer a unique insight into the intrigues and everyday life of the nobility. by swissnationalmuseum
He was unkind to anyone who wore skirts. He and a prominent lover assaulted one of Louis XIV’s legitimized sons, and had a long-term affair with the kid.
nyanlol t1_izk6efn wrote
im not gonna lie I was prepared to be like "poor rich lady boo hoo" but God damn that is genuinely awful
stocks-mostly-lower t1_izkdjm6 wrote
This is the tragic history Louis of Borbon, the young legitimated son of King Louis XIV. He was the nephew of Monsieur (Prince Phillipe) who was the brother of the king. Along with his handsome and utterly corrupt longtime lover the Duc de Lorraine, Philippe seduced the vulnerable boy. The boy’s father, King Louis XIV, and his mother, Madame Louise de Valliere, blamed the kid for the sexual assault/affair, and had nothing more to do with him. Ever.
Louis de Borbon joined the French army, and died in battle at the age of 16. His parents only had callous things to say about his death.
I dearly hope that this poor child was welcomed to heaven after such a tragic life. This is an excellent little documentary about him.
letssnark t1_izkvzrz wrote
Apparently she really loved children and took an active role in the lives of her step daughters, and not just when they were small, but for the rest of her life. From what I've read, she actually sounds like a decent person, and felt out of place at Versailles with the intrigue and back stabbing. She was an extensive letter writer, so there is quite a lot of information about her life through those.
EarlGreyTea-Hawt t1_izme7gx wrote
The fact that she thought her letters would be destroyed makes them so personal. She out wrote in correspondence the famously prolific Montesquieu...but she wasn't writing in his highly stylized manner meant for posterity, so it's really revealing about the quotidian life of nobles of the court.
[deleted] t1_izmr43b wrote
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