The Courtiers and the Court of Louis XIII, 1610–1643

The Courtiers and the Court of Louis XIII, 1610–1643 book cover

The Courtiers and the Court of Louis XIII, 1610–1643

Author(s): Marc W. S. Jaffré (Author)

  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication Date: July 17, 2025
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 384 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0198957610
  • ISBN-13: 9780198957614

Book Description

Louis XIII’s court has long been a fixture of popular culture, thanks in part to the many movie and TV adaptations of Alexandre Dumas’s novel, The Three Musketeers. Yet it remains misunderstood, commonly mischaracterized as unimportant, or wholly subservient to the whims of Cardinal Richelieu.

Seeking to correct this narrative, Marc W. S. Jaffré here offers a comprehensive analysis of the court’s institutional, political, social, cultural, ceremonial, and financial development, emphasizing its very wide range of active participants, from the nobility, financiers, merchants, to lower ranking household members. The close study engages with the key issues of Louis’s reign: the destabilizing role of the minister-favourite, Cardinal Richelieu; the turbulent family dynamics that led Louis to wage wars against his mother, his brother, and his cousins; the backdrop of war, both with the Huguenots and within the context of the Thirty Years War; and the rise of salon culture.

In so doing, the court is shown to be a central, vibrant, and misunderstood element of early modern French history and culture. Courtiers, artisans, merchants, and financiers, among others, are shown to have played key roles in shaping the institutional, political, cultural, economic, and military framework of the court, and Louis XIII’s reign more generally. In challenging the top-down paradigm prevalent in court studies, this monograph provides crucial correctives to the existing narrative that Louis XIII’s court was weak or unimportant and simultaneously revises how early modern courts and their development have been understood historiographically.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“The reader is struck throughout by the author’s ability – in a clear and uncluttered style – to bring existing historiography into dialogue with a vast corpus of primary sources, including private, political and diplomatic correspondence, memoirs, histories,edicts and ordinances, minutes from the council of finance, newspapers, all supplemented by useful illustrations and highly appreciated graphs. The study’s broad scope – shifting from merchants to battlefields – masterfully underscores the centrality of court studies to our understanding of Ancien Régime society.” — Stanislas Zagun, The Seventeenth Century

“This is a masterful study of privilege and power relevant to ancien régime and revolutionary studies.” — L. A. Rollo, CHOICE

“The author’s mastery of his subject is impressive. The book is well written and engaging. It is history at its best.” — Samuel Clark, European Review of History

About the Author

MARC W. S. JAFFRÉ, Researcher, University of Groningen; Honorary Fellow, Durham University

Marc W. S. Jaffré is an historian specializing in the reigns of Henri IV and Louis XIII of France. He holds a doctorate in history from the University of St Andrews. He has been a lecturer at the Universities of St Andrews, Oxford (Balliol College), and Durham and is currently based at the University of Groningen (Netherlands), where he is a researcher for the ‘Histories of Transitional Justice Project’. He remains an Honorary Fellow at Durham University and is also Deputy Chair of the European Branch of the Society for Court Studies.

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