Death and the Crown

Ritual and Politics in France Before the Revolution

Anne Byrne author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Manchester University Press

Published:24th Dec '19

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Death and the Crown cover

Looking at royal ritual in pre-revolutionary France, Death and the crown examines the deathbed and funeral of Louis XV in 1774, the lit de justice of November 1774 and the coronation of Louis XVI, including the ceremony of the royal healing touch for scrofula. It reviews the state of the field in ritual studies and appraises the situation of the monarchy in the 1770s, including the recall of the parlements and the many ways people engaged with royal ritual. It answers questions such as whether Louis XV died in fear of damnation, why Marie Antoinette was not crowned in 1775 and why Louis XVI's coronation was not held in Paris. This lively, accessible text is a useful tool for undergraduate and postgraduate teaching which will also be of interest to specialists on this under-researched period.

'This is a brilliant addition to the historiography of ceremony, ancien régime politics and the court that will particularly interest scholars of politics, ceremony and ritual, and the French monarchy.'
Lynette White, Royal Studies Journal

'This is one of the most important books to be published on the twilight of the ancien régime in several decades. In this meticulously researched and splendidly written study Anne Byrne presents us with the most scholarly account to date of the turbulent accession to the throne of Louis XVI in 1774. It will be invaluable and essential reading for scholars and students of eighteenth-century France alike.'
Ambrogio Caiani, Senior Lecturer in Modern European History, University of Kent

ISBN: 9781526143303

Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 19mm

Weight: 485g

312 pages