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Sewit Politics
in Paris
3/9/00
The power of
politics in Paris, determined the power of its king. Politics was
a constant issue between French society and French monarchs. Monarchs
such as Louis XIV, were absolutist monarchs living under the so
called rule of Divine Right. Divine right was based on a theory
that all kings were especially chosen by God to be king therefore
making them divine, which was their means of justifying their actions.
They used their power of Divine Right to abuse and corrupt political
parties. Politics becomes the centralized power of the kings as
they lost their power of Divine Right as a result of the Enlightment
making the absolutist kings, turn to the control of politics as
a means to regain their lost power. The battle between the absolutist
kings vs. the people thus began, intensifying more with every monarch
and ending with the reign of Louis XVI. As absolutism became the
driving force behind the kings of France, they wanted to use their
grip on politics for their own needs of intensifying or displaying
their power to their people and foreigners, not to help the poorer
citizens of Paris thus the excess control to absolutism led to the
downfall of the French monarchy.
Signs of the
kings taking over politics in Paris started with changing the appearance
of the city. The kings of Paris added larger avenues, boulevards
and squares to display their wealth and the city’s wealth, They
symbolically showed their power from these buildings by having them
modeled to look Greek and Roman, giving the viewers of these buildings
the idea that the king has the same ideals that the great Roman
and Greek leaders once had and giving the viewers of Paris a first
and lasting impression of the city and its king. Louis Napoleon
added tree lined roads to help beautify Paris but only added them
in the richer suburbs claiming it was helping all of the city after
the poorer people complained he was only beautifying the richer
areas. The Palace Louvere started out as Louis the I palace in
Paris. It was added on to by each king as they lived in them, adding
onto it a representation of themselves and eventually making it
the largest Palace in the world, showing how much the kings of Paris
depended on the external appearance of the city to show their strengthening
grip on politics, which would drastically change the city in the
near future.
The kings of
Paris starting with Louis XI (ruled 1461-83), started to rule Paris
under an iron fist, turning their attention away from the corrupt
nobility and turning toward suppressing the lower class people of
France. Louis XI set up the beginning of the decline of France.
He ruled with Machiavellian principals claiming that “he who has
success has honor” and cared nothing on how he attained his power
and success. Louis turned his attention away from the nobility and
started to buy all the towns in France and involving himself in
wars with dukes throughout France, draining Paris of its hard earned
wealth. This resulted in the rise of the nobility and taxes for
the lower classes, which agitated them greatly. Louis XIV was the
only king ,until his time, to have obtained a strong grip on politics
to his favor and bring rise to absolutism.
Louis XIV built
the palace of Versailles, which was the first palace of a king and
court ever to be built outside of Paris. The palace was full of
the king’s political symbols such as the hall of mirror’s which
gave the person walking through them the sense that the king is
watching all who passes through his halls. The designs of the roads
of Versailles were designed as a symbol of modernity to show off
Louis’s strength as a leader, modernity meaning in this case one
step ahead of the style of the times. The palace garden was made
for Louis and specifically designed to focus on the horizon, showing
that the Versailles, the emblem of modernity would be led by politics
(the garden which was at the front of the palace) into the future.
The palace and Louis’s way of governing put France into many useless
wars further draining the money out of Paris and France and angered
the people more than they were about Versailles, leading to the
revolution.
The revolutionaries
major concern during the revolution of 1789, was the corruption
of politics. The revolutionaries were sick of government politics,
trying to beautify Paris but only beautifying the nobility. They
believed politization of everyday life was responsible for party
politics, which equaled conspiracy against the revolution. They
formed la chose publique which was a method for the revolutionaries
to keep a close eye on the formation of factional parties. The revolutionaries
claimed politics of private groups or individuals, private circles,
and expression of private interests, to be considered as a conspiracy
and counterrevolutionary. The heightened state of politics can be
attributed to the huge drop in private life, wealth and political
and economic stability because of the the abuse of politics. The
revolution had become so powerful in 1789, that political meetings
held by the government had become open to the public.
Louis Napoleon’s
(Napoleon III) use of politics was different in his reign as emperor.
Napoleon, after the revolution, made the people believe he was one
of them claiming “I am a man of no party.” After his two unsuccessful
attempts to become a monarch of France, the people of were eager
to elect him as President because of Napoleon’s way of reminding
the people about how gloriously his uncle (Napoleon I) ruled France.
His way of reminding them was very simple since Louis-Phillipe had
just been overthrown, the people were looking for someone they knew
and someone they could trust and Napoleon was it. Napoleon’s dishonest
use of politics was very clever because it put the people in the
palm of his hands, one in his hands, he crushed them. He abolished
the constitution, made by his uncle Napoleon I, and replaced it
with one of his own giving rise to the absolutism that was present
during the reigns of the Louis’s. Napoleon’s dissolving of the National
assembly enhances his method of absolutism to obtain a monarch status.
Napoleon’s military coup de etat on December 2 1851, was successful
politically for Napoleon because it suppressed the civilian uprisings
in Paris and declared him emperor in December of 1852.
Once Napoleon
reached his desired status as emperor he showed his true lack of
leadership qualities. He, just like Louis XIV, led France into another
economic decline because of his apathy of being a leader, and with
partisan politics. His wife, Empress Eugene, was one of the main
reasons why he wasn’t overthrown more earlier than he was. Her
strong forte for politics, was enough to make her a regent three
times while Napoleon was out of the country, fixing all his mistakes
due to his weak political skill. She also dominated the Bonapartist
regimes after his death. Napoleon’s weak skills caused him to enter
the Crimean war in 1854, which was very costly to the people of
France, and poorly organized. His greatest mistake was entering
the Franco-Prussian war in which the French forces were greatly
outnumbered and under armed costing even more money from France
and taking many lives as well. Napoleon displayed his political
and influential power greatly, till he became first-Consul, which
showed his true limitations of power. Napoleon underestimation of
himself, his weakness in politics, the obsession of accomplishing
his “dream” of becoming emperor and a historical legend, caused
the suffering of the French people, just as the other emperors have
done before his time.
The Kings of
France, after Louis XI, proved to be leaders that cared only for
themselves and not the people of France, whom they were supposed
to lead and represent in the world. These kings broke the principals
of politics and set out to glorify themselves to the royal audiences
in the world and ended up failing, severely at times, and the people
of France paid for their mistakes. The actions of the kings truly
shows the power of politics in Paris and France, as well as around
the world. Had these kings been more aware of the true effects and
power of politics, and not obsessed with thoughts of expansion and
domination, it could have drastically changed the history of Paris
and the history of France and its relations with other countries.
Bibliography
Perrot, Michelle A History of Private
Life , Copyright 1990
Brester,
Fenton Napoleon III - a life, copyright 1999
Comptons
Interactive Encyclopedia, 1998
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