The central thesis of this article is that Louis XIV’s reign, which has tended to be considered from an exclusively visual perspective, warrants re-evaluation from a sonic angle. Voice and sound assume a particular intensity at the time of the king’s final illness and after his death in 1715: not only do those closest to Louis, including Mme de Maintenon and his two servants, the Antoine brothers, take care to record the monarch’s final words and the sound of his voice, but the voices of others commemorate and question the legacy of a king who in his later years presided over military defeats, crippling taxes and widespread hardship. The words of preachers, such as Quiqueran de Beaujeu and Massillon, take inspiration from criticism of the m...
Rolf Reichardt and Herbert Schneider : Popular songs and History in late 18th-century France. This...
The great compilations of french political songs from XVI-XVIIIth centuries remain few analysed by m...
International audienceThis article proposes a non-event-driven analysis of an extraordinary event: t...
Historians have concentrated on how Louis XIV and his ministers consciously exploited the persuasive...
François Moureau : Royal entries or the prince's pleasure. This article considers royal entries as ...
War and songs. This article focuses on a collection of songs printed in 1649, the Recueil général de...
Versailles has attracted a great deal of research concerned with determining the iconographical and ...
International audienceTo explain the musical affinity between the Motets à grand chœur with instrume...
This article asks what it is that the Medallic History of Louis XIV represents. Is it, as its author...
This is the first scholarly study of the political and economic relationship between Louis XIV and t...
This article explores the commemorative meaning of sound in early modern Montpellier, focusing on th...
This article examines debate about the nature of the French monarchy during the early years of Louis...
Five times « Amen ! ». The Songs of Saint Louis's Egyptian Crusade, A Neglected Source of Royalist O...
Au XVIIe siècle, en France, la musique joue un rôle privé et en même temps officiel dans le cadre d'...
This article explores the commemorative meaning of sound in early modern Montpellier, focusing on th...
Rolf Reichardt and Herbert Schneider : Popular songs and History in late 18th-century France. This...
The great compilations of french political songs from XVI-XVIIIth centuries remain few analysed by m...
International audienceThis article proposes a non-event-driven analysis of an extraordinary event: t...
Historians have concentrated on how Louis XIV and his ministers consciously exploited the persuasive...
François Moureau : Royal entries or the prince's pleasure. This article considers royal entries as ...
War and songs. This article focuses on a collection of songs printed in 1649, the Recueil général de...
Versailles has attracted a great deal of research concerned with determining the iconographical and ...
International audienceTo explain the musical affinity between the Motets à grand chœur with instrume...
This article asks what it is that the Medallic History of Louis XIV represents. Is it, as its author...
This is the first scholarly study of the political and economic relationship between Louis XIV and t...
This article explores the commemorative meaning of sound in early modern Montpellier, focusing on th...
This article examines debate about the nature of the French monarchy during the early years of Louis...
Five times « Amen ! ». The Songs of Saint Louis's Egyptian Crusade, A Neglected Source of Royalist O...
Au XVIIe siècle, en France, la musique joue un rôle privé et en même temps officiel dans le cadre d'...
This article explores the commemorative meaning of sound in early modern Montpellier, focusing on th...
Rolf Reichardt and Herbert Schneider : Popular songs and History in late 18th-century France. This...
The great compilations of french political songs from XVI-XVIIIth centuries remain few analysed by m...
International audienceThis article proposes a non-event-driven analysis of an extraordinary event: t...