Rather excellent biography of one of France's most famous and consequential monarchs. Written more as a popular history rather than a dry academic study, Mansel seeks to demystify Louis somewhat. Looking beyond the image of an all-powerful monarch (an image that Louis actively promoted), Mansel seeks to understand the monarchy as an institution with its own powers and limitations, as well as expectations and prerogatives. Mansel notes that the institution of the monarchy was a very public and accessible one, where normal citizens often had surprisingly easy access to the king (in contrast to typical ideas of the monarchy and the court as a very exclusive zone). For Louis, kingship was almost a public theatre, which demanded near-constant performance from his end. His relationship with the nobility was often one of patronage and reciprocity, rather than one of absolute domination as commonly portrayed.
Mansel provides a fascinating account of the court of King Louis XIV, which would provide the cultural and artistic benchmark for other European courts for much of his reign. He notes that women played a surprisingly prominent role in the French court, either as queens, princesses, mistresses, governesses, or ladies-in-waiting. The marriage of French noblewomen to other European royalty would help spread French culture and influence across the continent and these women were actively utilized by Louis and his ministers for diplomatic purposes.
Mansel also focuses on the major character flaws of Louis, which often clouded his judgement and actively worked against the larger interests of France. His revocation of the Edict of Nantes and subsequent harassment of French Protestants (or Huguenots) would see thousands of this prosperous and skilled community flee France to neighboring countries like Brandenburg, the Netherlands, and Great Britain, bleeding France of vital skills and capital (while also creating a hostile Huguenot diaspora).
His insatiable appetite for wars and French expansion would also prove his undoing later in life. While his early wars against the Dutch and German states proved successful, a growing megalomania would see Louis engage France in increasingly questionable wars which drained its resources and united Europe against it. The War of the Spanish Succession (1701 - 1714) proved particularly disastrous for France, pushing the country to the brink but for its dogged determination to continue fighting. As Mansel argues, in some sense Louis left France weaker than when he had inherited it, with few allies left within Europe.
One aspect of Mansel's history which I particularly appreciate is the positioning of Louis within larger global history. Mansel touches on Louis' relationship with not just European powers but non-European powers such as Morocco, Siam, China, and Persia. One of the most important diplomatic relationships of Louis' reign is that concerning the Ottoman Empire, one of France's oldest allies (forged through a common enmity with the Hapsburgs). Indeed, Louis would often prioritize his ties with the Grand Seigneur, including invading the western German states in 1688 to prevent the Austrians from completely knocking out the Ottomans in the aftermath of the Siege of Vienna. This would prove a miscalculation, since it left his arch-nemesis William III of the Netherlands free to invade Great Britain that same year in what became known as the Glorious Revolution.
If I had one complaint, it would be that too often Mansel references French quotes or uses French words without providing the necessary translations. Perhaps for British historians this may be unnecessary, but for someone who lacks knowledge of the French language, it can certainly be confusing!