Towards the end of August
1715, Louis XIV was dying of
gangrene. On
September 1, the king passed away after having reigned in France for 72 years, and Louis XV was immediately hailed as the new King of France with a grand coronation.
In August 1714, Louis XIV had made a will which granted a prominent role in the anticipated regency to his two legitimised sons by his former mistress,
Madame de Montespan, the
Duc de Maine and the
Comte de Toulouse. By legitimising his bastard sons, Louis XIV was trying to remedy the death of most of his male heirs in the three preceding years, and ensure the future of the endangered dynasty. The calculation was that should the young Louis XV die, the bastard sons of Louis XIV would succeed him on the throne. This was in contravention of the traditional rule of succession to the throne of France. The move also resulted from the insistence of Louis XIV's second wife,
Madame de Maintenon, who had raised the two boys and was on close and friendly terms with them (other bastard sons of the king, not raised by Madame de Maintenon, were not legitimised). The will sought to enhance the positions of Toulouse, and especially the elder son, Maine, at the expense of the man who was expected, by traditional right, to become
regent and rule France until Louis XV reached adulthood,
Philippe d'Orléans, son of Louis XIV's younger brother. The will stipulated that until the new king reached the age of majority, the nation was to be run by a Regency Council of 14 members. Philippe d'Orléans was named president of the council, but all decisions were to be taken by majority vote; and the composition of the council, which included Maine, Toulouse and various members of Louis XIV's administration, was such that Orléans would usually be outvoted.
The content of the will had become known before the old king died, and factions had already begun to line up behind Maine, Toulouse and Maintenon on one hand, and Orléans on the other. Orléans enjoyed the support of many amongst the
old sword nobility (
noblesse d'épée), descending from medieval knights, as opposed to the
noblesse de robe, the new aristocracy of recently ennobled lawyers and civil servants. Louis XIV had usually excluded the
noblesse d'épée from government in favour of commoners from the
bourgeoisie who often entered the
noblesse de robe and whom he could control better. Thus the
noblesse d'épée yearned for a change of policy more favourable to them, and were greatly displeased with the legitimisation of the "royal bastards" Maine and Toulouse, which they regarded as an affront to the traditional rules of inheritance.
The
Parlement of Paris, another political entity which Louis XIV had shut out of power, also hoped for an Orléans regency and a change of course in the government, with increased powers given to the
Parlement. Religion too entered the picture. Madame de Maintenon was a supporter of the
Jesuits, the
Pope, and the Pope's controversial
Bull Unigenitus, a
1713 papal bull directed against the
Jansenists, a Catholic group popular in France who were deemed to have too many
Protestant tendencies. Orléans was naturally supported by the Jansenists and the
Gallicans (French Catholics who wanted their church to be more independent from Rome), since they thought he would dislodge the Jesuit-Papist group from power after his own accession to power.
It appears that in the final weeks before his death, King Louis XIV arrived at somewhat of a reconciliation with his nephew Philippe d'Orléans. Bidding adieu to the closest courtiers and ministers on
August 26, the king had told them: "Always obey the orders my nephew Philippe d'Orléans will give you; he will govern the kingdom"
².
In the following days, Philippe d'Orléans met with and made promises to various aristocrats, clergymen, and members of the
Parlement of Paris to secure their support. He promised the aristocrats places on the new government councils he intended to form, which would eventually become known as the
polysynody; he assured Jansenists and Gallicans he would be lenient regarding
Unigenitus; and he promised the
Parlement he would restore its right of remonstrance (the right to criticize and delay royal edicts), which had been taken away from the
Parlement by Louis XIV in
1673.
On September 2, the day after Louis XIV died, there was a special session of the
Parlement of Paris. It was attended not only by the magistrates who were usually there, but also by the peers and princes of the blood. The king's will was read, and the future of the government decided. Philippe d'Orléans addressed the assembly. He stated his claim to be made regent, asking that he be given full power. He referred to a recent conversation in which the king had indicated to him that he would govern. He reminded those present of the arrangements he had negotiated with them over the preceding days.
The
Parlement responded affirmatively. He was granted the crucial right to choose his own Regency Council. Thus the king's written will was to a large extent nullified, and Philippe d'Orléans became, in fact, regent. He was 41 years old. The
Parlement, on the other hand, recovered its right of remonstrance. This court
coup was recorded in detail by
Saint-Simon, the famous writer of memoirs. Orléans took the symbolic decision to relocate the government to Paris, and the court in Versailles disbanded.
The regent conducted affairs of state from his Parisian palace, the
Palais Royal. The young Louis XV was moved to the modern lodgings attached to the medieval fortress of
Vincennes, located 7 km/4.5 miles east of Paris in the Forest of Vincennes, where the air was deemed more wholesome and healthy than in Paris. Later during the regency he was moved to the
Tuileries Palace, in the center of Paris, near the Palais Royal.
In keeping with the tradition that all French royal princes, when they reached their seventh birthdays, should be put under the care of men, a tearful Louis was separated from his governess, Madame de Ventadour, in February
1717, and put in the care of the
Duc de Villeroi, who had been designated as his governor in Louis XIV's will of August 1714.
³ The Duc de Villeroi served under the formal authority of the Duc de Maine, made superintendent of the king's education. He was aided by
André-Hercule de Fleury (later to become Cardinal Fleury), tutor to the young king. The Duc de Villeroi, an old and vain courtier, loved to show the good manners and talents of his pupil. The young king, during endless public ceremonies, had to learn to hide his feelings and his natural shyness. He acquired the cold attitude and air of majesty that he would display during his entire life in public, as well as a taste for private apartments and intimate circles – in short an almost private bourgeois lifestyle.
Fleury, his tutor, gave him an excellent education, with renowned professors such as the geographer
Guillaume Delisle. Louis XV's was an extremely curious and open-minded personality. He was an avid reader, and of eclectic tastes. A man of the
Enlightenment, fond of science and new technologies, he pushed for the creation of a department of physics (
1769) and mechanics (
1773) at the
Collège de France. The Cardinal Fleury, an ambitious man, and, like the king, secretive, but above all affable, was deeply admired by Louis XV, and had a great influence on the rest of the king's life.
During the
Régence, the regent, Philippe d'Orléans, in search of support, and in keeping with his promises, favoured the
nobility (aristocrats) who had been deprived of power during the reign of Louis XIV. He established the so-called
polysynody (
September 15, 1715), a short-lived structure of councils that gave the aristocracy a visible appearance of participating in the government. He concluded an alliance with
Great Britain and the Netherlands in
1717 (
Triple Alliance) in an effort to prevent
Philip V of Spain from claiming the crown of France should the young Louis XV die. Confronted with a total lack of expertise amongst the aristocracy in government affairs, the regent reverted to the monarchical organization of government that existed under Louis XIV and by
1718 reinstated
secretaries of state. Cardinal Dubois, close confidant of the regent, was made prime minister in
1722. In an attempt to replenish the French treasury the regency tried a number of original financial experiments, notable amongst which was the famous inflationary scheme of
John Law. The bursting of the speculative bubble fueled by Law's system brought about the ruin of many aristocrats.
In
1721, Louis XV was betrothed to his first cousin,
Maria Ana Victoria de Borbón, daughter of Philip V of Spain and his second wife
Elizabeth Farnese. The eleven-year-old king found no interest in the arrival in Paris of his future wife, the three-year-old Spanish
infanta, who only bored him. In June
1722 the young king and the court returned to Versailles, where they would stay until the end of the reign. In October of the same year, Louis XV was officially crowned in
Reims Cathedral. On
February 15, 1723, as he turned thirteen, the king was declared of majority by the
Parlement of Paris, thus ending the
Régence. The king left the Duc d'Orléans in charge of state affairs. The Duc d'Orléans was made first minister on the death of Cardinal Dubois in August 1723, and he himself died in December of the same year. Following the advice of Fleury, Louis XV appointed his cousin the
Duc de Bourbon, to replace the late Duc d'Orléans.