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Live auction - bry_360887 - LOUIS XIII Écu, buste drapé et cuirassé (2e buste de Jean Warin) 1643 Paris, Monnaie de Matignon

LOUIS XIII Écu, buste drapé et cuirassé (2e buste de Jean Warin) 1643 Paris, Monnaie de Matignon XF/AU
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Estimate : 2 000 €
Price : no bid
Maximum bid : no bid
End of the sale : 04 June 2019 16:47:32
Type : Écu, buste drapé et cuirassé (2e buste de Jean Warin)
Date: 1643 
Mint name / Town : Paris, Monnaie de Matignon
Quantity minted : 208634
Metal : silver
Millesimal fineness : 917 ‰
Diameter : 40 mm
Orientation dies : 6 h.
Weight : 27,37 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Cet écu est frappé sur un flan large et régulier. Le revers a conservé une partie de son brillant de frappe. Exemplaire recouvert d’une patine grise de médaillier portant de petites taches
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : LVDOVICVS. XIII. D. - G. FR. ET. NAV. REX.
Obverse description : Buste lauré, drapé et cuirassé de Louis XIII à droite, sans baie dans la couronne.
Obverse translation : (Louis XIII, par la grâce de Dieu, roi de France et de Navarre).

Reverse


Reverse legend : (MM) SIT. NOMEN. DOMINI. - A - .BENEDICTVM. 1643.
Reverse description : Écu de France couronné.
Reverse translation : (Béni soit le nom du Seigneur).

Historical background


LOUIS XIII

(05/14/1610-05/14/1643)

Son of Henri IV and Marie de Médicis, Louis XIII was born in Fontainebleau in 1601. King in 1610, he reigned first under the regency of his mother, who followed a policy of conciliation with Spain and showered the Great with favors to ensure their peace.. The Estates General, meeting in 1614-1615, showed the disunity of the Orders and the impossibility of financial reforms. The favorite of the regent, Concino Concini, marquis of Ancre, was at the head of affairs until 1617, date of his assassination by order of the king.. The new favourite, Albert de Luynes, received the dignity of constable and governed until his death before Montauban in 1621, continuing a foreign policy favorable to the Habsburgs.. Returning to power, the queen-mother brought one of her creatures, Richelieu, former bishop of Luçon, into the Council.. From 1626 and until the end of the reign, Richelieu was as Prime Minister the absolute master of the State.. The successive plots of Marie de Medici, Gaston d'Orléans, Anne of Austria and Cinq-Mars could not overcome the favor of the cardinal. He submitted the Protestant party (taking of La Rochelle, 1628, edict of grace of Alès, 1629) and brought France into the Thirty Years' War, a war first covered (1630) then open (1635). This long enterprise of "lowering the House of Austria" was to last until 1659.. Richelieu did not see the end of it, but was able to attend the conquest of Artois, Alsace and Roussillon. With the 1630s, came a "revolution in the art of governing" corresponding to the ministry of Richelieu and the entry of France into the Thirty Years' War.. In the context of the "military revolution" of the 17th century (tenfold increase in numbers, preponderance of infantry and firearms, bastioned fortification), the unprecedented war effort imposed and justified an all-powerful state, driven by sole reason of state. "Giant of the great century", studied by the Anglo-Saxons more than by the historians of France, the French army became an armed Leviathan; the tax that feeds her weighed like never before. The exercise of power gained in efficiency, with the organization of the Council of State and the institution of intendants. A first control of opinion and language was put in place (institution of the French Academy, creation of the Gazette de France). Power also tended towards brutality: evoking the early 1630s, Omer Talon writes that "we wanted things by authority and not by concert". The Fronde appears as a failed reaction to these too rapid changes. Warrior king, king imbued with his duties, Louis XIII let the Grand Cardinal do everything while retaining the direction of the armies, which he led with bravery (siege of La Rochelle, 1628, affair of Pas de Suse, 1629, conquest of Roussillon, 1642). He used Richelieu without liking him, but after his death in 1642 he retained his ministers and continued his policy until his death the following year.. From Anne of Austria married in 1614, he had two sons, Louis XIV and Philippe d'Orléans.

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