Colonial Acres Coins
SKU: SKU:July.DOD-P590
France 1657 B Louis XIV Juvenile Bust 1 Liard (DOD)
France 1657 B Louis XIV Juvenile Bust 1 Liard (DOD)
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France 1657 B Louis XIV Juvenile Bust 1 Liard (DOD)
King of France during Le Grand Siècle (The Great Century), Louis XIV (1638-1715) has come to be known as both Louis the Great and the Sun King. This thrilling period of French history gave rise to brilliant innovations in art, architecture, science, literature, theatre, and music. It was also a time of violence, defined by despotism, colonial brutality, and constant war. Perhaps nothing symbolizes Louis' reign like the Palace of Versailles, a spectacular feat of creativity and engineering that embodies French elegance and grandeur -- as well as extravagance, absolutism, and outrageous excess. When he died in 1715, aged 76, Louis had positioned France as Europe's strongest military power, established it as the brightest star of the Enlightenment, and propelled French culture to the height of sophistication. This had a downside, however: an absolutely staggering amount of debt, which Louis would leave to his five-year-old great-grandson and heir, Louis XV. In just two generations, the decadence, the splendour, and the absurd extravagance of the ancien régime would come crashing down in the French Revolution.
This 1657 liard features Louis' juvenile bust. He was nineteen in 1657, having come to the throne in 1643 when he was only four years old. The juvenile bust liard begins to be phased out by the tail end of the 1650s, making this one of the last of its kind. The B mint mark identifies it as having been produced in Acquigny.
King of France during Le Grand Siècle (The Great Century), Louis XIV (1638-1715) has come to be known as both Louis the Great and the Sun King. This thrilling period of French history gave rise to brilliant innovations in art, architecture, science, literature, theatre, and music. It was also a time of violence, defined by despotism, colonial brutality, and constant war. Perhaps nothing symbolizes Louis' reign like the Palace of Versailles, a spectacular feat of creativity and engineering that embodies French elegance and grandeur -- as well as extravagance, absolutism, and outrageous excess. When he died in 1715, aged 76, Louis had positioned France as Europe's strongest military power, established it as the brightest star of the Enlightenment, and propelled French culture to the height of sophistication. This had a downside, however: an absolutely staggering amount of debt, which Louis would leave to his five-year-old great-grandson and heir, Louis XV. In just two generations, the decadence, the splendour, and the absurd extravagance of the ancien régime would come crashing down in the French Revolution.
This 1657 liard features Louis' juvenile bust. He was nineteen in 1657, having come to the throne in 1643 when he was only four years old. The juvenile bust liard begins to be phased out by the tail end of the 1650s, making this one of the last of its kind. The B mint mark identifies it as having been produced in Acquigny.
