Early years (1774–1778) On 10 May 1774, upon the death of Louis XV, the dauphin ascended the throne as King Louis XVI of
France and
Navarre with Marie Antoinette as his
queen consort. At the outset, the new queen had limited political influence with her husband, who, with the support of his two most important ministers, Chief Minister
Maurepas and Foreign Minister
Vergennes, blocked several of her candidates from assuming important positions, including Choiseul. The queen did play a decisive role in the disgrace and exile of the most powerful of Louis XV's ministers, the
Duc d'Aiguillon. On 24 May 1774, two weeks after the death of Louis XV, the king gave his wife the
Petit Trianon, a small château on the grounds of Versailles that Louis XV had built for Madame de Pompadour. Louis XVI allowed Marie Antoinette to renovate it to suit her own tastes; soon rumours circulated that she had plastered the walls with gold and diamonds. by
Jean-Baptiste André Gautier-Dagoty, The queen was depicted as spending heavily on fashion, luxuries and gambling even as the country faced a grave financial crisis and the population suffered, but she seems to have been exceptionally frugal, when need be, and once refrained from buying expensive presents for her children on New Years because of the plight of the less fortunate poor.
Rose Bertin created dresses for her, hairstyles such as
poufs, up to three feet (90 cm) high, and the
panache—a spray of feather plumes. She and her court also adopted the English fashion of dresses made of
indienne (a material banned in France from 1686 until 1759 to protect local French woolen and silk cloth industries),
percale, and
muslin. The
Flour War of 1775—a series of riots caused by the high prices of flour and bread—damaged her reputation among the general public. Eventually, Marie Antoinette's reputation was no better than that of previous kings. Many French people were beginning to blame her for the degrading economic situation, suggesting the country's inability to pay off its debt was the result of her wasting the crown's money. In her correspondence, Maria Theresa expressed concern over her daughter's spending habits, citing the civil unrest it was beginning to cause. As early as 1774, Marie Antoinette had begun to befriend some of her male admirers, such as the
Baron de Besenval, the
Duc de Coigny, and
Count Valentin Esterházy, and also formed deep friendships with various ladies at court. Most noted was
Marie-Louise, Princesse de Lamballe, related to the royal family through her marriage to
the eldest son and heir of the
Duke of Penthièvre. On 19 September 1774, she appointed her superintendent of her household, an appointment she soon transferred to her new favourite, the
Duchess of Polignac. In 1774, she took under her the patronage of her former music teacher, the German opera composer
Christoph Willibald Gluck, who remained in France until 1779.
Motherhood, changes at court and intervention in politics (1778–1781) Amidst the atmosphere of a wave of
libelles, the Holy Roman Emperor
Joseph II came to France incognito, using the name Comte de Falkenstein, for a six-week visit during which he toured Paris extensively and was a guest at Versailles. He visited the king and queen (his sister) on 18 April 1777 at the
Château de la Muette and spoke frankly to Louis, curious as to why the royal marriage had not been consummated, concluding that no obstacle to the couple's conjugal relations existed save the queen's lack of interest and the king's unwillingness to exert himself.In a letter to his brother
Leopold, Grand Duke of Tuscany, Joseph II described them as "a couple of complete blunderers." He disclosed to Leopold that the inexperienced Louis had confided in him the course of action he had been undertaking in their marital bed; saying Louis "introduces the member," but then "stays there without moving for about two minutes," withdraws without having completed the act and "bids goodnight." Suggestions that Louis suffered from
phimosis, which was relieved by
circumcision, have been discredited. Nevertheless, following Joseph's intervention, the marriage was finally consummated in August 1777. Eight months later, in April 1778, it was suspected that the queen was pregnant, which was officially announced on 16 May. Marie Antoinette's daughter,
Marie-Thérèse Charlotte,
Madame Royale, was born at Versailles on 19 December 1778. The child's paternity was contested in the
libelles, as were all her children's. In the middle of the queen's pregnancy, two events occurred which had a profound effect on her later life: the return of her friend, the Swedish diplomat Count
Axel von Fersen the Younger to Versailles for two years, and her brother's
claim to the throne of
Bavaria, contested by
Saxony and Prussia. Marie Antoinette pleaded with her husband for the French to intercede on behalf of Austria. The
Peace of Teschen, signed on 13 May 1779, ended the brief conflict, with the queen imposing French mediation at her mother's insistence and Austria gaining the
Innviertel territory of at least 100,000 inhabitants—a strong retreat from the early French position which was hostile towards Austria. This gave the impression, partially justified, that the queen had sided with Austria against France. Meanwhile, the queen began to institute changes in court customs. Some of them were met with the disapproval of the older generation, such as the abandonment of heavy makeup and the popular wide-hooped
panniers. The new fashion called for a simpler feminine look, typified first by the rustic
robe à la polonaise style and later by the
gaulle, a layered muslin dress Marie Antoinette wore in a 1783
Vigée-Le Brun portrait. In 1780 she began to participate in amateur plays and musicals in the
Théâtre de la Reine built for her by
Richard Mique. '', a 1783 portrait of Marie Antoinette that was criticised for showing what was described as improper and informal attire for a queen. In response to the criticism, it was repainted with the queen in a blue silk dress.|left Repayment of the French debt remained a difficult problem, further exacerbated by Vergennes and also by Marie Antoinette prodding Louis to involve France in the
American Revolutionary War. The primary motive for the queen's involvement in political affairs in this period may arguably have had more to do with court factionalism than any true interest on her part in politics, but she played an important role in aiding the
American Revolution by securing Austrian and
Russian support for France, which resulted in the establishment of the
First League of Armed Neutrality that stopped Britain's attack, and by weighing in decisively for the nomination of
Philippe Henri, marquis de Ségur, as Minister of War and
Charles Eugène Gabriel de La Croix as Secretary of the Navy in 1780, who helped
George Washington defeat the British in the American Revolutionary War, which ended in 1783. Marie Antoinette's second pregnancy ended in a miscarriage early in July 1779, as confirmed by letters between the queen and her mother and by the account of the incident in the memoir of
Madame Campan, the chief lady of the queen's chamber. However, some historians believed that she may have experienced bleeding related to an irregular menstrual cycle, which she mistook for a lost pregnancy. Her third pregnancy was affirmed in March 1781, and on 22 October she gave birth to
Louis Joseph Xavier François, Dauphin of France. Empress Maria Theresa died on 29 November 1780 in Vienna. Marie Antoinette feared that the death of her mother would jeopardise the Franco-Austrian alliance, and ultimately herself. Still, Joseph II wrote to her that he had no intention of breaking the alliance. A second visit from Joseph II, which took place in July 1781 to reaffirm the Franco-Austrian alliance and also to see his sister, was tainted by false rumours that Marie Antoinette was sending money to him from the French treasury.
Declining popularity (1782–1785) Despite the general celebration over the birth of an heir, Marie Antoinette's political influence was perceived to greatly benefit Austria. During the
Kettle War in which Joseph II attempted to open the
Scheldt river for naval passage, Marie Antoinette succeeded in obliging Vergennes to pay huge financial compensation to Austria. The queen was able to obtain her brother's support against
Great Britain in the American Revolution, and she neutralized French hostility to his alliance with Russia. In 1782, after the governess of the royal children, the
Princesse de Guéméné, went bankrupt and resigned, Marie Antoinette appointed her favourite, the
Duchess of Polignac, to the position. This decision met with disapproval from the court as the duchess was considered to be of too modest origins to occupy such an exalted position. In contrast, both the king and the queen trusted Madame de Polignac completely, gave her a 13-room apartment in Versailles and paid her well. The entire
Polignac family benefited greatly from royal favour in titles and positions, but its sudden wealth and lavish lifestyle outraged most aristocratic families, who resented the Polignacs' dominance at court and also fueled the increasing popular disapproval of Marie Antoinette, mostly in Paris. Mercy-Argenteau wrote to the empress: "It is almost unexampled that in so short a time, the royal favour should have brought such overwhelming advantages to a family". , on the right
Madame Royale, overlooked by a
bust of Louis XVI, 1781, by
Charles Le ClercqIn June 1783, Marie Antoinette's pregnancy was announced, but on the night of 1–2 November, her 28th birthday, she suffered a miscarriage. In 1783 the queen played a decisive role in the nomination of
Charles Alexandre de Calonne, a close friend of the Polignacs, as
Controller-General of Finances, and of the
Baron de Breteuil as the Minister of the Royal Household, making him perhaps the strongest and most conservative minister of the reign. The result of these two nominations was that Marie Antoinette's influence became paramount in government, and the new ministers rejected any major change to the structure of the old regime. More than that, the
decree by de Ségur, the minister of war, requiring four
quarters of nobility as a condition for the appointment of officers, mainly served the interest of older noble families including poorer provincial ones, who were widely seen as a reactionary interest group by ambitious members of the middle and professional classes, by some more recent nobility, and even by the Parisian populace and press. The measure also blocked the access of 'commoners', mainly sons of members of the professional classes, and of more recently elevated nobility to important positions in the armed forces. As such, the decree became an important grievance for social classes that had been habitually supportive of the monarchy and established order, and which went on to supply the bulk of the early leadership of the French Revolution. Count
Axel von Fersen, after his return from America in June 1783, was accepted into the queen's private society. There were claims that the two were romantically involved, but since most of their correspondence has been lost, destroyed, or redacted, for many years there was no conclusive evidence. Starting in 2016, scientists at the
Centre for Research and Restoration of Museums of France uncovered some of the redacted text of the queen's letters to Fersen. The revealed texts do not mention a physical relationship but do confirm a very strong emotional relationship. Around this time, pamphlets describing farcical sexual deviance including the queen and her friends in the court were growing in popularity around the country. The ''Portefeuille d'un talon rouge'' was one of the earliest, including the queen and a variety of other nobles in a political statement decrying the immoral practices of the court. As time went on, these came to focus more on the queen. They described amorous encounters with a wide range of figures, from the Duchess of Polignac to Louis XV. As these attacks increased, they were connected with the public's dislike of her association with the rival nation of Austria. It was publicly suggested that her supposed behaviour was learned at the Austrian court, particularly lesbianism. In 1783, the queen was busy with the creation of her "
hamlet", a rustic retreat built by her favoured architect
Richard Mique, according to the designs of the painter
Hubert Robert. Its creation caused another uproar when its cost became widely known. However, the hamlet was not an eccentricity of Marie Antoinette's. It was en vogue at the time for nobles to have recreations of small villages on their properties. In fact, the design was copied from that of
Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé. It was also significantly smaller and less intricate than many other nobles'. Around this time she accumulated a library of 5,000 books. Those on music, often dedicated to her, were the most read, though she also liked to read history. She sponsored the arts, in particular music. Marie Antoinette preferred to hold her musicales in the salon of her
Petit appartement de la reine in the Palace of Versailles or in the Théâtre de la Reine. She limited the audience to her intimate circle and a few musicians, among them the
Chevalier de Saint-Georges. "Admitted to perform music with the Queen," Saint-Georges probably played his violin sonatas for two instruments, with Her Majesty playing the
fortepiano. She also supported some scientific endeavours, encouraging and witnessing the first launch of a
Montgolfière hot air balloon; this extraordinary feat which represented a turning point in human civilization was done by
Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier. On 27 April 1784,
Pierre Beaumarchais's play
The Marriage of Figaro premiered in Paris. Initially banned by the king because of its negative portrayal of the nobility, the play was finally allowed to be publicly performed because of the queen's support and its overwhelming popularity at court, where secret readings of it had been given by Marie Antoinette. The play was a disaster for the image of the monarchy and aristocracy. It inspired
Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro, which premiered in Vienna on 1 May 1786. , 1785 On 24 October 1784, putting the Baron de Breteuil in charge of its acquisition, Louis XVI bought the
Château de Saint-Cloud from
Louis Philippe I, Duke of Orléans in the name of his wife, which she wanted because of their expanding family. She wanted to be able to own her own property, one that was actually hers, to then have the authority to bequeath it to "whichever of my children I wish," choosing the child she thought could use it rather than it going through patriarchal inheritance laws or whims. It was proposed that the cost could be covered by other sales, such as that of the
château Trompette in Bordeaux. This was unpopular, particularly with those factions of the nobility who disliked the queen but also with a growing percentage of the population who disapproved of a queen of France independently owning a private residence. The purchase of Saint-Cloud thus damaged the public's image of the queen even further. The château's high price, almost 6 million
livres, plus the substantial extra cost of redecorating, ensured that much less money was going towards repaying France's substantial debt. On 27 March 1785, Marie Antoinette gave birth to a second son,
Louis Charles, who bore the title of
Duke of Normandy. The fact that the birth occurred exactly nine months after Fersen's return did not escape the attention of many, leading to doubt as to the parentage of the child and to a noticeable decline of the queen's reputation in public opinion. The majority of Marie Antoinette's and Louis Charles' biographers believe that he was the biological son of Louis XVI, including
Stefan Zweig and
Antonia Fraser. Fraser has noted that the birthdate matches up with a known conjugal visit from the king. Courtiers at Versailles noted in their diaries that the date of conception corresponded with a period when the king and queen had spent much time together, but these details were ignored amid attacks on the queen's character. These suspicions of illegitimacy further turned popular opinion sharply against the queen, and the image of a licentious, spendthrift, empty-headed foreign queen was quickly taking root in the French psyche. A second daughter, her last child, Marie Sophie Hélène Béatrix,
Madame Sophie, was born on 9 July 1786 and lived only eleven months until 19 June 1787. She was named after the king's aunt,
Princess Sophie of France.
Prelude to the Revolution: scandals and the failure of reforms (1786–1789) Affair of the Diamond Necklace , in France Marie Antoinette began to abandon her more carefree activities to become increasingly involved in politics in her role as queen of France. By publicly showing her attention to the education and care of her children, the queen sought to improve the dissolute image that had begun to shadow her reputation in 1785 from the "
Affair of the Diamond Necklace", which involved members of her court defrauding jewelers of the price of an expensive diamond necklace they had originally created for Madame du Barry. The main actors in the scandal were
Cardinal de Rohan,
Prince de Rohan-Guéméné, and
Jeanne de Valois-Saint-Rémy, Comtesse de la Motte. Marie Antoinette had profoundly disliked Rohan since the time he had been the French ambassador to Vienna when she was a child. Despite his high clerical position at the Court, she never addressed a word to him. Others involved were
Nicole Lequay, alias ''Baronne d'Oliva'', a prostitute who happened to look like Marie Antoinette;
Rétaux de Villette, a forger;
Alessandro Cagliostro, an Italian adventurer; and the
Count de La Motte, Jeanne de Valois' husband. Madame de La Motte tricked Rohan into buying the necklace as a gift to Marie Antoinette, for him to gain the queen's favour. When the affair was discovered, those involved were arrested, tried, convicted, and either imprisoned or exiled—except Count de La Motte and Rétaux de Villette, who both managed to flee. Madame de La Motte was sentenced for life to confinement in the
Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, which also served as a prison for women. Judged by the
Parlement of Paris, Rohan was found not guilty and allowed to leave the
Bastille. Although later commentators claimed that the affair was extremely damaging to the queen's reputation, even going so far as to say that the affair bolstered support for the French Revolution, neither the court records nor contemporary pamphlets implicated Marie Antoinette. Only later, in 1789 after the Revolution had already begun, did pamphlets and caricatures use the affair of the diamond necklace to criticize the queen for avarice and lasciviousness. The Assembly was a failure; it did not pass any reforms and instead fell into a pattern of defying the king. On the urging of the queen, Louis dismissed Calonne on 8 April. On 1 May
Étienne Charles de Loménie de Brienne,
Archbishop of Toulouse and one of the queen's political allies, was appointed by the king at her urging to replace Calonne, first as controller-general of finances and then as
chief minister. He began to institute more cutbacks at court while trying to restore the royal absolute power weakened by the Parlement. Brienne was unable to improve the financial situation, and since he was the queen's ally, this failure adversely affected her political position. The continued poor financial climate of the country resulted in the 25 May dissolution of the Assembly of Notables because of its inability to function, and the lack of solutions was blamed on the queen. While the sole fault for the financial crisis did not lie with her, Marie Antoinette was the biggest obstacle to any major reform effort. She had played a decisive role in the disgrace of the reformer ministers of finance,
Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot (in 1776), and
Jacques Necker (first dismissal in 1781). If the secret expenses of the queen were taken into account, court expenses were much higher than the official estimate of 7% of the state budget. '') of Marie Antoinette and her three surviving children,
Marie Thérèse,
Louis Charles (on her lap) and
Louis Joseph holding up the drape of an empty bassinet signifying the recent death of Marie's fourth child Sophie was meant to improve her reputation by depicting her as a mother in simple, yet stately attire, by
Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, 1787. The queen attempted to fight back at propaganda by portraying herself as a caring mother, most notably in the painting by
Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun exhibited at the
Royal Académie Salon de Paris in August 1787,
showing her with her children. Around the same time, Jeanne de Valois-Saint-Rémy escaped from prison and fled to London where she published damaging slander concerning her supposed amorous affair with the queen. The political situation in 1787 worsened when, at Marie Antoinette's urging, the
Parlement of Paris was exiled to
Troyes on 15 August. It further deteriorated when Louis tried to use a
lit de justice on 11 November to impose legislation. The new
Duke of Orléans publicly protested the king's actions and was subsequently exiled to his
Château de Villers-Cotterêts. The May Edicts issued on 8 May 1788 were also opposed by the public and parlement. On 8 August Louis announced his intention to bring back the
Estates General, the traditional elected legislature of the country, which had not been convened since 1614. While from late 1787 up to his death in June 1789, Marie Antoinette's primary concern was the continued deterioration of the health of Louis Joseph, who suffered from
tuberculosis, she was directly involved in the exile of the
Parlement, the May Edicts, and the announcement regarding the Estates General. She participated in the
King Council, the first queen to do so in over 175 years (since
Marie de' Medici had been named
Chef du Conseil du Roi, between 1614 and 1617), and she was making the major decisions behind the scene and in the Royal Council. Marie Antoinette was instrumental in the reinstatement of Necker as finance minister on 26 August 1788, a popular move, even though she herself was worried that it would go against her if Necker proved unsuccessful in reforming the country's finances. She accepted Necker's proposition to double the representation of the Third Estate (
tiers état) in an attempt to check the power of the aristocracy. On the eve of the opening of the Estates General the queen attended the mass celebrating its return. As soon as it opened on 5 May 1789, the fracture between the democratic
Third Estate (consisting of bourgeois and radical aristocrats) and the conservative nobility of the Second Estate widened, and Marie Antoinette knew that her rival, the Duke of Orléans, who had given money and bread to the people during the winter, would be acclaimed by the crowd, much to her detriment. The death of Louis Joseph on 4 June, which deeply affected his parents, was virtually ignored by the French people who were instead preparing for the next meeting of the Estates General and hoping for a resolution to the bread crisis. As the Third Estate declared itself a
National Assembly, and as people either spread or believed rumours that the queen wished to bathe in their blood, Marie Antoinette went into mourning for her eldest son. Her role was decisive in urging the king to remain firm and not concede to popular demands for reforms. In addition, she showed her determination to use force to crush the forthcoming revolution. ==French Revolution before Varennes (1789–1791)==