, 1700 In 1702, at the age of 20, Louis was admitted by his grandfather King Louis XIV to the ''
Conseil d'en haut'' (High Council), which was in charge of state secrets regarding religion, diplomacy and war. His father had been admitted only at the age of 30. In 1708, during the
War of the Spanish Succession, Louis was given command of the army in
Flanders, with the experienced soldier
Louis Joseph, Duke of Vendôme, serving under him. The uncertainty as to which of the two should truly command the army led to delays and the need to refer decisions to Louis XIV. Continued indecision led to French inactivity as messages travelled between the front and Versailles; the Allies were then able to take the initiative. The culmination of this was the
Battle of Oudenarde, where Louis's mistaken choices and reluctance to support Vendôme led to a decisive defeat for the French. In the aftermath of the defeat, his hesitation to relieve the
Siege of Lille led to the loss of the city and thereby allowed the Allies to make their first incursions onto French soil. Louis was influenced by the
dévots and was surrounded by a circle of people known as the
faction de Bourgogne, notably including his old tutor
François Fénelon, his old governor
Paul de Beauvilliers, Duke of Saint-Aignan and his brother-in-law
Charles Honoré d'Albert, Duke of Chevreuse, as well as the renowned memorialist,
Louis de Rouvroy, Duke of Saint-Simon. These high-ranking aristocrats sought a return to a monarchy less
absolute and less
centralised, with more powers granted to the individual provinces. Their view was that government should work through councils and intermediary organs between the king and the people. These intermediary councils were to be made up not by commoners from the
bourgeoisie (like the ministers appointed by Louis XIV) but by aristocrats who perceived themselves as the representatives of the people and would assist the king in governance and the exercise of power. Had Louis succeeded to the throne, he might have applied this concept of monarchy. == Death and legacy ==