The Fronde, a civil war in France, …

Years: 1648 - 1648
October

The Fronde, a civil war in France, had erupted as the Thirty Years' War ended in May 1648 when a tax levied by Cardinal Mazarin on judicial officers of the Parlement of Paris had been met not merely with a refusal to pay but with a condemnation of earlier financial edicts and a demand for the acceptance of a scheme of constitutional reforms framed by a united committee of the parlement (the Chambre Saint-Louis), composed of members of all the sovereign courts of Paris.

The military record of the first Fronde (the Fronde Parlementaire) is almost blank.

Mazarin, strengthened in August 1648 by the news of the victory of Louis, duc d’Enghien (later le Grand Condé) at Lens, had suddenly arrested the leaders of the parlement, whereupon Parisians, in an ironic twist, had broken into insurrection and barricaded the streets.

The word fronde means sling, which Parisian mobs use to smash the windows of Mazarin’s supporters.

The noble faction had demanded the calling of an États-généraux, which has not been convoked since 1615.

The nobles are certain that in an États-général they can continue to control the bourgeois element as they had in the past.

A mob of angry Parisians breaks into the royal palace and demands to see their king.

Led into the royal bedchamber, they gaze upon the ten-year-old Louis, who is feigning sleep, are appeased and quietly depart.

The threat to the royal family and Monarchy, which has no army at its immediate disposal, prompts Louis’s mother, the regent Anne of Austria, to release the prisoners, promise reforms, and on the night of October 22 flee Paris with the King and his courtiers.

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