Modern Europe: Europe in History, PART ONE, is my attempt to guide readers through the dramatic transformation of France from a Bourbon monarchy into a revolutionary republic. I begin with Henry IV (reigned 1589–1610 CE), the founder of Bourbon rule in France, then turn to Cardinal Richelieu—chief minister to Louis XIII (serving roughly 1624–1642 CE)—and the early consolidation of royal authority. From there I move into the long reign of Louis XIV, the Sun King (1643–1715 CE), whose vision of absolute monarchy remade the political landscape of Europe. Along the way we meet powerful religious and political forces—the Jesuits (founded 1540 CE), the Jansenists, and the bitter tensions between them that helped to test and define royal power. This is where the modern story begins: not with a single explosion of revolution, but with the patient building of centralized authority.
As the narrative unfolds, financiers and speculators like John Law—whose Mississippi scheme and the ensuing bubble in 1719–1720 CE rattled France's finances—take the stage, showing how credit and gambling could shake the foundations of the Ancien Régime. The Enlightenment does not appear as an abstract, detached phenomenon; it arrives in the voices of Voltaire and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who challenged authority, questioned religious dogma, and reimagined the structure of society itself. Slowly but unmistakably, science, philosophy, and political thought begin to tilt the balance of power away from the old doctrine of divine right and toward reason, public debate, and fresh ideas about sovereignty.
Under Louis XV the cracks in the ancien régime grow harder to ignore. War — above all the Seven Years' War (1756–1763 CE) — exacts a heavy toll, deepening the monarchy's financial woes and exposing the crown's growing weakness. Political paralysis at court, mounting fiscal disaster, and the ferment of Enlightenment ideas together feed a slow, structural collapse that historians have traced in The Fall of the Old Regime. What erupts in The Opening of the French Revolution is not random chaos but the long-awaited release of decades of pent-up pressure.
The Revolution brings a new cast of forceful personalities. Abbé Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès forces a rethink of what "the nation" actually means with pamphlets like What is the Third Estate?. Jacques-Pierre Brissot and the Girondins try to steer the Revolution toward a more moderate, federalist path, while the Jacobins push for centralization and a sharper republican zeal. As these factions collide in The Battle for the Republic, Maximilien Robespierre increasingly emerges as one of the Revolution's most decisive — and most controversial — figures.
The book reaches its climax in the figure of Robespierre and the Reign of Terror, where the optimistic promise of liberty smashes into political extremism and the grim necessities of revolutionary survival. By following the lives and struggles of Louis XIV and Louis XV, the polemics of Voltaire and Rousseau, and the political maneuverings of figures like Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès and Jacques-Pierre Brissot, I trace the long arc that bends history from absolutist monarchy toward the idea of popular sovereignty.