At the start of Louis' reign he was young and handsome; and France was prosperous in peace and victorious in war. These early medals portray a dazzling image of a 'Sun King,' who is represented as hard-working, accessible, generous and just; a king that worked for the benefit of the people, glorifying as much in their happiness as in victory over his enemies.
The picture changed as war succeeded war and defeat succeeded victory. The later medals, though careful to represent only French successes, are so numerous that they give the impression not of victory but of endless and draining warfare.
Elsewhere in Europe, particularly in the Netherlands, medals were produced that mocked and satirized the official French medals. These rival medals showed the French sun eclipsed by the zodiacal signs of his enemies, the 'Sun King' as Phaeton, falling through the sky after being ejected by Jupiter from Apollo's chariot, and Louis as an old man being roundly beaten by Queen Anne.
The great 1702 publication of the Medallic History, intended to carry its message throughout Europe was an immensely ambitious and luxurious publication: it even had one of the most famous of all typefaces, Roman du Roi invented for it. The volume opens with a frontispiece depicting Father Time, lying defeated by the medallic history which was intended to last forever. What survives today is a fascinating and unique self-portrait of a regime which dominated Europe for nearly sixty years, and which established the primacy of French taste and French culture for over a century.
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