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==Accession== {{more citations needed section|date=November 2024}} [[File:The Entry of Louis XI into Paris Fac simile of a Miniature in the Chroniques of Monstrelet Manuscript of the Fifteenth Century Imperial Library of Paris.png|thumb|The Entry of Louis XI into Paris. – Facsimile of a Miniature in the "Chroniques" of Monstrelet, Manuscript of the Fifteenth Century (Imperial Library of Paris).]] In 1461, Louis learned that his father was dying. He hurried to [[Reims]] to be crowned, in case his brother, [[Charles de Valois, Duc de Berry|Charles, Duke of Berry]], should try to do the same. Louis XI became King of France on 22 July 1461.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=107}} Louis pursued many of the same goals that his father had, such as limiting the powers of the dukes and barons of France, with consistently greater success. Among other initiatives, Louis instituted reforms to make the tax system more efficient.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=116}} He suppressed many of his former co-conspirators, who had thought him their friend, and he appointed to government service many men of no rank, but who had shown promising talent. He particularly favored the associates of the great French merchant [[Jacques Coeur]].{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=116}} He also allowed enterprising nobles to engage in trade without losing their privileges of nobility.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=116}} He eliminated offices within the government bureaucracy, and increased the demand on other offices within the government in order to promote efficiency.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=116}} Louis spent a large part of his kingship on the road.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=115}} Travelling from town to town in his kingdom, Louis would surprise local officials, investigate local governments, establish fairs, and promote trade regulations.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=118}} Perhaps the most significant contribution of Louis XI to the organization of the modern state of France was his development of the system of royal postal roads in 1464.{{sfn|Thompson|1995|p=64}} In this system, relays at instant service to the king operated on all the high roads of France; this communications network spread all across France and led to the king acquiring his nickname "Universal Spider".{{sfn|Guérard|1959|p=116}} As king, Louis became extremely prudent fiscally, whereas he had previously been lavish and extravagant. He wore rough and simple clothes and mixed with ordinary people and merchants. A candid account of some of his activities is recorded by the courtier [[Philippe de Commines]] in his [[memoir]]s of the period. Louis made a habit of surrounding himself with valuable advisers of humble origins, such as Commines himself, [[Olivier Le Daim]], [[Louis Tristan L'Hermite]], and [[Jean Balue]]. Louis was anxious to speed up everything, transform everything, and build his own new world.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=116}} In recognition of all the changes that Louis XI made to the government of France, he has the reputation of a leading "civil reformer" in French history, and his reforms were in the interests of the rising trading and mercantile classes that would later become the bourgeoisie of France.{{citation needed|date=November 2024}} Louis XI also involved himself in the affairs of the Church in France. In October 1461, Louis abolished the [[Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges|Pragmatic Sanction]] that his father had instituted in 1438 to establish a French [[Catholic Church in France|Gallican Church]] free of the controls of the [[pope]]s in Rome.{{sfn|Kendall|1971|p=117}}
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