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==King and the Enlightenment== [[File:Nicolas de Largillière - Portrait de Voltaire (1694-1778) en 1718 - P208 - Musée Carnavalet - 2.jpg|thumb|upright|Voltaire (1724–25)]] The French philosophical movement later called the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] began and gathered force during the reign of Louis XV; in 1746 [[Diderot]] published his ''Pensées philosophiques'', followed in 1749 by his ''Lettres sur les Aveugles'' and the first volume of the ''Encyclopédie'', in 1751. [[Montesquieu]] published ''De l'esprit des Lois'', in 1748. [[Voltaire]] published ''le Siecle de Louis XIV'' and ''l'Essai sur les moeurs et l'esprit des nations'', in 1756. [[Rousseau]] became known in 1750 by the publication of ''Discours sur les sciences et les arts'', followed in 1755 by ''Discours sur les origins et les fondaments de l'inégalité''. These were accompanied by new works on economics, finance, and commerce by [[Victor de Riqueti, marquis de Mirabeau|the elder Mirabeau]], [[François Quesnay]] and other scientific thinkers which undermined all of the standard assumptions of royal government, economics and fiscal policy.<ref>Antoine (1989) pp. 567–568.</ref> The censors of Louis XV at first permitted these publications; the first volume of the ''Encyclopédie'' received official permission because the government censors believed it was purely a collection of scientific articles. The project soon included a multitude of authors, including Rousseau, and had four thousand subscribers. Only later did the government and King himself take notice, after the church attacked the ''Encylopédie'' for questioning official church doctrines. The King personally removed Diderot from the list of those nominated for the {{lang|fr|Académie française|italic=no}}, and in 1759 the ''Encyclopédie'' was formally banned. Rousseau had a resounding success in 1756 with his opera ''Devin du Village'', and was invited to Versailles to meet the King, but he refused. Instead, he wrote the ''Contrat Social'' calling for a new system based upon political and economic equality, published in 1762. Increasingly solitary and unstable, he wandered from province to province, before returning to Paris, where he died in solitude in 1778. His ideas, composed during the reign of Louis XV, were adopted by the revolutionaries who overthrew Louis XVI in 1789.<ref>Guéganic (2008), p. 84.</ref> In the 1740s Voltaire was welcomed to the court as a playwright and poet, but his low rank as the son of a notary and the fact his father was also a Jansenist soon displeased the King and the Queen, and he was finally forced to depart Versailles. He went to Berlin, where he became a counselor to Frederick the Great, before living in Geneva and Savoy, far from Paris. On one issue in particular Voltaire took the side of Louis XV; when the King suppressed the ''parlements'' of nobles, demanded that all classes be taxed equally, and removed the charges which plaintiffs had to pay in order to have their cases heard. He wrote: "Parlements of the King! You are charged with rendering justice to the people! Render justice upon yourselves!... There is in the entire world no judicial court which has ever tried to share the power of the sovereign." However, the King's lack of further reforms in his last years disappointed Voltaire. When the King died, Voltaire wrote of his reign, "Fifty-six years, consumed with fatigues and wanderings."<ref>Bluche (2003), p. 180.</ref>
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