Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-1-5381-3824-3 • Hardback • July 2020 • $24.95 • (£18.99) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-1-5381-8944-3 • Paperback • April 2024 • $19.95 • (£14.99)
978-1-5381-3825-0 • eBook • July 2020 • $23.50 • (£17.99)
Will Bashor is the author of the award-winning Marie Antoinette's Head: The Royal Hairdresser, the Queen, and the Revolution and Marie Antoinette's Darkest Days: Prisoner No. 280 in the Conciergerie. He holds a doctorate in international studies from the American Graduate School in Paris and is professor of global issues at Franklin University. He lives in Barcelona, Spain. Visit him at www.willbashor.com.
Author’s Note
Introduction
Family Tree
Chronology
Part I: Enigmatic Versailles
1 Louis XIII’s Château of Debauchery
2 Louis XIV’s Reign of Bosoms and Cockles of the Heart
3 The Parc-aux-Cerfs: Louis XV’s Private Bordello
À Savoir: Marie Antoinette’s Handwriting (Vienna, Austria)
Part II: Marie Antoinette, Dauphine of France (1770–1774)
4 The Strawberry Blonde Arrives
5 New Friends, New Enemies, and the Princes Charmants
6 Fans and the Art of Seduction
À Savoir: Marie Antoinette’s Handwriting (1770–1774)
Part III: The Barren Queen’s Temptations (1774–1778)
7 Gallant Pursuers
8 Décampativos and Risky Diversions
9 Questionable Relationships with Women
À Savoir: Marie Antoinette’s Handwriting (1774–1778)
Part IV: The Queen’s Regrets (1778–1792)
10 Charlot and Toinette’s Love Affairs: A Play Stolen from V——
11 The Austrian Woman on the RAMPAGE, or the Royal Orgy: An Operatic Proverb
12 Description of the Royal Menagerie of Living Animals
13 Filth, Sex, and Erotica in Magnificence
À Savoir: Marie Antoinette’s Handwriting (1778–1792)
Part V: A Queen Dethroned and Diseased (1792–1793)
14 Maladies Vénériennes at the Court of Versailles
15 Maladies Vénériennes and the Unthinkable
16 Cancer Rising and Sun in Scorpio
À Savoir: Marie Antoinette’s Handwriting (1792–1793)
Part VI: The Verdict
17 The Last Testament
18 Guilty?
Acknowledgments
Notes
Selected Bibliography
List of Illustrations and Credits
Index
About the Author
Will Bashor puts Marie Antoinette’s tumultuous life under the microscope in his historical analysis, Marie Antoinette’s World. Marie Antoinette has long been shrouded in secrecy and scandal, from her marriage to indecisive Louis XVI to her gruesome demise. But the French court was a hotbed of debauchery, excess, and greed long before her coronation. Bashor traces over a century and a half of scurrilous royal affairs, particularly those involving—or allegedly involving—France’s most infamous queen.... Bashor’s thorough discussions reveal that Marie Antoinette was neither an angel nor a demon, but rather a complex, flawed human being. Marie Antoinette’s World is a frank portrait of the queen and the many scandals that plagued her reign and legacy.
— Foreword Reviews
[Bashor] delivers his most detailed vision of the doomed queen yet . . . Overall, it’s a glorious and realistic representation of Versailles that history buffs will enjoy. A full, realistic, and completely engrossing view of Marie Antoinette’s life and times.
— Kirkus Reviews
Will Bashor dares debunk all the romantic views of the queen, thanks to his scholarly knowledge and research . . . an excellent historical study of Marie Antoinette’s real world, not the one defended by the romantic and idealistic views that are unfortunately too often presented by English speaking authors focusing on French topics.”
— France Book Tours
Bashor goes far back into Marie Antoinette’s own family and that of her future husband, Louis XVI. It’s a well-structured book, organised chronologically, starting with the reign of Louis XIII, when the small village of Versailles became tied into the world of the French monarchs, growing from an ancient windmill into a vast palace ands seat of power. I found the evolution of the place that is Versailles possibly more intriguing than the lives of those who lived there. Bashor’s observation that the Versailles visited by tourists in more recent years . . . is something of a fantasy; read Chapter 13 to realise the pungent reality of life at this court, with chamber pots being emptied out of windows, and nobles relieving themselves in corridors.”
— The Victorian Librarian
An intimate portrait of the scandals plaguing the genealogy of Marie Antoinette and a genuine effort to assess her psychology, this fascinating book also reveals private moments with her inner circle as well as the machinations of her enemies. A vastly entertaining read as well as an excellent assessment of the living conditions of the Queen at Versailles, where rumors and stench spread as easily as love intrigues and syphilis.— Servanne Woodward, Western University Canada
A brilliant, and sad, history of the French monarchy and its descent into hell. Reality, gossip, and myths about the last royalty of France meld into a fascinating account by a true connoisseur.— Jean-Clément Martin, l’Université Paris, Panthéon-Sorbonne
Insightful and illuminating, Bashor’s book takes its readers on a thrilling tour behind the firmly closed bedroom doors and decorative screens of Versailles, where we eavesdrop on the gossip, read the secret messages behind the fans, and witness a world filled with pleasure, ruled by etiquette and dominated by sexual intrigue.— Josephine Wilkinson, author of Louis XIV: The Power and the Glory
A bold, evocative, and compelling portrait of Marie Antoinette, unlike any that have come before. Will Bashor confidently takes the reader on a well-researched, passionately written, historical piece that reveals fascinating, hard-to-deny insights into her intimate life. Readers will forever see Marie Antoinette in a whole new light.— Elissa Shaw, author of the blog Chasing French History
Already an established authority on the intimate life of Queen Marie Antoinette, Will Bashor goes a step further in placing her experience within the wider context of court society at Versailles stretching back through an emotional genealogy into the previous century. The result is a saucy re-telling of a tumultuous life in splendid detail.— Jonathan Spangler, Manchester Metropolitan University
Will Bashor’s latest book about Queen Marie Antoinette masterfully intertwines the intimate details of the Queen’s life at Versailles with a broad panoply of the debauchery that characterized the French monarchy from the reign of Louis XIII to the outbreak of the French Revolution.— Leland Conley Barrows, Voorhees College
Based on period memoirs and letters, respected biographies, and scurrilous eighteenth-century pamphlets, Will Bashor’s new work on Marie Antoinette looks behind the closed doors, underneath the gold and diamond-encrusted gowns, and into the boudoirs of Versailles and elsewhere. This is no excursion for the faint of heart, and Bashor bares it all, from the various positions in which Marie Antoinette found herself to further speculations about what the century’s long ‘den of iniquity’ had been spreading. He weaves a narrative of intrigue, debauchery, licentiousness, and jealousies into historical non-fiction. His new work makes Les Liaisons dangereuses (1782) seem boring and tame.— Susan Conner, Albion College