This stylish and highly entertaining account of the origins of the
Franco-Dutch War of 1672 is based on massive archival researches
covering twelve countries. Contrary to the accepted historical opinion
that there was a meeting of minds within Louis XIV's conseil d'en haut
over the desirability of the war, Professor Sonnino chronicles a story
of bitter division, in the course of which the contrasting personalities
of the king and of his most intimate advisors emerge in vivid detail.
Racine once eulogized the war as a brilliantly executed venture which
put the insolent Dutch in their place. Saint-Simon, on the other hand,
saw it as the disastrous result of endemic jealousies, in which Le
Tellier and Louvois sought to displace Colbert in Louis' affections.
From these early views the modern consensus, in spite of occasional
dissenters, has gradually evolved. Professor Sonnino, however, breaks
through the maze of interpretations with decisive new evidence, and in
an unusually clear and lively evocation of the emotional element which
pervaded high policy, explains the many agonizing decisions that
preceded one of the most dramatic conflicts of the seventeenth century.