This classic study of the life of the nobility at the royal court of
France, especially under Louis XIV, has long been out of print.
Recognised by historians as the benchmark for studies of early modern
courts, which were an important but long neglected phase in the growth
of the 'civilising' constraints imposed on people in increasingly
complex networks of interdependence. Elias shows how courtiers - and
finally even the king himself - were entrapped in a web of etiquette and
ceremonial, how their expenses, even down to details of their houses and
households, were dictated by their rank rather than their income.
Includes appendix on the parallels between factional competition at the
royal court and within Hitler's regime. Originally published in German
in 1969 as Die hofische Gesellschaft.