Her hair was piled atop her head, often ornamented
with jewels or trinkets.
Her face was always made up, and she wore
the finest gowns and jewelry.
At only 19 years old, she was a Queen, and
in the tumultuous times in which she lived,
she soon became a symbol of all that was wrong
with French royalty.
Let’s explore the life of Marie Antoinette...the
woman who was the face of royal excess during
the French Revolution.
Early life
Though now inextricably linked with France,
Antoinette wasn’t a native of the country.
Descended from the Hapsburg line, she was
born into royalty in Austria.
Marie Antoinette entered the world in 1755.
She was the daughter of the Empress of Austria
and the Holy Roman Emperor.
Like many born into a royalty, she had a lengthy
name...Maria Antonia Josepha Joanna.
Growing up, she was educated by private tutors.
Her education focused on morality and religion.
That was typical at the time for an aristocratic
female’s education.
Though she had a private tutor that worked
with her, Antoinette was no great shakes at
academics.
In fact...she could barely read and write
her native German...much less the French she
also had to study.
As one of her tutors described… “she is
rather lazy and extremely frivolous, she is
hard to teach.”
Antoinette grew up during the seven years
war.
She was only eight years old when it ended,
but the outcome of the conflict quite seriously
affected her future.
You see, as the Empress of Austria, Antoinette’s
mother was a political leader.
At the end of the seven years war, it was
in her best interest to keep an alliance between
the French and the Austrians... and in the
18th Century, the best way to forge an alliance
was through marriage.
Two years after the war ended, when Antoinette
was but ten years old, her mother pegged the
11 year old heir to the French crown as her
best bet for a son-in-law.
The necessary arrangements were made, and
at the age of only 14 years old Antoinette
was married off into foreign royalty....Louis
August de Bourbon.
Early Years in France
Even Marie Antoinette’s entry into France
as a teenager was a spectacular affair.
Her caravan was made up of nearly 60 carriages
accompanied by 117 footmen and 376 horses!
The destination for this veritable parade
was a royal retreat in the forest outside
Paris.
But they had to make a stop as they approached
the border with France...Antoinette had to
be dressed to look the part of French royalty.
Her hair was powdered, her makeup was done
up, and she put on a dress that matched the
lavish expectations of the French court.
When they arrived, Antoinette showed herself
to be just a teenager.
She was impulsive, and unable to control her
excitement about being in a new place, about
to meet her soon-to-be husband.
Rushing out of the carriage, she dashed up
to the King of France...when she curtsied,
he was charmed.
But the king’s grandson, the future husband
of Antoinette, did not share his betrothed’s
extroverted personality.
He did not dash up to her upon her arrival...instead
he averted his eyes, gave her a quick, formal
kiss on the cheek, and then stayed silent.
Meanwhile, Antoinette and the King chatted
away merrily.
Only days after Antoinette met Louis, the
two were married.
The May 16, 1770 wedding ceremony was held
in the chapel of the famed Palace of Versailles.
Antoinette’s dress was white and silver,
an opulent gown decked out in diamonds.
But there was a major problem with the gown...it
wasn’t the right size.
For any bride, discovering on your wedding
that your dress doesn’t fit well would be
a nightmare.
Imagine being the future queen, with all eyes
of the court and country on you.
Antoinette didn’t fret however...at least
not publicly.
She was expected to walk down the aisle and
take the hand of Louis Bourbon in marriage.
So that’s what she did, with her shift showing
through the back of her dress in between rows
of sewn on diamonds.
The ceremony itself was a long mass, and the
groom had on a dour expression for the entire
time.
Then, when it came time to seal the contract
with the signatures of the bride and groom,
Antoinette dripped ink on her signature, obscuring
the name.
Doing so was considered bad luck for the marriage.
And things didn’t get any better as the
day went on.
It was traditional in this era for newlyweds
to be followed up to their bedchamber by a
crowd.
In the case of Antoinette and Louis, the crowd
included royal dignitaries and an archbishop.
The bishop gave a blessing, the crowd dispersed,
and the couple disappeared behind drawn curtains
and undressed.
But as it would seem the entirety of Europe
knew by the next day...they didn’t consummate
the marriage as was expected of newlyweds.
And for the next seven years, they still didn’t
consummate the marriage.
To this day, there’s never been a clear
answer about why it took so long for the two
to fulfill this marital obligation.
Historians have put forward theories … two
of the most popular theories are that Louis
had phimosis, a condition that meant sex was
painful for him, or simply that the two teenagers
were just young and confused.
It seemed the whole world knew about the lack
of intimacy between the young royals, including
Antoinette’s mother.
Antoinette and her mother regularly corresponded
via letter, and their discussions offer a
glimpse into Antoinette’s early years in
the French court.
She was homesick…
“Madame, My very dear mother, I have not
received one of your dear letters without
having the tears come to my eyes.”
And she disliked the French custom of royalty
being attended to always…
““I put on my rouge and wash my hands
in front of the whole world,” she complained
to her mother in a letter.
Her mother spent time in her letters admonishing
her daughter for her frivolous behavior at
court ...as well as for not performing her
marital obligations.
In one letter, she told Antoinette that in
order to be a good wife she needed to “lavish
more caresses” on Louis.
Part of the problem might have been their
different schedules and lifestyles.
Though married, they lived two very different
lives.
Antoinette was as outgoing and social as ever,
but her husband remained quiet, avoiding the
frivolities of court life that his wife so
enjoyed.
The differences grated on the marriage.
Antoinette wrote to a friend,
“My tastes are not the same as the King’s,
who is only interested in hunting and his
metal-working.”
He would often go to bed well before midnight,
while she was just getting started with her
parties late at night.
Then, she’d wake up late morning after he’d
already been up tending to his duties or studies
from an early hour.
Eventually, Antoinette’s brother was sent
to France to talk to Louis.
It’s not clear what Antoinette’s brother
said to Louis, but after their chat, the couple
was finally able to consummate their marriage.
By the time their marriage was consummated,
Louis’ father had died and the two had been
king and queen for three years.
She was 21 years old.
Years 
as Queen
As Queen, Antoinette’s tastes remained lavish
much to her mother’s dismay.
In an almost portentous letter, her mother
wrote:
“You lead a dissipated life, I hope I shall
not live to see the disaster that is likely
to ensue.”
Her hair itself was a mark of her opulence,
with wigs and ornamentation piled feet atop
her head.
Her hair was so extravagantly done she could
even hide tiny vases of water in it to keep
the ornamental flowers fresh.
Leonard Autie, her hairdresser, became a cultural
icon in his own right.
The women of the court and of high society
in Paris began emulating Antoinette’s hairstyles,
with mourning women even going so far as to
ornament their towers of hair with urns.
Her jewelry was also flashy...two of her diamond
bracelets were worth as much as an entire
mansion in Paris.
Just getting dressed in the morning was literally
a production.
One of Antoinette’s maids would hold up
a book of fabric samples for her to help her
decide what to wear.
Then, she’d put on layers of under garments
including a frame for under her skirt to emphasize
her hips.
A corset of course, then layers of fabric
and her dress.
Again, her mother did not approve.
“As you know, I have always been of the
opinion that fashions should be followed in
moderation but should never be taken to extremes.
A beautiful young woman, a graceful queen,
has no need for such madness.
On the contrary, simplicity of dress is more
befitting and more worthy of a queen.
I love my little queen and watch everything
you do and feel I must not hesitate to draw
your attention to this little frivolity.”
The royal couple was living well, and showing
it off.
But the people of France weren’t sharing
in the opulence, and not all of the French
population was impressed with their new queen’s
luxurious style.
In the late 1770s, the harvest in France wasn’t
going well.
Grain was at a premium, prices were skyrocketing,
and farmers and peasants were hurting.
There were literal riots in the streets over
bread.
It is during these riots that Antoinette was
supposed to have said “Let them eat cake.”
But she never actually did… that phrase
was attributed to her much later, in 1843.
Antoinette may have never uttered that famously
callous phrase, but she certainly wasn’t
sympathetic to the plight of the peasants.
In fact, even as her subjects were suffering
she continued spending even more.
She gambled, and she spent money to construct
her own private retreat at Versailles.
The building, known as the Trianon, already
existed.
Antoinette, though, she needed to make it
her own.
She installed artificial rivers, a rotunda,
and a series of what appeared to be rustic
cottages.
Once inside, it became clear they were anything
but… they were furnished in the typically
comfortable style of the wealthy, complete
with pool tables.
Silk hangings and other ornate wall decor,
fine china and luxury furniture brought the
cost of the retreat to an astounding two million
francs.
Beyond the cost of the decor and the property,
the Trianon caused other problems for Antoinette
among her subjects.
People wondered why a Queen would need such
a retreat, and so they jumped to conclusions
and began spreading rumors and gossip.
The Queen was hosting men, they said.
Obscene gatherings had to be happening at
the Trianon...why else would she need a lavish
getaway for just herself and her friends?
One rumor persisted...that of Antoinette’s
affair with Swedish diplomat Axel de Fersen.
In 2016, a team of researchers announced that
a decoded letter showed Antoinette and de
Fersen’s relationship went beyond just discussing
matters of state.
Among the decoded passages is this:
“I will end [this letter] but not without
telling you, my dear and gentle friend, that
I love you madly and that there is never a
moment in which I do not adore you.”
The two had first been introduced in 1774,
and saw each other more and more as Fersen
attended more events at the French court.
He left Europe for a time to fight in the
American Revolution, but that didn’t dim
the feelings between him and Antoinette.
Another letter that survived the centuries
has Fersen telling his sister that he could
never marry because his one true love was
already taken.
The queen was giving the people of France
a lot to talk about.
Discussions of Antoinette as a traitor to
her husband, and about her frivolity with
money were spread in pamphlets distributed
throughout France.
Drawings of Antoinette accompanied acerbic
words, showing her in her extravagant dress
and driving ire toward her and the rest of
the royal family.
French Revolution
As the king and queen were acting as if nothing
was different about life, the people of France
were getting angrier and angrier.
In 1789, King Louis had sent troops to Versaille
and Paris and French citizens were starting
to worry it might be a move to dissolve the
National Assembly.
In response, 900 Frenchmen descended upon
Paris and stormed the Bastille prison.
They stole weapons and ammunition, but the
event was much more than just a stockpiling
of weapons … it was a symbol of the people
being ready to take on the powerful forces
of the monarchy.
The Bastille was a fortress, but it was also
the prison where political enemies were kept.
It was a symbol of the monarchy’s power,
and by taking it over the people showed just
how weak the monarchy could be.
The storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789
is widely considered to be the start of the
French Revolution.
And things were moving fast.
By October, the crowds of revolutionaries
had grown to thousands.
Ten thousand French commoners gathered outside
Versailles, calling for the King and Queen
to be dragged to Paris.
Among them were thousands of women who had
marched miles from Paris...along the way they
were joined by men with guns.
When they showed up outside the royal residence,
Louis didn’t know what to do.
His first instinct was to escape, so he ordered
his carriages prepared.
But they were no match for the angry crowds.
The carriages were ruined, and Louis and his
family remained trapped in the palace.
They weren’t much safer inside, though.
Some of the crowds tried to get at Antoinette,
and they nearly succeeded.
Two guards were killed as the crowd forced
their way towards her quarters.
The crowds didn’t find Antoinette in her
bedroom though...she had left earlier and
was safe in the dining rooms of Louis’s
quarters.
Soon after, French troops under the command
of Marquis de Lafayette arrived and were able
to restore order.
The peace was not to last, though.
The crowds were able to capture the king and
queen, and forced them back to Paris in a
procession led by the heads of their dead
bodyguards hoisted up on pikes.
Throughout the crisis, Antoinette was meeting
with ambassadors and writing letters to other
European officials, calling on them to help
out the French monarchy.
Louis, meanwhile, seemed at a loss for how
to help.
Then, in 1891, aided by the help of her lover
de Fersen - not Louis - Antoinette put together
a plan to get the royal family out of France
and away from the danger of an ever-growing
anger from the public.
The plan was to escape to the Netherlands,
where they could plot a counter-revolution.
Antoinette proved herself able to make decisions
and plan, but when it came time to escape
her desire for luxury got in the way again.
A French general had told the royals that
their journey would be much safer if they
made it in two, small, inconspicuous carriages.
Instead, Antoinette demanded they use larger
carriages that could be outfitted with a full
silver dinner service and a wine chest.
Also joining the royal family in their luxurious
carriage was de Fersen.
The plan called for him to leave the royal
family a short way into the journey, then
meet back up with them at their destination.
He wanted to travel the whole way as part
of their group to offer protection, but Louis
demanded he follow the plan and separate from
the group.
Shortly after de Fersen’s departure from
the group they ran into trouble.
A peasant recognized the king, and was able
to muster up a crowd to attack the carriage.
They were dragged into a house and held captive.
Eventually, they were allowed to return to
Paris but still held captive in a palace.
The French Assembly allowed Louis to serve
as King, but he didn’t really have any power.
And Antoinette, well, she wasn’t much in
favor of the Assembly at all.
She was actively working against them, writing
to officials throughout Europe about how terrible
she thought the new constitution was.
She was also pretty clear in how she felt
about the members of the Assembly themselves,
describing them as
“A heap of blackguards, madmen and beasts.”
During this time, Louis had also declared
war on Austria.
Things were falling apart all around Antoinette.
And they were about to get worse.
In 1792, the French royal family was forced
into the medieval Temple tower fortress.
As they were held prisoner, the millennium-old
monarchy of France was dissolved and a new
French Republic took its place.
As all this was going on outside, the royal
family tried to live a somewhat normal life
in prison.
Louis and Marie tutored their children, played
chess, and played instruments.
But they were also still trying to bring the
monarchy back to power.
It was this effort that ultimately undid her
and Louis.
The couple had hidden the letters they received
from foreign powers in a box inside the prison.
When the correspondence was discovered, Louis
was dragged on trial.
He was ultimately sentenced to death, with
the revolutionary leader Robespierre proclaiming
“Louis must die, so that the country may
live.”
Antoinette and their children were able to
spend a few final hours with him before he
met his fate at the guillotine with 20,000
frenchmen looking on.
Months later, Antoinette herself would be
the one on the platform.
After Louis’ execution, she was brought
to a new prison - a prison with the dire nickname
of “death’s antechamber.”
Here, a sympathetic military officer attempted
to help her escape.
When his efforts were uncovered, Antoinette
was put on trial right away to avoid any danger
of her escaping.
She was charged with treason and theft, and
it was left up to an all male jury to decide
her fate.
It only took two days for them to decide she
was guilty and should be sentenced to death.
The 37 year old queen made one final trip
through the streets of Paris.
Her hair shorn in preparation for execution,
she sat stoically in her carriage on the ride
to the guillotine platform where she would
meet her fate.
When she arrived at the platform, the priest
told her to have courage.
Her response?
“Courage!
I have shown it for years; think you I shall
lose it at the moment when my sufferings are
to end?”
From the moment she was born, Marie Antoinette
was destined to play a role on the world stage.
Her mother set her up for a powerful marriage,
a marriage that thrust her into the midst
of the French Revolution and made her the
ultimate representation of the excesses of
royalty.
She was only alive for 37 years, but in that
time she certainly left her mark on 
the world.
