he was gelable, kiddish, he would take the last person's opinion, he was really mean and he was not interested in his marriage.
A weak and vacillating leader, Louis XVI proved incapable of pursuing any consistent policy.
Yes, it was Louis XVI.
The French king under the French revolution was King Louis XVI. The Queen was Marie-Antoinette. They were both executed using the guillotine.
Yes the Louis was a coin. It was created by Louis XIII in 1640 in golden and silver version. The golden Louis was also called écu d'or (golden ecu). This currency had been used until the French revolution. After the revolution some coins (franc germinal or The Napoléon) were still wrongly called Louis.
Louis XVI was an inept and indecisive French King who lost his office and his head during the French Revolution.
Louis XVI (the sixteenth / seize)
Louis XVI who was guillotined.
Louis XVI
No, the French Revolution was during the reign of Louis XVI.
Louis XVI had very poor qualities as a leader. He neglected his country over his obsession with defeating England in the American Revolution and he had sent enough money over to America to feed and house his people for an entire year. He also heavily taxed the poor who had no money and left the nobility and the priests untaxed and wanting more money. This eventually caused the people to say we have had enough and we do not want to take it anymore.
Louis XVI became a victim of the guillotine during the French Revolution.
Louis XVI. He was deposed and sent to the guillotine.
I tyink he answer to "who was the french leader of the second crusade" is Louis VII.
He did not die in the French Revolution, but well before that in 1226.
Louis XIV was not in the French Revolution, since he had died in 1715. I think you mean Louis XVI, his great-grandfather, though he did not act anything.
King Louis XIV wasn't in the French Revolution, I think you mean King Louis XVI. He was protected by the Swiss Guards.
Yes, it was Louis XVI.
==Jacques Danton, Camille Desmoulins, Maximilien de Robespierre, and Louis de Saint-Just all had critical leadership roles in bringing about and carrying out the French Revolution. Danton observed, "La révolution dévore ses enfants" [The revolution eats up its children]. And all four indeed had lost their heads by the time the revolution ended.