[1] He painted a largely positive portrait of Louis XIV in his biography, attributing to him substantial cultural and political achievements.
[2] Bluche saw Louis as a precursor to enlightened despotism and argued that his reign witnessed the birth of modern France.
[3] In his view both Louis' creation of a centralised, powerful monarchy and his wars of conquest benefited the French people.
[5] Peter Burke labelled Bluche a "neo-traditionalist" who had written a "moderate but firm apologia for Louis XIV, a reaction against what the author calls the 'black legend' of the reign".
[7] Bluche was awarded the Grand prix Gobert in 1961 for his book Les magistrats du Parlement de Paris au XVIIIe siècle, the Prix Feydeau de Brou for Les magistrats du Grand Conseil au XVIIIe siècle (1968), the Prix Broquette-Gonin (literature) for Le despotisme éclairé médaille (1970), the Prix Feydeau de Brou for La vie quotidienne de la noblesse française au XVIIIe siècle (1974) and the Prix d’Académie for the Dictionnaire du Grand Siècle médaille de vermeil in 1991.