Liberty and locality in revolutionary France : six villages compared, 1760-1820

Author(s)

    • Jones, Peter

Bibliographic Information

Liberty and locality in revolutionary France : six villages compared, 1760-1820

Peter Jones

(New studies in European history)

Cambridge University Press, 2007

  • : pbk.

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 274-301) and index

Originally published: 2003

"This digitally printed version 2007"

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book examines the interface between the old and the new France in the period 1760-1820. It adopts an unusual 'comparative micro-historical' approach in order to illuminate the manner in which country dwellers cut themselves loose from the congeries of local societies that made up the Ancien Regime, and attached themselves to the wider polity of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic state. The apprehensions and ambitions of six groups of villagers located in different parts of the kingdom are explored in close-up across the span of a single adult lifetime. Contrasting experiences form a large part of the analysis, but the story is ultimately one of fusion around a set of values that no individual villager could possibly have anticipated, whether in 1750 or 1789. The book is at once an institutional, a social and a political history of life in the village in an epoch of momentous change.

Table of Contents

  • List of illustrations
  • List of tables
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • 1. Mise-en-scene
  • 2. The structures of village life towards the end of the ancien regime
  • 3. Agendas for change: 1787-1790
  • 4. A new civic landscape
  • 5. Sovereignty in the village
  • 6. Church and state in miniature
  • 7. Land of liberty?
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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