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9780385092609

The Old Regime and the French Revolution

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780385092609

  • ISBN10:

    0385092601

  • Edition: Revised
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 1955-10-01
  • Publisher: Anchor

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Summary

The French Revolution is undoubtedly one of the most significant events in world history, one whose repercussions still affect Western society today, two hundred years later. The most important contribution to our understanding of the French Revolution was written almost one hundred years ago by Alexis de Tocqueville, who is recognized today as one of the greatest political thinkers of the nineteenth century. Tocqueville's Democracy in America was only one part of the study of democracy to which he devoted his life; the second, and to his mind more important, part was to be a monumental study of the French Revolution, its origins, course, and consequences. Only the first section--The Old Regime and the French Revolution--was completed before his death. It brilliantly and searchingly examines the nature of French society in the years before the Revolution. Why did the Revolution break out? Was it inevitable, and if so, why? How was France really changed by the Revolution? Why did the intellectuals become enemies of the old French state and society? Why was the French nobility so estranged from the French people? Why, in short, were Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette doomed to the guillotines of the Revolution? In The Old Regime and the French Revolution, Tocqueville examines these and many other questions and in large measure succeeds in answering them. Book jacket.

Author Biography

Alexis de Tocqueville (1805–1859) was a French politician and theorist. He wrote Democracy in America after visiting the United States during which he observed various elements of the prison system. He continued on to serve in the French parliament and also wrote many works, including The Old Regime and the Revolution.

Table of Contents

Forewordp. vii
Conflicting opinions of the Revolution at its outbreakp. 1
How the chief and ultimate aim of the Revolution was not, as used to be thought, to overthrow religious and to weaken political authority in Francep. 5
How, though its objectives were political, the French Revolution followed the lines of a religious revolution and why this was sop. 10
How almost all European nations had had the same institutions and how these were breaking down everywherep. 14
What did the French Revolution accomplish?p. 19
Why feudalism had come to be more detested in France than in any other countryp. 22
How administrative centralization was an institution of the old regime and not, as is often thought, a creation of the Revolution or the Napoleonic periodp. 32
How paternal government, as it is called today, had been practiced under the old regimep. 41
How administrative justice and the immunity of public servants were institutions of the old regimep. 52
How the idea of centralized administration was established among the ancient powers, which it supplanted, without, however, destroying themp. 57
Of the methods of administration under the old regimep. 61
How in France, more than in any other European country, the provinces had come under the thrall of the metropolis, which attracted to itself all that was most vital in the nationp. 72
How France had become the country in which men were most like each otherp. 77
How, though in many respects so similar, the French were split up more than ever before into small, isolated, self-regarding groupsp. 81
How the suppression of political freedom and the barriers set up between classes brought on most of the diseases to which the old regime succumbedp. 97
Of the nature of the freedom prevailing under the old regime and of its influence on the Revolutionp. 108
How, despite the progress of civilization, the lot of the French peasant was sometimes worse in the eighteenth century than it had been in the thirteenthp. 120
How towards the middle of the eighteenth century men of letters took the lead in politics and the consequences of this new developmentp. 138
How vehement and widespread anti-religious feeling had become in eighteenth-century France and its influence on the nature of the Revolutionp. 148
How the desire for reforms took precedence of the desire for freedomp. 157
How, though the reign of Louis XVI was the most prosperous period of the monarchy, this very prosperity hastened the outbreak of the Revolutionp. 169
How the spirit of revolt was promoted by well-intentioned efforts to improve the people's lotp. 180
How certain practices of the central power completed the revolutionary education of the massesp. 188
How revolutionary changes in the administrative system preceded the political revolution and their consequencesp. 193
How, given the facts set forth in the preceding chapters, the Revolution was a foregone conclusionp. 203
The pays d'etats, with special reference to Languedocp. 212
Notesp. 222
General Notesp. 289
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

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