ABSTRACT

The upheavals, terror, and drama of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic period restructured politics and society on a grand scale, making this the defining moment for modern European history.

This volume collects together a wide selection of primary texts to explain the process behind the enormous changes undergone by France and Europe between 1787 and 1815, from the Terror to the Counter-Revolution and from Marie-Antoinette to Robespierre and Bonaparte. While bringing the impact of historical events to life, Philip Dwyer and Peter McPhee provide a clear outline of the period through key documents and lucid introductory passages and commentary. They illustrate the meaning of the Revolution for peasants, sans-culottes, women, and slaves, as well as placing events within a wider European context..

Students will find this an invaluable source of information on the Revolution as a whole as well as the international significance of the events.

chapter 1|15 pages

THE ANCIEN RÉGIME CHALLENGED

chapter 2|8 pages

REVOLUTIONARY ACTION

chapter 3|11 pages

CREATING A REGENERATED FRANCE

chapter 4|8 pages

EXCLUSIONS AND INCLUSIONS

chapter 5|8 pages

THE CHURCH AND THE REVOLUTIONARY STATE

chapter 6|9 pages

MONARCHY AND REVOLUTION

chapter 7|8 pages

THE REVOLUTION AT WAR

chapter 8|12 pages

THE END OF THE MONARCHY

chapter 9|4 pages

THE PEASANTRY AND THE RURAL ENVIRONMENT

chapter 10|6 pages

A NEW CIVIC CULTURE

chapter 11|7 pages

THE REPUBLIC AT WAR

chapter 12|6 pages

REVOLT IN THE VENDÉE

chapter 13|12 pages

THE TERROR AT WORK

chapter 14|6 pages

THE THERMIDORIAN REACTION

chapter 15|7 pages

THE DIRECTORY

chapter 16|12 pages

BONAPARTE

chapter 17|9 pages

LAW AND ORDER

chapter 18|6 pages

RULE BY PLEBISCITE

chapter 19|14 pages

GOVERNING THE EMPIRE

chapter 20|6 pages

RESISTANCE AND REPRESSION

chapter 21|12 pages

THE RUSSIAN CATASTROPHE

chapter 22|6 pages

COLLAPSE

chapter 23|9 pages

THE HUNDRED DAYS

chapter 24|7 pages

FRENCH MEN AND WOMEN REFLECT