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E-raamat: Confiscating the common good: Small towns and religious politics in the French Revolution

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Comprising five microhistories, this book proposes that the French Revolution’s religious politics in small towns weakened democratic society to such an extent that it precluded political democracy. It details two revolutionary dynamics that damaged the civic life of small towns: social polarisation and the loss of local institutions that had been a source of social capital as well as a common good. Detailed narratives about Pont-à-Mousson, Gournay-en-Bray, Vienne, Haguenau and Is-sur-Tille also reveal that contrary to the view upheld by many scholars, small-town religious politics extended far beyond the pivotal Ecclesiastical Oath of 1791. Other developments — the nationalisation of Church property, the dissolution of religious orders, and the elimination of bishoprics, chapters, parishes and collegial churches — also adversely affected the wellbeing of these small urban communities not only in the Revolution but also in the two centuries that followed.

Challenging the subject’s current interpretation, this microhistorical study traces the social and civic dynamics of the French Revolution’s religious politics within five small towns.

List of figures
vi
List of tables
vii
Acknowledgments viii
List of abbreviations
xi
Introduction 1(1)
1 Hidden in plain sight
35(26)
2 A new story
61(25)
3 Two tribes
86(33)
4 Out of many, one
119(27)
5 Myth and realpolitik
146(45)
6 A forgotten fight
191(38)
Conclusion 229(12)
Appendices 241(26)
Bibliography 267(19)
Index 286(97)
Edward J. Woell is Professor of History at Western Illinois University -- .