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Fall of Robespierre: 24 Hours in Revolutionary Paris [Kõva köide]

(Emeritus Professor of Cultural History, Queen Mary University of London)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 592 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x160x50 mm, kaal: 838 g, 4 maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Aug-2021
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198715951
  • ISBN-13: 9780198715955
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 592 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x160x50 mm, kaal: 838 g, 4 maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Aug-2021
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198715951
  • ISBN-13: 9780198715955
Teised raamatud teemal:
The day of 9 Thermidor (27 July 1794) is universally acknowledged as a major turning-point in the history of the French Revolution. At 12.00 midnight, Maximilien Robespierre, the most prominent member of the Committee of Public Safety which had for more than a year directed the Reign of Terror, was planning to destroy one of the most dangerous plots that the Revolution had faced.

By 12.00 midnight at the close of the day, following a day of uncertainty, surprises, upsets and reverses, his world had been turned upside down. He was an outlaw, on the run, and himself wanted for conspiracy against the Republic. He felt that his whole life and his Revolutionary career were drawing to an end. As indeed they were. He shot himself shortly afterwards. Half-dead, the guillotine finished him off in grisly fashion the next day.

The Fall of Robespierre provides an hour-by-hour analysis of these 24 hours.

Arvustused

It's almost as dramatic as the fall of Boris. * Iain Martin, Reaction * The melodramatic story of Maximilien Robespierre's fall has been told many times before, but never in such gloriously sensual detail... Colin Jones brings the French Revolution to life in all its colour and horror... Above all he is brilliant on the psychological twists of politics, which would cost Robespierre his life. * Dominic Sandbrook, 21 Best History Books of 2021, The Times * The book is suspenseful because, even though we know the way things end, it relates the build-up to Robespierres execution in breathless detail. Mining abundant archival material (from the reports of government functionaries, soldiers and spies to the diaries and letters of private citizens of all political beliefs), Jones shows how turbulence, confusion and contingency shaped each moment of that day. * Caroline Weber, London Review of Books * ... a thrilling blow-by-blow account of that fateful day in the summer of 1794. One can almost hear the ticking of the clock, minute by minute, second by second, counting down to the guillotine. * Joseph Hone, Books of the Year 2021, History Today * A brilliant hour-by-hour recreation... He has a marvellous eye for colour: the sweat and fear in the Parisian prisons, the exhausted paranoia of the government committees, the stench of the guillotined bodies in the death pits outside the city. He is excellent on the contingency of political history... And, above all, he is brilliant on the psychology of politics, the way the mood of an assembly can switch in a moment with devastating consequences. * Dominic Sandbrook, The Sunday Times * Jones insists that to understand 9 Thermidor it's necessary to dig down to the level of "infinitely small" details. In his admirable account he meticulously reconstructs the day on an hour-by-hour basis, crisscrossing the city as he does so. * Gerard deGroot, The Times * Colin Jones, a professor of history at Queen Mary University of London, handles a huge amount of material with skill and verve. He creates an extraordinarily vivid minute-by-minute portrait of Paris and its people on that pivotal day... * Constance Craig Smith, Daily Mail * The Historian Colin Jones has a gift for examining events afresh. * New Statesman * ... minutely detailed and unfailingly gripping... Jones's superbly researched and strikingly original book produces an optic of a radically different kind. 'Only by getting "up close" and drilling down into the "infinitely small" details of the revolutionary process', its author insists, can the day's course and outcome be understood. And for once this counsel of perfection can be put into practice. * John Adamson, Literary Review * Behind the books general reader-friendly narrative structure, academics will find historical virtuosity on display. * Katie Jarvis, The English Historical Review * This is a remarkable, barnstorming doorstop of a book. * David Andress, French History * The greatest merit of Colin Jones's microscopic study of those deadly days in the summer of 1794 is that he succeeds in conveying the terrified uncertainty of the many actors, including large numbers of ordinary Parisians...His account required a massive amount of archival work, and his bibliography is testimony to his labors... The broader educated public with an interest in this extraordinary period will enjoy Jones's lively narrative... * Peter McPhee, H-France * An incisively argued and thrilling moment-by-moment examination of one of the French Revolution's most dramatic days... Colin Jones achieves the exceptional feat of putting 9 Thermidor in a new perspective... Jones's enthralling, incisively argued book is a fine contribution to the debate. * Tony Barber, Financial Times * The story of the Ninth of Thermidor has been told many times, but never so well as in Colin Joness The Fall of Robespierre. * David A Bell, The New York Review * ... Colin Jones, as well informed about eighteenth century France as any professor of history could be, leads us through Paris on the exceptional day of 9 Thermidor, Year II. * Johan Hakelius, Engelsberg Ideas * Jones offers a new perspective on the Terror and nature of the Thermidorian Reaction. The unconventional narrative structure and style bring contingency to the fore and, in so doing, lead to new interpretations not only of Maximilien Robespierres downfall but of the course of the French Revolution. * Katlyn Carter, Age of Revolutions * ... overall this is a classic: living up to the title exactly, it does so with full marks for style and substance... If you have any interest in the French Revolution, or politics in general, or the "processes of history" you will find The Fall of Robespierre a riveting, rigorous and thought-provoking read. * Anthony Webb, Popular History * This is a remarkable, barnstorming doorstop of a book. * , French History * The work Jones produced to support his point is remarkable... With its minute detailing of human characters, The Fall of Robespierre has the texture of literature and is good material for a mini-series or...how about another Hamilton?... * David Luhrssen, Shepherd Express * Vital, incisive, revelatory, The Fall of Robespierre offers a crisis anatomised, 'by the map and by the clock.' Its close-focus intensity makes us question everything we thought we knew about the bloody events of Thermidor Year II. It takes us to the place, to the instant, to the heartbeat of revolution in the making. * Hilary Mantel, author A Place of Greater Safety and the Wolf Hall trilogy * This is an astoundingly scholarly book, written with a beautifully assured hand... a book for the historian of the French Revolution itself... The minutiae of detail, and the ability to convey it, along with the mounting tension, is a specific talent, and which has been so obviously achieved by the author of this fascinating and superb volume. * Sandra Callard, On: Yorkshire Magazine * This is a remarkable, barnstorming doorstop of a book. * David Andress, French History * Colin Jones's micro-history can be fundamental reading. * Timothy Tackett, University of California, Irvine, Journal of Modern History *

Muu info

Winner of Winner, 2021 Franco-British Society Literary Award Shortlisted, Duff Cooper Literary Award.
Prefatory Note and Abbreviations xvii
List of Figures and Maps xix
Introduction: The Fall of Robespierre Up Close 1(10)
Prelude: Around Midnight 11(16)
Rousseville's lodgings, Rue Saint-Honore (Tuileries)
Vernet's wanderings: from the Place du Trone-Renverse (Montreuil/Quinze-Vingts) to the Rue de Birague (Arsenal)
La Force Prison (Droits-de-l'Homme)
Legracieux's lodgings, Rue Denfert (Chalier)
Home of Guittard de Floriban, Rue des Canettes (Mutius-Scevole)
Part I: Elements Of Conspiracy: (Midnight to 5.00 a.m.)
00.00/Midnight
27(16)
Robespierre's lodgings, 366 Rue Saint-Honore (Piques)
01.00/1.00 a.m.
43(13)
CPS Committee Room, Tuileries palace (Tuileries)
02.00/2.00 a.m.
56(13)
CPS offices, Tuileries palace
CPS Committee Room, Tuileries palace
Tallien's quest: the streets of Paris
03.00/3.00 a.m.
69(15)
Across the city
Conciergerie prison, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite (Revolutionnaire)
Benedictins-Anglais prison, Rue Saint-Jacques (Observatoire)
04.00/4.00 a.m.
84(19)
Various locations, CPS offices, Tuileries palace
Part II: Settings For A Drama (5.00 a.m. to Midday)
05.00/5.00 a.m.
103(11)
Streets leading to Les Halles (Marches)
06.00/6.00 a.m.
114(12)
Robespierre's lodgings, 366 Rue Saint-Honore
07.00/7.00 a.m.
126(14)
Municipal offices, Maison Commune (Maison-Commune)
Place du Pantheon (Pantheon)
Jacques-Louis Minetra's section (Bon-Conseil)
08.00/8.00 a.m.
140(10)
Ecole de Mars, Plaine des Sablons, Neuilly
The streets of the city
09.00/9.00 a.m.
150(14)
Offices of the municipal Police Administration, Mairie, Ile de la Cite (Revolutionnaire)
Giot's itinerary: Rue de Hautefeuille (Marat), Pantheon (Pantheon), Temple prison (Temple)
10.00/10.00 a.m.
164(12)
Revolutionary Tribunal, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite (Revolutionnaire)
Thibaudeau's route: from Rue Hautefeuille (Marat) to the Tuileries palace
Robespierre's lodgings, 366 Rue Saint-Honore
11.00/11.00 a.m.
176(15)
Tuileries palace and gardens
Vestibule to the Convention hall and Tuileries palace environs
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
CPS Committee Room, Tuileries palace
Part III: A Parliamentary Coup (Midday to 5.00 p.m.)
12.00/12.00 Midday
191(9)
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
13.00/1.00 p.m.
200(15)
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Tuileries gardens
Public galleries, Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Across the city
14.00/2.00 p.m.
215(18)
Salle de l'Egalite, Maison Commune
Revolutionary Tribunal, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite
Maison Penthievre, Place des Piques (Piques)
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Police Administration offices, Ile de la Cite, and sectional meetings
Across the city
15.00/3.00 p.m.
233(18)
National Guard Head quarters, Rue du Martroy (Maison-Commune)-Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Courtyard, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Hanriot's ride: the eastern sections
Across the city: sectional committee meetings
16.00/4.00 p.m.
251(18)
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Vergne's home, Ile Saint-Louis (Fraternite)
La Force prison
Conciergerie courtyard, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite
CPS Committee Room, Tuileries palace
Place de la Maison Commune (or Place de Greve) (Arcis)
Maineand Police Administration HQ, Ile de la Cite
Hanriot's raid: from the Maison Commune to the Tuileries palace
CGS offices, Hotel de Brionne (Tuileries)
Part IV: A Parisian Journee (5.00 p.m. to Midnight)
17.06/5.00 p.m.
269(13)
Thedtre de la Republique, Palais-Royal environs (Montagne)
The streets of the city
Police Administration HQ, Maifie, Ile de la Cite
Place de la Maison Commune
CGS and CPS offices, Tuileries palace complex
Place de la Maison Commune
Maison Commune Council Chamber
CGS offices, Hotel de Brionne
Vergne's home, Ile Saint-Louis
18.00/6.00 p.m.
282(16)
Council chamber, Maison Commune
Fouquier-Tinville's lodgings, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite
Place du Carrousel (Tuileries)
Place du Trone-Renverse
Council Chamber, Maison Commune
Mairie and Police Administration HQ, Ile de la Cite
Talaru prison (Montagne) and the prison network
Rue Saint-Guillaume (Fontaine-de-Grenelle)
19.00/7.00 p.m.
298(16)
Place de la Maison Commune
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Maison Commune
Jacobin Club (Mon tagne)
Luxembourg prison (Mutius-Scevole)
Ccffinhal's raid: Rue Saint-Honore (Tuileries)
Police Administration HQ, Maifie, Ile de la Cite
Across the city
20.00/8.00 p.m.
314(21)
Police Administration HQ, Ile de la Cite
Fouquier-Tinville's office, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite
Maison Commune
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Place du Carrousel
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Place du Carrousel
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
CPS Committee Room, Tuileries palace
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
21.00/9.00 p.m.
335(16)
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Tuileries palace environs
Place de la Maison Commune
Council chamber, Maison Commune
Across the city
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Maison Commune
Quai de Gesvres (Arcis)
22.00/10.00 p.m.
351(22)
Police Administration HQ, Mairie, Ile de la Cite
Maison Commune
Across the city
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Jacobin Club
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Maison Commune
Guillaume-Tell section and across the city
Paris prisons
23.00/11.00 p.m.
373(24)
Salle de l'Egalite, Maison Commune
Cafe des Subsistances, Palais de Justice, Ile de la Cite
Across the city
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Lombards section and across the city
Revolutionnaire section
Place Saint-Sulpice (Mutius-Scivole) and across the city
Place de la Maison Commune and Place du Carrousel
Maison Commune
Part V: Midnight, Around Midnight, After Midnight
Midnight
397(6)
Salle de l'Egalite, Maison Commune
Around Midnight
403(29)
Private lodgings, Quai de l'Ecole (Museum)
Convention hall, Tuileries palace
Place de la Maison Commune
Mairie, Ile de la Cite
Temple prison
Maison Commune
Gravilliers section
Across the city
Ecole de Mars encampment, Plaine des Sablons
Guyot's wandering: from the Maison Commune to the Sans-Culottes section
Bourdon's expedition: from the Gravilliers section to the Place de la Maison Commune
After Midnight 419(13)
Afterword: 9 Thermidor From Afar 432(25)
Against the people
Conspiring against Robespierre: a myth?
Robespierre conspirator?
The Commune and the people
Public opinion redivivus
The people's choice: institutions over personalities
Notes 457(68)
List of Characters 525(8)
Note on Sources 533(4)
Bibliography and Printed Sources 537(18)
Index 555
Colin Jones CBE is Professor of History at Queen Mary University of London. He has published widely on French history, particularly on the eighteenth century, the French Revolution, and the history of medicine. His many books include The Medical World of Early Modern France (with Lawrence Brockliss, 1997), The Great Nation: France from Louis XV to Napoleon (2002), Paris: Biography of a City (2004: winner of the Enid MacLeod Prize) and The Smile Revolution: In Eighteenth-Century Paris (2014). He is a Fellow of the British Academy and Past President, Royal Historical Society.