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Shortest History of France: From Roman Gaul to Revolution and Cultural Radiance - A Global Story for Our Times [Paperback / softback]

  • Format: Paperback / softback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 198x130x23 mm, weight: 275 g, B&W images throughout
  • Series: The Shortest History Series
  • Pub. Date: 25-Apr-2025
  • Publisher: The Experiment LLC
  • ISBN-13: 9798893030129
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  • Price: 15,62 €
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 198x130x23 mm, weight: 275 g, B&W images throughout
  • Series: The Shortest History Series
  • Pub. Date: 25-Apr-2025
  • Publisher: The Experiment LLC
  • ISBN-13: 9798893030129
Other books in subject:
France is the most popular tourist destination in the world, thanks to its unsurpassed cultural and historical riches. Gothic architecture, Louis XIV opulence, revolutionary spirit, café society, haute cuisine and couture . . . what could be more quintessentially French?

Rarely, however, do we think of France as a melting pot, and yet historian Colin Jones asserts its no less a mélange of foreign ingredients than the United States, and by some measures more. As nationalism and anti-immigration rhetoric surge in France (and elsewhere), The Shortest History of France presents a portrait of a nation whose politics and society have always been shaped by global forces. Grounded in up-to-date historical scholarship that avoids the traps of national exceptionalism, Jones reminds us that it was only after the first millennium of French historyfollowing constant subjugation to the Roman Empire, Germanic invaders, and the Holy Roman Empirethat a nation-state began to emerge. Even then, regions of France were independent and more closely linked to neighboring states. The medieval crusades and then overseas colonization were two further vectors of global connection, admitting Islamic, North African, and Caribbean influences.

France has been home to the Enlightenment, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and The Paris Agreement. Meanwhile, its darker moments have included the Vichy regime and the Algerian War, along with persistent racism, police brutality, and civil unrest. From the serious to the sublime, The Shortest History of France is a dynamic, global story enhanced with touches of cultural radiancetruly a retelling for our times.

Reviews

"Colin Jones is not only one of the greatest living historians of France, but a terrific writer who has distilled a remarkable quantity of learning, insight, and wit into this concise and wonderfully readable volume. There is no better starting point for readers interested in the history of France and its overseas empires." -- David A. Bell, author of Napoleon and Sidney and Ruth Lapidus Professor in the Era of North Atlantic Revolutions, Princeton University "Colin Jones has proven that shortest can rhyme with best. Anyone curious about Frances long and remarkable history should grab this book. Its style is clear, down-to-earth, and totally absorbing." -- Don and Petie Kladstrup, authors of Wine & War "Moving at the speed of a TGV, and drawing on his deep knowledge of France and its past, Jones deploys his writing talent to show how the history of the Hexagon has always been intimately connected to developments in other parts of Europe and the world." -- Jeremy D. Popkin, author of A New World Begins and William T. Bryan Chair of history (emeritus), University of Kentucky "Vital, incisive, revelatory." -- Hilary Mantel on 24 Hours in Revolutionary Paris "The historian Colin Jones has a gift for examining events afresh." -- New Statesman on The Fall of Robespierre "A marvelous, engaging, and constantly enlightening story." -- Literary Review on The Smile Revolution

Introduction: The Hexagon in Global Context              




The First Millennium, 52BCE1000CE
France Emergent, 10001500
New Worlds, 15001720
France Goes Global, 17201850            
Imperial Frances German Problem, 18501940
Resetting the Nation, 19401989
Memories and Prospects, 1989the present


Bibliography


Acknowledgments
Colin Jones is Emeritus Professor of History at Queen Mary University of London and visiting professor at the University of Chicago. He is a fellow of the British Academy, former president of the Royal Historical Society, and officier in the Ordre des Palmes académiques. He is the author and editor of many works on French history, including The Cambridge Illustrated History of France, The Great Nation: France from Louis XV to Napoleon, Paris: Biography of a City (awarded the Enid MacLeod Prize of the Franco-British Society), The Smile Revolution in 18th-Century Paris, Versailles, and The Fall of Robespierre: 24 Hours in Revolutionary Paris.