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The New Regime - Transformations of the French Civic Order, 1789-1820s (Paperback, Revised)
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The New Regime - Transformations of the French Civic Order, 1789-1820s (Paperback, Revised)
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Confident that they had broken with a discredited past, French
revolutionaries after 1789 referred to pre-revolutionary times as
the ancien regime (old regime). The National Assembly proclaimed
the sovereignty of the people, grasping the reins of power and
asserting the supremacy of law over all other interests. Even as
the liberalism of 1789 collapsed into the Terror and then into the
Napoleonic dictatorship, a new regime emerged at the juncture of
state and civil society. The cycles of recrimination, hatred, and
endemic local conflict unleashed by the Terror did not obliterate
this new civic order. In this fascinating and wide-ranging study of
three turbulent decades in French history, the eminent historian
Isser Woloch examines some large questions: How did the French
civic order change after 1789? What civic values animated the new
regime; what policies did it adopt? What institutions did it
establish, and how did they fare when carried into practice?
Drawing on a variety of archival sources, Professor Woloch explains
shifts in lawmaking and local authority, state intervention in
village life, the creation of public primary schools, experiments
in public assistance, a cycle of changes in the mechanisms of civil
justice, the introduction of felony trials, and above all the
imposition of military conscription.
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