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Merchants, Landlords, Magistrates - The Depont Family in Eighteenth-Century France (Paperback)
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Merchants, Landlords, Magistrates - The Depont Family in Eighteenth-Century France (Paperback)
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Originally published in 1980. A social historian of modern France,
Robert Forster discovered a series of father-to-son letters that
presented an unusual opportunity to trace in human terms the impact
of institutions and cultural norms on eighteenth-century French
society. From these letters and other family papers, Forster
reconstructed a family biography of the Deponts of La Rochelle over
four generations. Their story affords new insights into the
workings of institutions-economic, religious, legal,
administrative-the mentality of provincial notables, the world of
Parisian high finance and salon society, and the response of a
socially mobile family to the challenges of the century, climaxing
in the French Revolution of 1789. Forster demonstrates how real
people in an upwardly mobile family coped with their changing
society, moved from overseas trade to local and then national
office, managed their wealth, treated their children, and then
parried the psychological shocks accompanying their ascent to
status and power. It is the story not of a "class" response to
abstract trends or forces identified by the historian in retrospect
but of flesh-and-blood human beings grappling with day-to-day
decisions and revealing a full range of human ambiguity and
inconsistency. This study offers perspective on the emergence by
1800 of a new elite in France-a social amalgam of landlords,
administrators, and professional men, inculcated with a national
awareness and a cautious political liberalism. These were the
notables who would govern France in the next century. Forster's
approach, uncommon among social historians, combines narrative and
analytical modes of historiography. Based on archival materials in
La Rochelle and Paris, the book blends economic, social, cultural,
and political history.
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