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Louis Blanc (1811-82) was a French historian and politician whose
writings had a considerable influence on the development of French
socialism. In his famous Organisation du travail (1839) he called
for social reform by action of the State. As a member of the
provisional government established after the 1848 Revolution, he
campaigned for workers' rights, advocating the creation of
cooperative workshops. His twelve-volume Histoire de la Revolution
Francaise (1847-62), most of which he wrote while in exile in
England, combines years of thorough research with Blanc's
characteristic socialist and republican enthusiasm. Volume 1, first
published in 1847, traces the intellectual origins of the French
Revolution to the development of individualism, first in
Protestantism, and then in the Enlightenment. It spans four
centuries, from the origins of Protestantism with the Czech priest
Jan Hus, to the reign of Louis XIV, to the political philosophies
of Voltaire and Montesquieu.
Louis Blanc (1811-82) was a French historian and politician whose
writings had a considerable influence on the development of French
socialism. In his famous Organisation du travail (1839) he called
for social reform by action of the State, an unusual position at
the time. As a member of the provisional government established
after the 1848 Revolution, he campaigned for workers' rights,
advocating the creation of cooperative workshops. His twelve-volume
Histoire de la Revolution Francaise (1847-62), most of which he
wrote while in exile in England, combines years of thorough
research with Blanc's characteristic socialist and republican
enthusiasm. Volume 2, published in 1847, opens with an overview of
French society under Louis XVI. It shows how the financial crisis
led to popular unrest, and focuses on the main events of the year
1789, from the Estates-General to the storming of the Bastille and
the abolition of feudalism.
Louis Blanc (1811-82) was a French historian and politician whose
writings had a considerable influence on the development of French
socialism. In his famous Organisation du travail (1839) he called
for social reform by action of the State, an unusual position at
the time. As a member of the provisional government established
after the 1848 Revolution, he campaigned for workers' rights,
advocating the creation of cooperative workshops. His twelve-volume
Histoire de la Revolution Francaise (1847-62), most of which he
wrote while in exile in England, combines years of thorough
research with Blanc's characteristic socialist and republican
enthusiasm. Volume 3, first published in 1864, focuses on the
immediate aftermath of the abolition of feudalism by the National
Constituent Assembly. It describes the Women's March on Versailles,
which took place in October 1789, and the subsequent forced
relocation of Louis XVI to the Tuileries Palace in Paris.
Louis Blanc (1811-82) was a French historian and politician whose
writings had a considerable influence on the development of French
socialism. In his famous Organisation du travail (1839) he called
for social reform by action of the State, an unusual position at
the time. As a member of the provisional government established
after the 1848 Revolution, he campaigned for workers' rights,
advocating the creation of cooperative workshops. His twelve-volume
Histoire de la Revolution Francaise (1847-62), most of which he
wrote while in exile in England, combines years of thorough
research with Blanc's characteristic socialist and republican
enthusiasm. Volume 4, first published in 1852, focuses on the
administrative reorganisation of France from 1790. It includes
details on the new status of the clergy, who had been turned into
employees of the state by the Civil Constitution of the Clergy
passed on 12 July 1790.
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