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Cool It! (Paperback)
Mark Potter, Colin Northmore
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R57
Discovery Miles 570
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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One of the greatest challenges that teachers face when starting out
in their careers is learning how to deal with unruly and badly
behaved learners so that the rest of the class can get on with the
lesson. Teachers often say that they are not paid to discipline
learners, they are paid to teach them. However, without discipline
there can be little learning.
This title was first published in 2003. Few historians would deny
that Louis XIV's France dominated the political, cultural and
military landscape of late seventeenth century Europe. Yet, the
financial foundations on which French hegemony were based remain
open to question. Traditionally the regime has been viewed as the
archetypal centralizing monarchy in which warfare was the main
motor driving reform. Yet recent research has pointed to a more
subtle interpretation in which power was negotiated and interests
balanced between the crown and members of the elite. Corps and
Clienteles offers a unique approach to this debate by focusing on
the intersection between institutions and personal relationships in
the financial strategies surrounding Louis XIV's final two wars. It
argues that, in appealing to the elite for financial support to
wage war, Louis in return stabilised many of the structures on
which the elite stood, entrenched elements of privilege throughout
the political landscape, and devolved power to provincial
institutions. Especially with the participation of privileged corps
as financial intermediaries, the politics of war finance in the
last twenty five years of Louis' reign profoundly influenced the
direction in which absolutism developed through the remainder of
the Old Regime. The book situates the period 1688 to 1715 as a
crucial stage in the development of absolutism; tying the choices
available to Louis XIV with the structures and institutions that he
inherited from his predecessors, while setting his approach apart.
By also measuring the impact of financial negotiations between
crown and corps on the later state, it is argued that absolutism
under Louis was neither ossified nor in crisis, as the latter half
of his reign is often described, but rather dynamic and flexible as
it sought to meet the financial costs of warfare.
This title was first published in 2003. Corps and Clienteles offers
a unique approach to this debate by focusing on the intersection
between institutions and personal relationships in the financial
strategies surrounding Louis XIV's final two wars. It argues that,
in appealing to the elite for financial support to wage war, Louis
in return stabilised many of the structures on which the elite
stood, entrenched elements of privilege throughout the political
landscape, and devolved power to provincial institutions.
Especially with the participation of privileged corps as financial
intermediaries, the politics of war finance in the last twenty five
years of Louis' reign profoundly influenced the direction in which
absolutism developed through the remainder of the Old Regime. The
book situates the period 1688 to 1715 as a crucial stage in the
development of absolutism; tying the choices available to Louis XIV
with the structures and institutions that he inherited from his
predecessors, while setting his approach apart.
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