The French Revolution: a history in documents
"This book explores the rapidly evolving political culture of the French Revolution through first-hand accounts of the revolutionary (and counterrevolutionary) actors. As well as providing an invaluable general introduction and vital contextual notes on every source included, Micah Alpaugh sele...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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London
Bloomsbury Academic
2021
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Schriftenreihe: | Bloomsbury sourcebooks
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Zusammenfassung: | "This book explores the rapidly evolving political culture of the French Revolution through first-hand accounts of the revolutionary (and counterrevolutionary) actors. As well as providing an invaluable general introduction and vital contextual notes on every source included, Micah Alpaugh selects a varied range of pieces, drawing on Parisian, provincial and even international voices, and classic texts in addition to lesser-known sources. This unique collection of 13 visual sources and 88 documents, many of which have been translated into English here for the first time, provide perspectives into the debates, pronouncements and proposals that spawned modern politics"-- |
Beschreibung: | xvi, 290 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9781350065307 9781350065291 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS List of Illustrations xi Acknowledgments xii Timeline xiii Introduction: The French Revolution and the Possible 1 Origins 2 The Rise of the Political Nation 5 Becoming a Revolution 6 Destabilizing the Revolution 7 The French Republic 10 The Radical Revolution and Terror 12 Military Possibilities and Authoritarian Anticipations 15 1 Revolutionary Origins 19 Baron de Montesquieu, The Spirit of the Laws, 1748 20 Madame de Campan, Memoirs on the Private Life of Marie Antoinette, published 1823 22 Louis de Jaucourt, “Superstition” article, Encyclopedia, 1765 24 Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, 1762 25 Louis-Sébastien Mercier, selections from Panorama of Paris, 1781-1788 27 Abbé de Raynal, History of the Two Indies, Third Edition, 1780 31 Jacques Necker, Account Rendered to the King, 1781 33 Arthur Young, Account of a 1787 Salon Gathering, Travels in France, published in 1792 35 2 Towards the Estates General 39 Letters from the Marquis de Lafayette to George Washington, August and September 1787 40
VI CONTENTS Gazette de Leyde Artide on the Day of the Tiles, June 20,1788 42 Statement of Grievances of the Secular and Regular Clergy of Forcalquier, April 7, 1789 44 Statement of Grievances of the Nobility of La Rochelle, March 26, 1789 47 Statement of Grievances of the Third Estate of the District of Guéret, March 21,1789 51 Statement of Grievances of the Third Estate of Paris, 1789 53 Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès, What is the Third Estate? 1789 57 3 Sparking the French Revolution 63 Jacques Necker, Speech at Opening of Estates General, May 5, 1789 64 Declaration of the National Assembly, June 17,1789 66 Louis XVI, Speech to the Estates General, June 23,1789 67 Jean-Baptiste Humbert, Insurrection of Jean-Baptiste Humbert, Watchmaker, Who was First to Climb the Towers of the Bastille, 1789 70 Adrien Duquesnoy, Personal Journal, Entry of July 16,1789 75 Decree on the Abolition of Privileges, August 11 79 4 Revolutionary Freedoms 83 Thomas Jefferson, Richard Gem and Marquis de Lafayette, selections from letters and documents concerning the drafting of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, January-July 1789 84 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, August 26,1789 88 André de Sinéty, Proposal for a Declaration of the Rights of Man and Duties of the Citizen, 1789 90 Pierre-Victor, Baron de Malouet, Speech on the Royal Veto, September 1,1789 93 Madame Chéret, Events of Paris and Versailles, by one of the Women who had the Opportunity to be in the Deputation, 1789 95 Reading of a Letter from the London Revolution Society in the National Assembly, Followed by the
National Assembly’s Response, Presaging the Jacobin Club’s Founding, November 25,1789 97
CONTENTS 5 vii Revolutionary Radicalization 101 Arthur Young, selection from Travels in France, account of an early Jacobin Meeting, published in 1792 102 The Friend of the King newspaper, selections from “Preliminary Discourse on the State of France,” June 1,1790 104 Jean-Marie Goujon and Pierre-François Tissot, Account of Federation Festival, July 14,1790 106 Protest against Refractory Clergyman refusing Civil Constitution of the Clergy, Universal Gazette, January 19,1791 108 Maximillien de Robespierre, Selections from Speech favoring the Abolition of the Death Penalty, May 30,1791 108 6 Overthrowing the Monarchy 113 Louis XVI, “Declaration of the King, Addressed to all the French Before His Leaving Paris,” June 20,1791 114 Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette’s Correspondence with the Revolution’s Enemies, May 18,1790 and March 2,1792 116 National Assembly, Debates over a War Ultimatum to Austria, January 25,1792 118 Duke of Brunswick, Brunswick Manifesto, July 25,1792 120 Claude-Joseph Rouget de Lisle, The Marseillaise, April 1792 123 Grand Telling of the Siege and Taking of the Tuileries Palace, 1792 125 7 Debating Terror 129 Jean-Paul Marat, The Friend of the People, No. 679, August 14, 1792 130 François de Jourgniac Saint-Méard, My Agony of Thirty-Eight Hours, 1792 132 Georges-Jacques Danton, “Always Audaciousness” speech, September 2,1792 135 Charles-François Morrison, Proposal of Punishment for the King, November 13,1792 136 Louis-Antoine de Saint-Just, selections from “One Cannot Reign Innocently” speech, November 13,1792 138
viii CONTENTS Legislators pronounce their verdicts in the King’s Trial, January 16-17,1793 140 Marchioness de Bonchamps, selections from Memoirs of the Vendée, published 1815 143 8 A Cultural Revolution 147 Olympe de Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of Woman, 1791 148 Pauline Léon, from Address to the National Assembly by the Female Citizens of the Capital, March 6,1792 153 Petition to legalize divorce from Department of Paris, February 13, 1792 154 Léonard Robin, Instruction on the Law that Determines the Causes, the Method and the Effects of Divorce, passed on September 20, 2792, February 6,1793 155 Mary Wollstonecraft, selections from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792 157 Rosalie Julien, selected letters from a Convention deputy’s wife and mother, September 2 and December 28,1792 160 Selections from Père Duchesne newspaper Number 253,1793 161 “What is a Ѕапѕ-Culotteì” 1793 163 9 Executing Terror 165 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, 1793 166 Ça Ira, 1790 and 1793 versions 170 Law of Suspects, September 17,1793 172 Camille Desmoulins, selections from The Old Cordelier, Frimaire—Nivôse Year II (December 1793-January 1794) 174 Maximillien Robespierre, selections from “Virtue and Terror” speech, 18 Pluviôse Year II (February 6,1794) 176 Proceedings of the Revolutionary Tribunal, 14 Germinal Year II (April 3,1794) 179 Decree Establishing the Worship of the Supreme Being, 18 Floréal Year II (May 7,1794) 181 10 International Reverberations Ш Camille Desmoulins, Revolutions of France and Brabant Newspaper, October 1789 190
CONTENTS їх Edmund Burke, selections from Reflections on the Revolution in France. 1790 192 Thomas Paine, selections from the Rights of Man, 1791-2 195 James Watt, Jr. and Thomas Cooper. “Speech of the Delegates of the Manchester Constitutional Society Pronounced before the Paris Jacobin Club,” April 13,1792 198 French National Assembly Bestows Citizenship on Exemplary Foreigners (Paine, Wilberforce, Washington and Hamilton Included), August 26,1792 200 Regulations of the Democratic-Republican Society of Philadelphia, 1793 201 Theobald Wolfe Tone, selections from Memoirs, published 1826 202 Anacharsis Cloots, extract from Constitutional Bases for the Republic of the Human Race, 1793 205 11 The Haitian Revolution 209 Julien Raimond, selections from Observations on the Origin and Progress of White Colonials’ Prejudice Against Free Men of Color. 1791 211 Club Massiac, Letter to the Chambers of Commerce of Maritime Cities, August 27,1789 (with ensuing Nantes petition) 213 Maximillien Robespierre, Interventions in Colonial Debates, May 12-13,1791 214 Antoine Métrai, Account of the Bois Caiman Ceremony (August 1791), History of the Insurrection of Slaves in the North of SaintDomingue, 1818 216 Jean-Philippe Garran de Coulon, selections from An Inquiry into the Causes of the Insurrection of the Negroes in the Island of Santo Domingo, 1792 218 National Convention, selections from Debates on the Abolition of Slavery, 16 Pluviôse Year II (February 4,1794) 220 Saint-Domingue Constitution of 1801 222 Haitian Declaration of Independence, 1804 224 12 The Thermidorian and Directory Eras
229 Jean-Lambert Tallien, selections from “System of Terror” speech, 11 Fructidor Year II (August 28,1794) 230
CONTENTS x Eusèbe Salverte, selections from The First Days of Prairial, Year III (1795) 232 François-Marie Boissy d’Anglas, selections from Preliminary Discourse on the Constitutional Project, 5 Messidor Year III (June 23,1795) 235 Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man and Citizen, Year III (1795) 237 Manifesto of the Directors, selections, 14 Brumaire Year IV (November 5,1795) 239 Gracchus Babeuf, Analysis of the Doctrine, Year ГѴ (1796) 240 General Jean-Pierre Ramel, Secret Anecdotes of the Revolution of 18 Fructidor, published Year VI (1799) 241 13 The Rise of Napoleon 245 Napoleon Bonaparte, selections from First Speech as Consul, November 10,1799 246 Concordat. Year IX, 1801 248 Madame de Staël, Considerations on the Principal Events of the Revolution and Empire, published 1818 250 Napoleonic Code, Marriage Laws, Year XI1804 and 1810 253 Pierre-Louis Roederer, Speech Proposing the Creation of a Legion of Honor, Year X (1802) 255 Denis Parquin, Recitations of War, published 1892 256 Napoleon Bonaparte, selections from Memoirs from St. Helena, published 1821 258 Appendix: Maps 263 Notes 266 Bibliography 276 Index 282
The French Revolution: A History in Documents explores the rapidiy evolving political culture of the French Revolution through first-hand accounts of the revolutionary (and counter revolutionary) actors themselves. It demonstrates how radical Enlightenment philosophyfused with a governmental crisis to create a moment of new political opportunities unlike any the world had previously seen. In so doing, the French and their allies generated a template for revolutionary possibility from which virtually all subsequent political movements ֊ liberalism, abolitionism, socialism, anarchism, conservatism, feminism, and human rights included derived inspiration. As well as providing an invaluable general introduction, vital contextual notes and thematic bibliographies, Micah Alpaugh selects a fascinating range of pieces, drawing on Parisian, provincial, colonial, and even international voices. From Enlightened dissent to apologias for terror, from declarations of human rights to accounts of slave rebellions, from passionate arguments for democratization to the authoritarian pronouncements of Napoleonic rule, this book presents the French Revolution’s evolution in all its awesome complexity. In addition to classic texts, Alpaugh includes many lesser-known sources, a number of which are translated into English here forthe first time. This unique collection of 13 visual sources and over 80 documents, incorporating perspectives from across class, gender, race, and nationality, provides you with insights into the fervent debates, pronouncements, and proposals that spawned modern
politics.
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS List of Illustrations xi Acknowledgments xii Timeline xiii Introduction: The French Revolution and the Possible 1 Origins 2 The Rise of the Political Nation 5 Becoming a Revolution 6 Destabilizing the Revolution 7 The French Republic 10 The Radical Revolution and Terror 12 Military Possibilities and Authoritarian Anticipations 15 1 Revolutionary Origins 19 Baron de Montesquieu, The Spirit of the Laws, 1748 20 Madame de Campan, Memoirs on the Private Life of Marie Antoinette, published 1823 22 Louis de Jaucourt, “Superstition” article, Encyclopedia, 1765 24 Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, 1762 25 Louis-Sébastien Mercier, selections from Panorama of Paris, 1781-1788 27 Abbé de Raynal, History of the Two Indies, Third Edition, 1780 31 Jacques Necker, Account Rendered to the King, 1781 33 Arthur Young, Account of a 1787 Salon Gathering, Travels in France, published in 1792 35 2 Towards the Estates General 39 Letters from the Marquis de Lafayette to George Washington, August and September 1787 40
VI CONTENTS Gazette de Leyde Artide on the Day of the Tiles, June 20,1788 42 Statement of Grievances of the Secular and Regular Clergy of Forcalquier, April 7, 1789 44 Statement of Grievances of the Nobility of La Rochelle, March 26, 1789 47 Statement of Grievances of the Third Estate of the District of Guéret, March 21,1789 51 Statement of Grievances of the Third Estate of Paris, 1789 53 Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès, What is the Third Estate? 1789 57 3 Sparking the French Revolution 63 Jacques Necker, Speech at Opening of Estates General, May 5, 1789 64 Declaration of the National Assembly, June 17,1789 66 Louis XVI, Speech to the Estates General, June 23,1789 67 Jean-Baptiste Humbert, Insurrection of Jean-Baptiste Humbert, Watchmaker, Who was First to Climb the Towers of the Bastille, 1789 70 Adrien Duquesnoy, Personal Journal, Entry of July 16,1789 75 Decree on the Abolition of Privileges, August 11 79 4 Revolutionary Freedoms 83 Thomas Jefferson, Richard Gem and Marquis de Lafayette, selections from letters and documents concerning the drafting of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, January-July 1789 84 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, August 26,1789 88 André de Sinéty, Proposal for a Declaration of the Rights of Man and Duties of the Citizen, 1789 90 Pierre-Victor, Baron de Malouet, Speech on the Royal Veto, September 1,1789 93 Madame Chéret, Events of Paris and Versailles, by one of the Women who had the Opportunity to be in the Deputation, 1789 95 Reading of a Letter from the London Revolution Society in the National Assembly, Followed by the
National Assembly’s Response, Presaging the Jacobin Club’s Founding, November 25,1789 97
CONTENTS 5 vii Revolutionary Radicalization 101 Arthur Young, selection from Travels in France, account of an early Jacobin Meeting, published in 1792 102 The Friend of the King newspaper, selections from “Preliminary Discourse on the State of France,” June 1,1790 104 Jean-Marie Goujon and Pierre-François Tissot, Account of Federation Festival, July 14,1790 106 Protest against Refractory Clergyman refusing Civil Constitution of the Clergy, Universal Gazette, January 19,1791 108 Maximillien de Robespierre, Selections from Speech favoring the Abolition of the Death Penalty, May 30,1791 108 6 Overthrowing the Monarchy 113 Louis XVI, “Declaration of the King, Addressed to all the French Before His Leaving Paris,” June 20,1791 114 Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette’s Correspondence with the Revolution’s Enemies, May 18,1790 and March 2,1792 116 National Assembly, Debates over a War Ultimatum to Austria, January 25,1792 118 Duke of Brunswick, Brunswick Manifesto, July 25,1792 120 Claude-Joseph Rouget de Lisle, The Marseillaise, April 1792 123 Grand Telling of the Siege and Taking of the Tuileries Palace, 1792 125 7 Debating Terror 129 Jean-Paul Marat, The Friend of the People, No. 679, August 14, 1792 130 François de Jourgniac Saint-Méard, My Agony of Thirty-Eight Hours, 1792 132 Georges-Jacques Danton, “Always Audaciousness” speech, September 2,1792 135 Charles-François Morrison, Proposal of Punishment for the King, November 13,1792 136 Louis-Antoine de Saint-Just, selections from “One Cannot Reign Innocently” speech, November 13,1792 138
viii CONTENTS Legislators pronounce their verdicts in the King’s Trial, January 16-17,1793 140 Marchioness de Bonchamps, selections from Memoirs of the Vendée, published 1815 143 8 A Cultural Revolution 147 Olympe de Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of Woman, 1791 148 Pauline Léon, from Address to the National Assembly by the Female Citizens of the Capital, March 6,1792 153 Petition to legalize divorce from Department of Paris, February 13, 1792 154 Léonard Robin, Instruction on the Law that Determines the Causes, the Method and the Effects of Divorce, passed on September 20, 2792, February 6,1793 155 Mary Wollstonecraft, selections from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792 157 Rosalie Julien, selected letters from a Convention deputy’s wife and mother, September 2 and December 28,1792 160 Selections from Père Duchesne newspaper Number 253,1793 161 “What is a Ѕапѕ-Culotteì” 1793 163 9 Executing Terror 165 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, 1793 166 Ça Ira, 1790 and 1793 versions 170 Law of Suspects, September 17,1793 172 Camille Desmoulins, selections from The Old Cordelier, Frimaire—Nivôse Year II (December 1793-January 1794) 174 Maximillien Robespierre, selections from “Virtue and Terror” speech, 18 Pluviôse Year II (February 6,1794) 176 Proceedings of the Revolutionary Tribunal, 14 Germinal Year II (April 3,1794) 179 Decree Establishing the Worship of the Supreme Being, 18 Floréal Year II (May 7,1794) 181 10 International Reverberations Ш Camille Desmoulins, Revolutions of France and Brabant Newspaper, October 1789 190
CONTENTS їх Edmund Burke, selections from Reflections on the Revolution in France. 1790 192 Thomas Paine, selections from the Rights of Man, 1791-2 195 James Watt, Jr. and Thomas Cooper. “Speech of the Delegates of the Manchester Constitutional Society Pronounced before the Paris Jacobin Club,” April 13,1792 198 French National Assembly Bestows Citizenship on Exemplary Foreigners (Paine, Wilberforce, Washington and Hamilton Included), August 26,1792 200 Regulations of the Democratic-Republican Society of Philadelphia, 1793 201 Theobald Wolfe Tone, selections from Memoirs, published 1826 202 Anacharsis Cloots, extract from Constitutional Bases for the Republic of the Human Race, 1793 205 11 The Haitian Revolution 209 Julien Raimond, selections from Observations on the Origin and Progress of White Colonials’ Prejudice Against Free Men of Color. 1791 211 Club Massiac, Letter to the Chambers of Commerce of Maritime Cities, August 27,1789 (with ensuing Nantes petition) 213 Maximillien Robespierre, Interventions in Colonial Debates, May 12-13,1791 214 Antoine Métrai, Account of the Bois Caiman Ceremony (August 1791), History of the Insurrection of Slaves in the North of SaintDomingue, 1818 216 Jean-Philippe Garran de Coulon, selections from An Inquiry into the Causes of the Insurrection of the Negroes in the Island of Santo Domingo, 1792 218 National Convention, selections from Debates on the Abolition of Slavery, 16 Pluviôse Year II (February 4,1794) 220 Saint-Domingue Constitution of 1801 222 Haitian Declaration of Independence, 1804 224 12 The Thermidorian and Directory Eras
229 Jean-Lambert Tallien, selections from “System of Terror” speech, 11 Fructidor Year II (August 28,1794) 230
CONTENTS x Eusèbe Salverte, selections from The First Days of Prairial, Year III (1795) 232 François-Marie Boissy d’Anglas, selections from Preliminary Discourse on the Constitutional Project, 5 Messidor Year III (June 23,1795) 235 Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man and Citizen, Year III (1795) 237 Manifesto of the Directors, selections, 14 Brumaire Year IV (November 5,1795) 239 Gracchus Babeuf, Analysis of the Doctrine, Year ГѴ (1796) 240 General Jean-Pierre Ramel, Secret Anecdotes of the Revolution of 18 Fructidor, published Year VI (1799) 241 13 The Rise of Napoleon 245 Napoleon Bonaparte, selections from First Speech as Consul, November 10,1799 246 Concordat. Year IX, 1801 248 Madame de Staël, Considerations on the Principal Events of the Revolution and Empire, published 1818 250 Napoleonic Code, Marriage Laws, Year XI1804 and 1810 253 Pierre-Louis Roederer, Speech Proposing the Creation of a Legion of Honor, Year X (1802) 255 Denis Parquin, Recitations of War, published 1892 256 Napoleon Bonaparte, selections from Memoirs from St. Helena, published 1821 258 Appendix: Maps 263 Notes 266 Bibliography 276 Index 282
The French Revolution: A History in Documents explores the rapidiy evolving political culture of the French Revolution through first-hand accounts of the revolutionary (and counter revolutionary) actors themselves. It demonstrates how radical Enlightenment philosophyfused with a governmental crisis to create a moment of new political opportunities unlike any the world had previously seen. In so doing, the French and their allies generated a template for revolutionary possibility from which virtually all subsequent political movements ֊ liberalism, abolitionism, socialism, anarchism, conservatism, feminism, and human rights included derived inspiration. As well as providing an invaluable general introduction, vital contextual notes and thematic bibliographies, Micah Alpaugh selects a fascinating range of pieces, drawing on Parisian, provincial, colonial, and even international voices. From Enlightened dissent to apologias for terror, from declarations of human rights to accounts of slave rebellions, from passionate arguments for democratization to the authoritarian pronouncements of Napoleonic rule, this book presents the French Revolution’s evolution in all its awesome complexity. In addition to classic texts, Alpaugh includes many lesser-known sources, a number of which are translated into English here forthe first time. This unique collection of 13 visual sources and over 80 documents, incorporating perspectives from across class, gender, race, and nationality, provides you with insights into the fervent debates, pronouncements, and proposals that spawned modern
politics. |
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genre | (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content |
genre_facet | Quelle |
id | DE-604.BV047197122 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T16:50:10Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:05:21Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781350065307 9781350065291 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-032602316 |
oclc_num | 1241198039 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-384 |
owner_facet | DE-384 |
physical | xvi, 290 Seiten Illustrationen |
publishDate | 2021 |
publishDateSearch | 2021 |
publishDateSort | 2021 |
publisher | Bloomsbury Academic |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Bloomsbury sourcebooks |
spelling | The French Revolution a history in documents edited by Micah Alpaugh London Bloomsbury Academic 2021 xvi, 290 Seiten Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Bloomsbury sourcebooks "This book explores the rapidly evolving political culture of the French Revolution through first-hand accounts of the revolutionary (and counterrevolutionary) actors. As well as providing an invaluable general introduction and vital contextual notes on every source included, Micah Alpaugh selects a varied range of pieces, drawing on Parisian, provincial and even international voices, and classic texts in addition to lesser-known sources. This unique collection of 13 visual sources and 88 documents, many of which have been translated into English here for the first time, provide perspectives into the debates, pronouncements and proposals that spawned modern politics"-- Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 gnd rswk-swf France / History / Revolution, 1789-1799 / Sources France 1789-1799 History Sources (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 s DE-604 Alpaugh, Micah (DE-588)1064335195 edt Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-3500-6532-1 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF 978-1-3500-6531-4 Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032602316&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032602316&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | The French Revolution a history in documents Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4018183-2 (DE-588)4135952-5 |
title | The French Revolution a history in documents |
title_auth | The French Revolution a history in documents |
title_exact_search | The French Revolution a history in documents |
title_exact_search_txtP | The French Revolution a history in documents |
title_full | The French Revolution a history in documents edited by Micah Alpaugh |
title_fullStr | The French Revolution a history in documents edited by Micah Alpaugh |
title_full_unstemmed | The French Revolution a history in documents edited by Micah Alpaugh |
title_short | The French Revolution |
title_sort | the french revolution a history in documents |
title_sub | a history in documents |
topic | Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Französische Revolution Quelle |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032602316&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032602316&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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