Prologue - court and country; the day of the tennis-court oath, 20 June 1789; the day of the Vainquers de la Bastille, 14 July 1789; the day of the market-women, 5-6 October 1789; the days of the federes and the flight to Varennes, 14-17 July 1790 and 19-26 June 1791; the days of the tuileries, 20 June and 10 August 1792; the days of the September massacres and the execution of the king, 2-7 September 1792 and 21 January 1793; the days of the enrages and the hebertists, 28 May-2 June and 4-5 September 1793; the days of the terror, October-December 1793 and March-July 1794; the days of Thermidor, 22-28 July 1794; the days of Germinal, Prairal and Vendemiaire, 1 April, 20 May and 4-6 October 1795; epilogue - the advent of Bonaparte; appendices.
Christopher Hibbert was born in Leicestershire in 1924 and educated
at Radley and Oriel College, Oxford. He served as an infantry
officer during the war, was twice wounded and was awarded the
Military Cross in 1945. Described by Professor J. H. Plumb as 'a
writer of the highest ability' and in the New Statesman as 'a pearl
of biographers', he is, in the words of The Times Educational
Supplement, 'perhaps the most gifted popular historian we
have'.
Christopher Hibbert is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
He is married with two sons and a daughter and lives in
Henley-on-Thames.
Ask a Question About this Product More... |