List of maps
Preface
1: France under Louis XVI
2: Enlightened Opinion
3: Crisis and Collapse, 1776-1788
4: The Estates-General, September 1788-July 1789
5: The Principles of 1789 and the Reform of France
6: The Breakdown of Revolutionary Consensus, 1790-1791
7: Europe and the Revolution, 1788-1791
8: The Republican Revolution, October 1791-January 1793
9: War Against Europe, 1792-1797
10: The Revolt of the Provinces
11: Government by Terror, 1793-1794
12: Thermidor, 1794-1795
13: Counter-Revolution, 1789-1795
14: The Directory, 1795-1799
15: Occupied Europe, 1794-1799
16: An End to Revolution, 1799-1802
17: The Revolution in Perspective
Notes
Appendix I: Chronology of the French Revolution
Appendix II: The Revolutionary Calendar
Bibliography: The Revolution and its Historians
Index
William Doyle is Professor of History, University of Bristol. His other books, published by OUP, include Origins of the French Revolution, Old Regime France 1648-1788, The Old European Order 1660-1800, and The French Revolution: A Very Short Introduction.
`Review from previous edition . . . an outstanding model of clarity
and informed scholarship.'
Simon Schama, New Republic
`Doyle's book, in its readability, its clarity and its balance, is
certainly the best of the general studies of the Revolution that
have recently appeared; it will appeal both to the general reader
and to the historian. And it deals with the subject, rather than
with those who have already written about it.'
Richard Griffiths, Times Higher Educational Supplement
`. . . a work of breath-taking range which deserves to reach a wide
popular market. It is the fullest history to appear of the
Revolutionary era, of the events preceding it and of its impact on
a wider world. Masterfully written.'
The Observer
`He writes lucidly and gracefully, with balance and good judgement
. . . offers valuable insights into the shadows that the Revolution
cast across the century that followed it.'
Philip Zeigler, Weekend Telegraph
`Doyle has produced a wonderfully lucid, authoritative and balanced
history, ornamented with all the scholarly apparatus one would
expect from an Oxford history.'
Linda Colley, London Review of Books
`. . . excellent narrative history.'
Spectator
`. . . first-rate synthesis . . . The strengths of the book are its
firm narrative thread, its measured tone and the extraordinary
distillation of knowledge contained in each chapter. The author's
familiarity with ongoing research in the field of French
revolutionary history is nearly total; the fruits of many
historians' labours are deftly summarised, received opinions
modified, alternative judgments formulated. In terms of sheer
coverage, the book is
difficult to fault. Not only is the life of revolutionary France
captured in these pages, but that of much of Europe as well.'
New Statesman
`efficient book . . . William Doyle's account of the course of the
Revolution is solid and up-to-date, and will make an excellent
textbook.'
Norman Stone, Sunday Times
`For readers who need a fairly brisk, non-digressive account of
events after the accession of Louis XVI up to Napoleon and the
peace of Amiens in 1802, this compact book, by the professor and
chairman of the school of history at Bristol University, is the
answer.'
Anthony Curtis, Financial Times
`. . . an excellent text for the early part of the Revolution.'
London Evening Standard
`a work of breath-taking range which deserves to reach a wide
popular market . . . It is the fullest history to appear of the
Revolutionary era . . . Masterfully written, with a nice sense of
the atmosphere and of the physical background to the events
recounted.'
Marianne Elliott, Observer
`His book is a tour de force of historical scholarship . . . and a
pleasure to read.'
Piers Brendon, The Mail on Sunday
`This is the most comprehensive all-in-one history of the
Revolution . . . supremely clear and brimming with scholarly
detail.'
Independent
`. . . traditional, scholarly, narrative history . . . a clear and
balanced picture of the origins of the Revolution.'
New York Times Book Review
`A fair, and remarkably complete, account of both the Revolution
itself and the years that preceded it . . . a book that sets itself
to cover an immense amount of ground and ends with a clear and
well-balanced final chapter in which he outlines the many gains,
and the often heavy cost, of the revolutionary years . . . thorough
and scholarly appraisal of French cultural values.'
New York Newsday
`truly a master narrative of this classical subject of
historiography.'
Alexander Pinwinkler, University of Salzburg
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