Translator's Introduction
Introduction
PART ONE: PARIS AND ITS INHABITANTS (THIRTEENTH-FIFTEENTH
CENTURIES)
Chapter 1: Urban Space: Designers and Occupants
—The Enceinte Defined the City
—Urban Growth to the Thirteenth Century
—Witnesses to These Transformations
—Ordinary Parisians in Urbanization
—Paris, Home of the Free
—The Big City at the End of the Middle Ages: Prosperity and
Sorrow.
—Parisians in Their City
Chapter 2: Street Scenes: Marvels and Perils of Parisian Life
—The Flattery of Arts and Letters
—Prosaic Glimpses
—Normative Documents
—The Streets of Paris: Life, Crime and Punishment
—The Streets of Paris: Religious Spaces and Political Spaces
Chapter 3: Parisians
—Provincial Immigrants
—A Self-Sustaining Population
—Strangers Assimilated and Individuals Distinguished
—Tales of Ordinary Life
—Parisians Between Modernity and Tradition
PART TWO: A KALEIDOSCOPE OF HIERARCHIES
Chapter 4: The World of Money: Haves and Have Nots
—The Parisian Great Bourgeoisie
—International Financiers and Royal Financial Agents
—The Simple Bourgeois
—From Comfort to Survival: The Poor and the Impoverished
Chapter 5: The World of Political Power
—Paris, Seat of the King and his Court
—In the King's Service
—And the Nobility?
—Agents of Power: Procurators, Sergeants, Clerks, and Others
Chapter 6: The World of the Church
—Church Grandees in the Capital
—Ecclesiastical Seigneuries
—A Clerical Patchwork Quilt
—Religious Life Set the Beat for Paris Life
—Scholars and Savants
—The World of the Church and the World of Charity
PART THREE: OF WORKS AND DAYS
Chapter 7: In Shop and Workroom: Bringing Home the Bacon
—The House as Work Space and Living Space
—The World of the Artisans
—Apprentices
—Valets or Wage-Earning Journeymen
—Masters, Jurés, and Gardes
—Outside the Crafts: Domestics and Unskilled Labor
—Disturbances in the World of Labor
Chapter 8: Networks of Solidarity: Obligatory Bonds and Chosen
Ties
—The Family Group, More Restrained Yet Less Constraining
—Ordinary Parisian Women in the Time of Philip the Fair
—Voluntary Attachments and Supportive Solidarities: Associations
and Confraternities
Chapter 9: Lifestyles
—Intimacy: The Individual and the Community
—Lodging from Palace to Cottage
—Enclosed Space and Open Space, Public and Private
—The Nuts and Bolts of Daily Life
Conclusion
Appendix: Parisian Taxpayers in 1297
Notes
Bibliography
Chronology
Glossary
Index
Centering on the streets of this metropolis, Simone Roux peers into the secret lives of people within their homes and the public world of affairs and entertainments, populating the book with laborers, shop keepers, magistrates, thieves, and strollers.
Simone Roux is Professor of History Emerita at University of Paris-X, Nantes. Jo Ann McNamara was Professor of History at Hunter College, City University of New York. She was the author of Sisters in Arms: Catholic Nuns Through Two Millennia.
"Simone Roux's new history of medieval Paris, beautifully
translated by Jo Ann McNamara . . . goes far beyond cold
administrative mechanics or economics, and digs down into the
attitudes of workaday life. It is this anecdotal material that
gives the book its human edge—too often absent from a period
lacking in diaries and private letters."—TLS
"One feels the city in constant motion, going from funeral to
carnival, wading along streets drenched with the blood of animals
flayed by butchers, applauding jongleurs and their monkeys, even
watching the legal trials of beasts condemned to death."—Le Nouvel
Observateur, in a review of the French edition
"A wonderful and useful book for anyone who wants to know the
history of the city from the inside."—H-Net
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