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Neob''iasnimaia Vandeia: sel'skii mir na zapade Frantsii v XVII-XVIII vekakh [Unexplained Vendée: The Rural World of Western Fra
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Presented here is the first study in domestic historiography to examine one of the most dramatic episodes of the French Revolution: the civil war in the country's western regions (1793–1796). For Soviet historians, the powerful peasant protest against the policies of the new regime long remained a taboo subject. Drawing upon the insights of historical anthropology and agrarian history, as well as the latest methodological approaches, the author explores the distinctive features of self-identity and self-organization, the modes of economic activity, and the nature of social engagement within rural society during this transitional era between two epochs.
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Presented here is the first study in domestic historiography to examine one of the most dramatic episodes of the French Revolution: the civil war in the country's western regions (1793–1796). For Soviet historians, the powerful peasant protest against the policies of the new regime long remained a taboo subject. Drawing upon the insights of historical anthropology and agrarian history, as well as the latest methodological approaches, the author explores the distinctive features of self-identity and self-organization, the modes of economic activity, and the nature of social engagement within rural society during this transitional era between two epochs.
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Data sheet
Author
Miagkova E
Publisher
Academia
ISBN
5874442294
Format
Hardcover
Year Published
2006
Pages
288
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Presented here is the first study in domestic historiography to examine one of the most dramatic episodes of the French Revolution: the civil war in the country's western regions (1793–1796). For Soviet historians, the powerful peasant protest against the policies of the new regime long remained a taboo subject. Drawing upon the insights of historical anthropology and agrarian history, as well as the latest methodological approaches, the author explores the distinctive features of self-identity and self-organization, the modes of economic activity, and the nature of social engagement within rural society during this transitional era between two epochs.