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À Paris, dans les premières années du XIXe siècle, l’association du centre du pouvoir politique et administratif et de celui de la vie financière, commerciale et, dans quelque mesure, industrielle était accomplie pour l’essentiel, donnant naissance à ce complexe de domination jacobino-capitaliste si particulier à notre pays, son orgueil pour les uns, son fléau pour les autres. Le visage de la métropole s’en est trouvé modelé d’une façon décisive : les quartiers s’étendant de la place des Victoires à la gare Saint-Lazare, du Sentier à la « City » parisienne constituent toujours le môle de résistance et le pôle d’attraction, où une société marchande et aristocratique à la fois a - de Louis XVI à Napoléon III - édifié ses bastions, et fini par donner au profit ses lettres de noblesse. « L. Bergeron apporte des éléments nouveaux au grand débat historique sur les incidences économiques de la Révolution et des guerres impériales. En fin de compte, cette thèse originale se consulte plus facilement qu’elle se lit, car elle apparaît comme une suite de monographies ou une série d’études de cas qui fournissent une somme impressionnante d’informations sur les aléas de l’industrialisation française. » François Jequier, Schweizerische Zeitscbrift fur Gescbicbte, 27 (3), 1977. Avec « Les Réimpressions » des titres du fonds des Éditions de l'EHESS, publiés des années 1950 aux années 1970 sous l'égide de la VIe Section de l'École Pratique des Hautes Études, sont à nouveau disponibles. En permettant d'accéder à l'intégralité du texte de l'édition originale - avec l'appareil scientifique complet - « Les Réimpressions » répondent aux besoins des bibliothèques universitaires et savantes, ainsi qu'à ceux des chercheurs et des lecteurs soucieux de disposer d'ouvrages de référence, devenus souvent des classiques.
Business & Economics --- Economic History --- Paris (France) --- Economic conditions. --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Paris --- Seine (France) --- City of Paris --- Directoire --- Premier Empire --- banquiers --- Banque de France --- négociants
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'The Kill' is the second volume in Zola's great cycle of 20 novels, Les Rougon-Macquart, and the first to establish Paris - the capital of modernity - as the centre of Zola's narrative world. The novel combines into a single, powerful vision the twin themes of lust for money and lust for pleasure.
French literature. --- Paris (France) --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Paris --- Seine (France) --- Social life and customs --- City of Paris
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Paris (France) --- History --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- City of Paris --- Paris --- Seine (France)
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Pour la première fois en français, ce panorama comparatif de l'image symbolique et de l'histoire culturelle des principales capitales européennes est le fruit des recherches d'historien(ne)s, d'historien(ne)s d'art, de musicologues, d'historien(ne)s du livre et de la littérature. Dans une grande Europe de la France à la Russie et de l'Allemagne à l'Espagne ou l'Italie, l'analyse comparative s'étend sur plus de deux siècles. Elle permet de revisiter le cas parisien, exceptionnel certes, mais aussi modèle pour d'autres nations plus récentes ou repoussoir pour des espaces qui répondent à d'autres logiques urbaines. La confrontation des disciplines permet des liaisons nouvelles du politique à l'artistique, du symbolique au mémoriel, de l'échelle locale à l'échelle nationale, des institutions aux pratiques sociales et aux stratégies des créateurs. Ces deux siècles voient le passage d'une culture dominée par des élites restreintes à une société où les cultures s'ouvrent, se diversifient et se chevauchent. Ils sont marqués aussi par la concurrence croissante entre un modèle traditionnel encore vivace dans les arts élitistes (peinture, musique, etc.), fondé sur la dialectique de la Cour et de la Ville, et un modèle plus contemporain, où les métropoles sont, de plus en plus, des points de passage entre des réseaux, à la fois rivaux et interdépendants de production et de diffusion des biens culturels reproductibles et largement diffusés (livre, spectacles...).
History of Europe --- anno 1700-1799 --- anno 1800-1899 --- Capitals (Cities) --- Capitales --- History --- Congresses. --- Histoire --- Congrès --- Europe --- Paris (France) --- Civilization --- Intellectual life --- Congresses --- Civilisation --- Vie intellectuelle --- History & Archaeology --- History - General --- 944 --- Geschiedenis van Frankrijk --- 944 Geschiedenis van Frankrijk --- Congrès --- Cities and towns --- 18th century --- 19th century --- 20th century --- Civilization. --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Paris --- Seine (France) --- 944 History of France --- History of France --- City of Paris --- image symbolique --- ville européenne
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Paris (France) --- France --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Parys (France) --- باريس (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- Париж (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Seine (France) --- News. --- Zeitung. --- Frankreich. --- Paris --- Bali (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- City of Paris --- Journaux français --- French newspapers --- Newspapers --- French newspapers. --- Paris (França) --- Informació general --- Parigi (França) --- París
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Paris, Ville Lumière, miroir du monde, Babel des temps modernes, voilà l’image que nous a léguée le XIXe siècle. Exilés, sans-patrie, poètes, romanciers, peintres, musiciens, étudiants y ont trouvé refuge. De telle manière que tous ces étrangers de Paris ont constitué le Paris des étrangers. Mais après le traumatisme de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, Paris est-il toujours la capitale des libertés ? Les victimes des révolutions et des répressions ; se dirigent-elles encore vers la capitale de la France ? Paris reste-t-il ce centre de légitimation intellectuelle et culturelle qu’il a si longtemps été ? Quel rôle joue-t-il dans le monde pour la création artistique, la musique, le cinéma, l’édition ? Quel accueil réserve-t-il à ceux qui pensent y trouver un moyen de subsistance ? Les vingt-trois contributions de ce livre, poursuite d’un projet amorcé en 1987 à l’initiative du professeur Jean-Baptiste Duroselle (1917-1994), fondateur de l’Institut d’Histoire des Relations internationales contemporaines, s’efforcent de répondre à la question du pouvoir d’attraction de Paris depuis 1945 : elles jettent des éclairages variés, contradictoires, complexes, qui interdisent des conclusions univoques. Chaque jour, un congrès, un sommet international, une vague touristique, une révolution ou un drame dans le monde, un afflux d’étudiants, de nouvelles dispositions d’entrée sur le territoire viennent modifier le paysage d’un Paris des étrangers qui demeure d’une extraordinaire diversité. Italiens, Espagnols, Catalans, Portugais constituent l’immense apport latin à la France, qui n’a cessé depuis la fin du XIXe siècle. Mais l’Europe centrale et orientale est également présente, avec les différentes composantes de l’Union soviétique (Russes, Arméniens, Géorgiens), les Hongrois, les Polonais, les Roumains ou les Tchécoslovaques. Les anciennes colonies françaises ne sont pas absentes : l’Afrique du Nord et l’Afrique noire ont marqué Paris, et réciproquement, que leurs ressortissants…
Regions & Countries - Europe --- History & Archaeology --- France --- Aliens --- Paris (France) --- History --- Visitors [Foreign ] --- Immigrants --- Emigration and immigration --- Ethnic relations --- Intellectual life --- 20th century --- Civilization --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Paris --- Seine (France) --- Visitors, Foreign --- Étrangers --- Histoire --- Emigration and immigration. --- Vie artistique. --- Emigration et immigration --- Vie intellectuelle --- City of Paris --- Noncitizens --- immigration --- communauté --- PARIS (FRANCE) --- DEMOGRAPHIE --- FRANCE --- POPULATION --- 20E SIECLE --- 19E-20E SIECLES --- EMIGRATION ET IMMIGRATION
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In the closing years of the fourteenth century, an anonymous French writer compiled a book addressed to a fifteen-year-old bride, narrated in the voice of her husband, a wealthy, aging Parisian. The book was designed to teach this young wife the moral attributes, duties, and conduct befitting a woman of her station in society, in the almost certain event of her widowhood and subsequent remarriage. The work also provides a rich assembly of practical materials for the wife's use and for her household, including treatises on gardening and shopping, tips on choosing servants, directions on the medical care of horses and the training of hawks, plus menus for elaborate feasts, and more than 380 recipes.The Good Wife's Guide is the first complete modern English translation of this important medieval text also known as Le Ménagier de Paris (the Parisian household book), a work long recognized for its unique insights into the domestic life of the bourgeoisie during the later Middle Ages. The Good Wife's Guide, expertly rendered into modern English by Gina L. Greco and Christine M. Rose, is accompanied by an informative critical introduction setting the work in its proper medieval context as a conduct manual. This edition presents the book in its entirety, as it must have existed for its earliest readers.The Guide is now a treasure for the classroom, appealing to anyone studying medieval literature or history or considering the complex lives of medieval women. It illuminates the milieu and composition process of medieval authors and will in turn fascinate cooking or horticulture enthusiasts. The work illustrates how a (perhaps fictional) Parisian householder of the late fourteenth century might well have trained his wife so that her behavior could reflect honorably on him and enhance his reputation.
Conduct of life --- Cookery, French --- Cooking, French --- Home economics --- Paris (France) --- Social life and customs --- Book history --- Housekeeping --- anno 500-1499 --- Economie domestique --- Morale pratique --- Cuisine française --- Early works to 1800. --- Ouvrages avant 1800 --- Moeurs et coutumes --- Domestic economy --- Domestic science --- Family and consumer sciences --- Household management --- Household science --- Family life education --- Home --- Consumer education --- Formulas, recipes, etc. --- Households --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Parys (France) --- باريس (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- Париж (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Seine (France) --- Bali (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Paris --- City of Paris
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Le xixe siècle marque un tournant pour la population française puisqu’il est le siècle de l’urbanisation, de l’industrialisation et de la transition démographique. Si la France est, dès le milieu du xviiie siècle, précurseur du déclin de la fécondité, c’est dans la capitale que la limitation des naissances est la plus forte. Agrandissements urbains et grands travaux haussmanniens, forte immigration et changements socioéconomiques : Paris, qui connaît de profonds bouleversements tout au long du siècle, adopte une attitude malthusienne en matière de fécondité. À différentes échelles, de quartier en arrondissement, de Paris aux communes de banlieue, Sandra Brée mesure et analyse non seulement la fécondité légitime, mais aussi l’« illégitime », celle des naissances hors mariage et des unions libres. Elle livre ainsi un portrait subtil des comportements démographiques des citadins, influencés notamment par leur condition sociale, maritale et géographique. L’enquête historique révèle ainsi un fascinant laboratoire démographique. Au fil des pages se dessine un Paris révolutionnaire dans ses comportements contraceptifs, particulièrement anticipateurs. La capitale affirme, même dans ce domaine, sa volonté d’émancipation
Régulation des naissances --- Birth control --- Population --- History --- Fertility, Human --- Population control --- Pregnancy --- Family planning --- Contraception --- Reproductive rights --- Human fertility --- Natality --- Demography --- Human reproduction --- Infertility --- Prevention --- Paris (France) --- Social conditions --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- City of Paris --- Paris --- Seine (France) --- XIXe siècle --- histoire --- fécondité --- contrôle des naissances --- Régulation des naissances
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Paris in 1871 was a shambles following military defeat, siege, and a bloody uprising, and the question loomed, ""Could this extraordinary city even survive?"" By 1900, the Belle Epoque was in full flower, but the decades between were marked by tension and conflict, as the new challenged the old in everything from politics to art, literature, music, science, and engineering. Mary McAuliffe takes the reader back to these perilous years following the abrupt collapse of the Second Empire and France's uncertain venture into the Third Republic-examining this era through the eyes of
Belle Époque --- geschiedenis --- kunstgeschiedenis --- politiek --- Bernhardt, Sarah --- Clemenceau, Georges --- Debussy, Claude --- Dreyfus, Alfred --- Eiffel, Alexandre Gustave --- Monet, Claude --- Zola, Émile --- 19de eeuw --- 20ste eeuw --- Parijs --- Arts, French --- French literature --- Hussards (Group of writers) --- French arts --- Paris (France) --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Paris --- Seine (France) --- History --- Intellectual life --- City of Paris --- geschiedenis. --- politiek. --- Belle Époque. --- kunstgeschiedenis. --- Monet, Claude. --- Zola, Émile. --- Dreyfus, Alfred. --- Bernhardt, Sarah. --- Eiffel, Alexandre Gustave. --- Debussy, Claude. --- Clemenceau, Georges. --- 19de eeuw. --- 20ste eeuw. --- Parijs.
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The sights, sounds, and smells of life on the streets and in the houses of eighteenth-century Paris rise from the pages of this marvelously anecdotal chronicle of a perpetually alluring city during one hundred years of extraordinary social and cultural change. An excellent general history as well as an innovative synthesis of new research, The Making of Revolutionary Paris combines vivid portraits of individual lives, accounts of social trends, and analyses of significant events as it explores the evolution of Parisian society during the eighteenth century and reveals the city's pivotal role in shaping the French Revolution. David Garrioch rewrites the origins of the Parisian Revolution as the story of an urban metamorphosis stimulated by factors such as the spread of the Enlightenment, the growth of consumerism, and new ideas about urban space. With an eye on the broad social trends emerging during the century, he focuses his narrative on such humble but fascinating aspects of daily life as traffic congestion, a controversy over the renumbering of houses, and the ever-present dilemma of where to bury the dead. He describes changes in family life and women's social status, in religion, in the literary imagination, and in politics. Paris played a significant role in sparking the French Revolution, and in turn, the Revolution changed the city, not only its political structures but also its social organization, gender ideologies, and cultural practices. This book is the first to look comprehensively at the effect of the Revolution on city life. Based on the author's own research in Paris and on the most current scholarship, this absorbing book takes French history in new directions, providing a new understanding of the Parisian and the European past.
HISTORY / Europe / General. --- Paris (France) --- Social life and customs --- History --- Parijs (France) --- Pařiž (France) --- Parizh (France) --- Париж (France) --- Parigi (France) --- Bārīs (France) --- باريس (France) --- Lutetia (France) --- Paryż (France) --- Párizs (France) --- Parisioi (France) --- Parisi (France) --- Παρίσι (France) --- Parys (France) --- Parij (France) --- Parĩ (France) --- Bali (France) --- Pa-lí (France) --- 巴黎 (France) --- Horad Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Горад Парыж (France) --- Paryz︠h︡ (France) --- Парыж (France) --- Парис (France) --- Parighji (France) --- Pariggi (France) --- Pariis (France) --- Париж ош (France) --- Parizh osh (France) --- Parizo (France) --- Páras (France) --- Paarys (France) --- Pâ-lì-sṳ (France) --- 파리 (France) --- Palika (France) --- פריז (France) --- Lutèce (France) --- Paris --- Seine (France) --- City of Paris --- 18th century. --- anecdotal. --- burial issues. --- consumerism. --- cultural change. --- cultural history. --- enlightenment. --- european history. --- family changes. --- france. --- french history. --- french revolution. --- gender ideologies. --- historians. --- history buffs. --- house numbering. --- literary. --- nonfiction. --- paris. --- parisian revolution. --- parisian society. --- revolutionaries. --- social change. --- social organization. --- social status. --- social trends. --- sociology. --- traffic congestion. --- urban landscape. --- womens status.
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