Academic literature on the topic '1814-1830 (Bourbon Restoration)'

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Journal articles on the topic "1814-1830 (Bourbon Restoration)"

1

Jones, Kimberly A. "Henri IV and the Decorative Arts of the Bourbon Restoration, 1814-1830: A Study in Politics and Popular Taste." Studies in the Decorative Arts 1, no. 1 (1993): 2–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/studdecoarts.1.1.40662302.

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Bertran de Balanda, Flavien, and Gérard Gengembre. "Restoration and Resilience: The Last Bourbons and the Revolutionary Past." Royal Studies Journal 9, no. 2 (2022): 116–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.21039/rsj.321.

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As early as 1795, immediately after the death of the young Louis XVII in his Parisian prison, the comte de Provence, brother of the late Louis XVI who had been executed in 1793, was hoping the course of history would prove him right. He opted to call himself Louis XVIII, a title which was made official nineteen years later when he became king. Proclaimed in the Déclaration de Vérone on 8 June 1795, in the midst of the Revolution, such an act implied that the Revolution was not happening, had never happened, and would never happen again. Our paper explores this new and ambivalent kind of resilience by examining three decisive moments during the reigns of Louis XVI’s two brothers, Louis XVIII (1814-1824) and Charles X (1824-1830): the First Restoration and the Hundred Days, with their curious institutional novelties and changes of hands; the early Second Restoration, when the game between the old and the new world seemed on and then over; and the first years of Charles X’s reign, when the tensions returned with a vengeance, probably climaxing in 1825 with the Compensation Act, known as “le milliard des émigrés.”
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "1814-1830 (Bourbon Restoration)"

1

Hême, de Lacotte Rémy. "Entre le trône et l’autel : la grande aumônerie de France sous l’Empire et la Restauration (1804- 1830)." Thesis, Paris 4, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012PA040215.

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La grande aumônerie désigne traditionnellement, en France, le clergé chargé de l’exercice du culte auprès dusouverain et de ceux de ses sujets attachés à sa personne. Longtemps cantonné à la cour, ce service connaît, desa recréation par Napoléon au moment du passage à l’Empire jusqu’à sa suppression par la monarchie deJuillet, un développement sans précédent. L’amalgame de différentes composantes, à commencer, sous laRestauration, par l’aumônerie militaire, transforme le modeste département aulique en une institution présenteà l’échelle nationale, dont les effectifs équivalent à ceux d’un petit diocèse. Le présent travail s’interroge sur lamanière dont l’existence d’un tel clergé affecte concrètement le fonctionnement du système concordataire, àtravers l’étude de ses structures, de son personnel et de son activité pastorale. Il pose aussi la question du poidspolitique du clergé de cour dans la direction des Affaires religieuses en régime constitutionnel. Il conclut surun constat : celui de la marginalisation, avant même sa disparition, de la grande aumônerie, soulignant parcontrecoup la solidité des institutions de régulation des cultes mises en place par Bonaparte. L’antique alliancedu Trône et de l’Autel fait alors place, définitivement, à la relation purement administrative de l’Église et del’État<br>The “Grande Aumônerie” traditionally refers, in France, to the clergy in charge of the exercise of the ministryto the sovereign and, among his subjects, to all those attached to his person. A long time confined to the court,this service knows, from its restoration by Napoleon until its removal by the July Monarchy, an unprecedentedgrowth. The incorporation of various components, which the most important is certainly, under theRestoration, the military chaplaincy, converts the modest aulic department into a national institution, whosenumbers equall to those of a small diocese. This work examines how the existence of such a clergy actuallyaffects the running of the Concordat System, through a detailed study of its structures, its staff and its pastoralactivity. It also raises the question of the political weight of the court clergy in the management of religiousaffairs in a constitutional government. Eventually a finding stands out : the marginalization, even before itsdisappearance, of the “Grande Aumônerie”, which, by contrast, underlines the soundness of the institutionsestablished by Bonaparte in order to regulate the religions. The ancient alliance of Throne and Altar then givesway, definitively, to the merely administrative relationship between Church and State
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Hême, de Lacotte Rémy. "Entre le trône et l’autel : la grande aumônerie de France sous l’Empire et la Restauration (1804- 1830)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 4, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012PA040215.

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La grande aumônerie désigne traditionnellement, en France, le clergé chargé de l’exercice du culte auprès dusouverain et de ceux de ses sujets attachés à sa personne. Longtemps cantonné à la cour, ce service connaît, desa recréation par Napoléon au moment du passage à l’Empire jusqu’à sa suppression par la monarchie deJuillet, un développement sans précédent. L’amalgame de différentes composantes, à commencer, sous laRestauration, par l’aumônerie militaire, transforme le modeste département aulique en une institution présenteà l’échelle nationale, dont les effectifs équivalent à ceux d’un petit diocèse. Le présent travail s’interroge sur lamanière dont l’existence d’un tel clergé affecte concrètement le fonctionnement du système concordataire, àtravers l’étude de ses structures, de son personnel et de son activité pastorale. Il pose aussi la question du poidspolitique du clergé de cour dans la direction des Affaires religieuses en régime constitutionnel. Il conclut surun constat : celui de la marginalisation, avant même sa disparition, de la grande aumônerie, soulignant parcontrecoup la solidité des institutions de régulation des cultes mises en place par Bonaparte. L’antique alliancedu Trône et de l’Autel fait alors place, définitivement, à la relation purement administrative de l’Église et del’État<br>The “Grande Aumônerie” traditionally refers, in France, to the clergy in charge of the exercise of the ministryto the sovereign and, among his subjects, to all those attached to his person. A long time confined to the court,this service knows, from its restoration by Napoleon until its removal by the July Monarchy, an unprecedentedgrowth. The incorporation of various components, which the most important is certainly, under theRestoration, the military chaplaincy, converts the modest aulic department into a national institution, whosenumbers equall to those of a small diocese. This work examines how the existence of such a clergy actuallyaffects the running of the Concordat System, through a detailed study of its structures, its staff and its pastoralactivity. It also raises the question of the political weight of the court clergy in the management of religiousaffairs in a constitutional government. Eventually a finding stands out : the marginalization, even before itsdisappearance, of the “Grande Aumônerie”, which, by contrast, underlines the soundness of the institutionsestablished by Bonaparte in order to regulate the religions. The ancient alliance of Throne and Altar then givesway, definitively, to the merely administrative relationship between Church and State
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3

Anciaux, Camille. "Édouard Bignon (1771-1841). Héraut de la gloire napoléonienne." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018SORUL149.

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Ayant vécu de 1771 à 1841, Édouard Bignon incarne la génération d’hommes qui a traversé, non sans encombre, la Révolution, le Directoire, le Consulat, l’Empire, la Restauration et la monarchie de Juillet. Sa carrière est le reflet des changements politiques français. Précepteur à la fin de l’Ancien Régime, il s’enrôle dans l’armée en 1793 pour fuir les proscriptions de la Terreur. Sous le Directoire, en 1797, il intègre la carrière diplomatique au sein de laquelle il reste dix-neuf années, jusqu’en 1815 : il y connaît une progression continue, passant du rang de second secrétaire de légation en 1797 à celui de ministre plénipotentiaire en Pologne en 1813. Après avoir participé aux Cent-Jours, il se retire de la vie publique. Deux ans après Waterloo, il est élu député et siège dans les rangs de l’opposition libérale jusqu’à la chute de la monarchie bourbonienne. Indépendamment de ses mandats de députés, il se lance dans une carrière de publiciste et d’historien qui lui assure une notoriété grandissante. En effet, dans son testament, Napoléon Ier lui a commandé une histoire diplomatique de la France à laquelle Bignon s’attelle dès 1821. Divisée en quatorze tomes, cette Histoire de France paraît à partir de 1829. L’année suivante, Bignon participe à la chute de Charles X et devient proche des gouvernements de Louis-Philippe : il est nommé pair de France en 1837, couronnement d’une longue carrière au service de la France. Cette étude biographique, qui embrasse la totalité de sa carrière, entend mettre à l’honneur le parcours d’un diplomate napoléonien à l’envergure secondaire, les activités d’un parlementaire sous la Restauration et la monarchie Juillet, et l’originalité d’un historien de l’Empire<br>Born in 1771 and died in 1841, Édouard Bignon embodies the generation who has live, with some trouble, through the French Revolution, the Directory, the Consulate, the First Empire, the Restoration and the July Monarchy. His career reflects all the French political changes. A private tutor, he enlisted in 1793 while trying to avoid being arrested. During the Directory, in 1797, he joined the Foreign Office and stayed in this departement until 1815 : he was constantly promoted, from the position of 2nd secretary in 1797 to minister plenipotentiary in Poland in 1813. As he joined the ranks of Napoleon during The Hundred Days, he had to retire from public life once Louis XVIII came back. Two years after Waterloo, he became a member of Parliament and sat among the liberals until the Bourbons fall. Separately from his political activities, he published several historical books which rose his popularity. In his will, Napoleon asked him to write the diplomatic history of his reign. Begun in 1821, the Histoire de France was issued from 1829 to 1850 and split into 14 volumes. In 1830, he contributed to the July Monarchy’s birth and became one of its support in Parliament : Louis-Philippe rewarded him and appointed him as peer of France in 1837, as a public recognition for his duties. This study which tackles all Bignon’s activities, aims to emphasize a medium scale diplomatic experience, parliamentarian’s occupations during the Restoration and the July Monarchy and Napoleon historian’s originality
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4

Anciaux, Camille. "Édouard Bignon (1771-1841). Héraut de la gloire napoléonienne." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018SORUL149.

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Ayant vécu de 1771 à 1841, Édouard Bignon incarne la génération d’hommes qui a traversé, non sans encombre, la Révolution, le Directoire, le Consulat, l’Empire, la Restauration et la monarchie de Juillet. Sa carrière est le reflet des changements politiques français. Précepteur à la fin de l’Ancien Régime, il s’enrôle dans l’armée en 1793 pour fuir les proscriptions de la Terreur. Sous le Directoire, en 1797, il intègre la carrière diplomatique au sein de laquelle il reste dix-neuf années, jusqu’en 1815 : il y connaît une progression continue, passant du rang de second secrétaire de légation en 1797 à celui de ministre plénipotentiaire en Pologne en 1813. Après avoir participé aux Cent-Jours, il se retire de la vie publique. Deux ans après Waterloo, il est élu député et siège dans les rangs de l’opposition libérale jusqu’à la chute de la monarchie bourbonienne. Indépendamment de ses mandats de députés, il se lance dans une carrière de publiciste et d’historien qui lui assure une notoriété grandissante. En effet, dans son testament, Napoléon Ier lui a commandé une histoire diplomatique de la France à laquelle Bignon s’attelle dès 1821. Divisée en quatorze tomes, cette Histoire de France paraît à partir de 1829. L’année suivante, Bignon participe à la chute de Charles X et devient proche des gouvernements de Louis-Philippe : il est nommé pair de France en 1837, couronnement d’une longue carrière au service de la France. Cette étude biographique, qui embrasse la totalité de sa carrière, entend mettre à l’honneur le parcours d’un diplomate napoléonien à l’envergure secondaire, les activités d’un parlementaire sous la Restauration et la monarchie Juillet, et l’originalité d’un historien de l’Empire<br>Born in 1771 and died in 1841, Édouard Bignon embodies the generation who has live, with some trouble, through the French Revolution, the Directory, the Consulate, the First Empire, the Restoration and the July Monarchy. His career reflects all the French political changes. A private tutor, he enlisted in 1793 while trying to avoid being arrested. During the Directory, in 1797, he joined the Foreign Office and stayed in this departement until 1815 : he was constantly promoted, from the position of 2nd secretary in 1797 to minister plenipotentiary in Poland in 1813. As he joined the ranks of Napoleon during The Hundred Days, he had to retire from public life once Louis XVIII came back. Two years after Waterloo, he became a member of Parliament and sat among the liberals until the Bourbons fall. Separately from his political activities, he published several historical books which rose his popularity. In his will, Napoleon asked him to write the diplomatic history of his reign. Begun in 1821, the Histoire de France was issued from 1829 to 1850 and split into 14 volumes. In 1830, he contributed to the July Monarchy’s birth and became one of its support in Parliament : Louis-Philippe rewarded him and appointed him as peer of France in 1837, as a public recognition for his duties. This study which tackles all Bignon’s activities, aims to emphasize a medium scale diplomatic experience, parliamentarian’s occupations during the Restoration and the July Monarchy and Napoleon historian’s originality
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5

Grosskurth, Brian. "The representation of death in the painting of Gericault and Delacroix during the first and second Bourbon restorations, 1814-1830." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.240225.

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Books on the topic "1814-1830 (Bourbon Restoration)"

1

Case, Lynn M., and Guillaume de Bertier de Sauvigny. Bourbon Restoration. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016.

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Alexander, Robert. Re-Writing the French Revolutionary Tradition: Liberal Opposition and the Fall of the Bourbon Monarchy (New Studies in European History). Cambridge University Press, 2007.

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Saint-Amand, Imbert de. The Duchess of Berry and the Court of Charles X. IndyPublish.com, 2002.

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Saint-Amand, Imbert de. The Duchess of Berry and the Court of Charles X. IndyPublish.com, 2005.

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Saint-Amand, Imbert de. La duchesse de Berry et la cour de Charles X. Adamant Media Corporation, 2001.

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Saint-Amand, Imbert de. The Duchess of Berry and the Court of Charles X. IndyPublish.com, 2002.

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Saint-Amand, Imbert de. The Duchess of Berry and the Court of Charles X (Large Print Edition). BiblioBazaar, 2006.

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Saint-Amand, Imbert de. The Duchess Of Berry and Charles X. Echo Library, 2006.

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The Duchess of Berry and the Court of Charles X. BiblioBazaar, 2006.

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Britain in the Age of the French Revolution, 1785-1820. Longman Publishing Group, 2000.

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