Academic literature on the topic 'French Revolution of 1830'

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Journal articles on the topic "French Revolution of 1830"

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Ignatchenko, I. V. "France in the Vienna System of International Relations (the First Half of The 19th Century)." MGIMO Review of International Relations, no. 6(45) (December 28, 2015): 9–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2071-8160-2015-6-45-9-14.

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Abstract: The Vienna system of international relations established at the Congress of Vienna in 1814-1815, was a real challenge for the French political elite during all subsequent decades. France was a defeated party and was thus morally humiliated. The objective for all French governments after 1815 was to improve the position of France in this new system of international relations, including due to the destabilization and breaking of the Vienna system. In the years of the Restoration in France (1814-1830) a major foreign policy action of the government of Louis XVIII was the intervention in Spain in 1823, which refers to the Spanish revolution of 1820-1823. The French government, reflecting the interests of the European reaction, had hoped to raise these military prestige of France, and consequently to raise the question of the revision of the treatises of Vienna of 1815. Despite the success of the intervention, she has not brought the big political dividends in France. After the July revolution 1830 in France, the foreign policy of France intensified. Leading French politicians defined quite clearly exclusive spheres of influence of France, and in 1832 the French troops invaded Central Italy, capturing the city of Ancona. In 1840, during the second Oriental crisis, the French government has opposed themselves to the rest of Europe for the first time since the Napoleonic wars. Ultimately, the strategic position of France in the middle East was weakened. But the exacerbation of international conflict contributed to the strengthening of the French army and Navy. Further successes of the French diplomacy will be linked to the period of the Second Empire in France, in particular, with the Crimean war, that raised has raised status of France, and the decision of the Italian question in the second half of the 60-ies of the XIX century.
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QUINAULT, ROLAND. "The French Revolution of 1830 and Parliamentary Reform." History 79, no. 257 (1994): 377–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-229x.1994.tb01605.x.

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Pottinger, Mark. "Revolution and the art of history in France: Daniel Auber’s Gustave III (1833)." Studia Musicologica 52, no. 1-4 (2011): 393–418. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/smus.52.2011.1-4.28.

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Following the July Revolution of 1830, French history writing began to reflect a new personal perspective that allowed many to identify with the earlier revolution of 1789. This immediate association with the past allowed individuals to connect with history in ways that reflected themselves as well as the new political and cultural horizon. French grand opéra represented this desire for historical knowledge by displaying a dramatic narrative akin to the writings of French academic historian Jules Michelet (1798–1874). Through the analysis of the music and libretto of Daniel Auber’s Gustave III (1833) it is shown that the historical narrative found within this so-called’ opéra historique’ embraces the same historiographic narrative of revolution as found in the writings of Michelet. Such an investigation highlights the aesthetic and cultural importance of grand opéra in France as well as the genre’s relationship to national identity in the first half of the nineteenth century.
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Sibalis, Michael David. "Parisian Labour During the French Revolution." Historical Papers 21, no. 1 (2006): 11–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/030945ar.

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Abstract Workers in revolutionary Paris did not show the class consciousness nor, with certain exceptions, the organizational skills of the workers' movement after 1830. Nevertheless, an analysis of eighty-five recorded labour disputes proves labour protest to have been a significant form of protest in the capital between 1789 and 1799. Sans-culotte unity has been exaggerated, and wage-earners articulated demands (principally for higher wages) that set them apart from the master-craftsmen and shopkeepers who directed the sans-culotte movement. The response of the authorities to labour unrest was often hesitant and contradictory, and the repressive Le Chapelier law of 1791 was in fact rarely invoked.
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Welch, Cheryl B. "Tocqueville and the French." Tocqueville Review 15, no. 1 (1994): 159–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/ttr.15.1.159.

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For contemporary political theorists, the events of nineteenth-century France – the "bourgeois" revolution of 1830, the revolutionary eruption of 1848 with its dénouement in Bonapartism, and the "heroic" moment of the Paris Commune – have entered the domain of reflection on modern politics through Marx. Not only for Marxists, but for those who learned political theory in a Marxist tradition or whose primary acquaintance with nineteenth-century France came from Marx's trenchant dissection of its class struggles, this was a story fraught with universal significance. Indeed, French historical events have long functioned as dramatic signs or markers of the modern relationship between state and civil society, and between democracy and revolution.
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Sperber, Jonathan. "Echoes of the French Revolution in the Rhineland, 1830–1849." Central European History 22, no. 2 (1989): 200–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000893890001150x.

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Of all the regions of Central Europe, the Rhineland was the one most affected by the French Revolution. The area on the left bank of the Rhine belonged for almost two full decades to the First French Republic and the Napoleonic Empire; parts of the right bank were, for a shorter period, under the rule of the Napoleonic satellite state, the Grand Duchy of Berg. In studying these unusual circumstances, historians have sometimes focused on short-term political implications, asking how the Rhenish population of the 1790s responded to the Jacobin regime. They have also studied the long-term social and economic effects of the revolutionary legislation and the secularization of church lands.
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Müßig, Ulrike. "Constitutional developments after 1830: towards a balance between monarchical and popular sovereignty." Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis / Revue d'Histoire du Droit / The Legal History Review 79, no. 3-4 (2011): 489–519. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157181911x596402.

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AbstractThe constitutional developments and debates during the first half of the 19th century, in particular following the French and Belgian revolutions of 1830 and the introduction of new written constitutions (the French Charte of 1830 and the Belgian constitution of 1831) show the dynamics between the Executive, still largely controlled by the monarch, and the parliamentary representation. Although the balance of power differed from one political system to another, the dual system established during the July Monarchy, which increasingly called for a government and government policies which were acceptable to both the monarch and a majority in Parliament, affected the developments throughout Europe.
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Purvis, Zachary. "Religion, Revolution, and the Dangers of Demagogues: The Basel “Troubles” (Wirren) and the Politics of Protestantism, 1830–1833." Church History 88, no. 2 (2019): 409–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009640719001173.

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In 1833, the Swiss city-republic of Basel separated into two distinct cantons. During the three-year period known as the “Troubles” (Wirren), landowners in the countryside, inspired by the French July Revolution of 1830, rebelled against the city government. The roots of the division, however, run deeper in Basel's religious and theological culture and also reflect the outgrowth of the German Confederation's “persecution of demagogues.” This article examines these neglected aspects of the cantonal division, showing the importance of Christianity, and the complex politics of Protestantism, in Europe's revolutionary century.
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Verbeke, Christian F. "Belgian Law: Bibliographic Guide to Reference Materials, 1830–1990." International Journal of Legal Information 20, no. 2 (1992): 133–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0731126500007514.

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No unified or codified Belgian system of law existed before the French Revolution, as each county, principality or region had in effect its own set of laws, and one does therefore before 1795 refer to Flemish, Brabant, Liège, Namur, Waesland, etc. laws, or to specific customary laws of cities, e.g. Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp, or of smaller towns, e.g. the customs of Alost, Eekloo, or the Judgements of Damme (for maritime law), to name but a few; these so-called coutumiers were published in both the French and Flemish (Dutch) languages.
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Krichevtsev, Mikhail Vladimirovich. "Life sentence as a type of criminal punishment in France of the late XVIII – early XIX centuries." Genesis: исторические исследования, no. 12 (December 2020): 96–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.25136/2409-868x.2020.12.34714.

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This article questions the opinion established in modern French historiography on implementation of life sentence as a criminal punishment under the rule of Napoleon Bonaparte (in accordance with the Criminal Code of 1810). Leaning on examination of legislative, policy drafting, and court materials, the author traces the evolution of the system of criminal penalties associated with incarceration. and determines the role of life sentence therein – since the adoption of first criminal laws in the era Great Revolution until the revision Napoleonic Criminal Code in 1832, and the court of Peers under Louis-Philippe I. The acquires materials demonstrate that after long absence of the  Consulate and Early Empire in the time of Revolution,  life sentence was envisaged by the Criminal Code of 1810 as an alternative measure to penal servitude for life or deportation (for criminals of senior age), rather than an separate type of criminal punishment. Reference to the practice of the court of Peers during the Restoration and the July Monarchy suggests that life sentence became a separate type of criminal punishment only with the advent of verdict passed by Peers with regards to 1830 case of former ministers. This sentence was based on the combination of legislative and court functions in actions of the Chamber of Peers as higher justice authority, and thus was of constitutive nature. The conclusion is made that the implementation of life sentence in French criminal law should be attributed to the time of the July Monarchy rather than the ruling of Napoleon Bonaparte.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "French Revolution of 1830"

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Garnett, Elizabeth Ann. "Constructions of gender and musical style, 1790-1830." Thesis, University of Southampton, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.296997.

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Plassart, Anna. "The Scottish Enlightenment and the French Revolution." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2011. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/252236.

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Lo, Francis Richard. "Orientalism, empire and revolution, 1785-1810." Thesis, University of Sussex, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.360534.

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Ackroyd, Marcus Lowell. "Constitution and revolution : political debate in France, 1795-1800." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.319055.

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Hall, Daniel James Alan. "Gothic fiction in France and Germany (1790-1800)." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.324030.

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Underwood, Scott V. "A revolutionary atmosphere : England in the aftermath of the French revolution." Virtual Press, 1990. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/722223.

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This study is a cross-examination of the theory of revolution and the historical view of English society and politics in the late eighteenth century. Historical research focused upon the most respected (if not the most recent) works containing theory and information about the effects of the French Revolution on English society and politics. Research into the theory of revolution was basically a selection process whereby a few of the most extensive and reasonable theories were chosen for use.The cross-study of the two fields revealed that, although historians view it as politically conservative and generally complacent, English society, fettered by antiquated political institutions and keenly aware of the recent French Revolution, contained all the elements conducive to rebellion listed by the theorists of revolution. In the final analysis, research indicated revolution did not occur in England because of the confluence of political, military and social events in England and France.<br>Department of History
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Brunt, Liam. "New technology and labour productivity in English and French agriculture 1700-1850." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.324812.

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Harvey, Louis-Georges. "Importing the revolution: The image of America in French-Canadian political discourse, 1805-1837." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/5834.

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Between 1805 and 1837, the image of America assumed very different meanings within French-Canadian political discourse. America, which had appeared as a globally negative model before 1815, came in the 1830's to serve as an inspiration for the establishment of a French-Canadian republic, resistance to colonial rule and eventually the necessity of rebellion against that rule. Essentially though, these changes were effected within the same pattern of political discourse, one emphasizing the continuing conflict between the forces of virtue and corruption. Indeed, it is this very pattern which can explain the prominent place of the American image. Once virtue was associated with North America and corruption with Europe, no other political image could acquire the meaning which was ultimately associated with that of the United States. The failure of the Rebellions and the survival of the French-Canadian identity under British rule should not obscure this important stage in the development of French-Canadian political discourse.
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Dengate, Jacob. "Lighting the torch of liberty : the French Revolution and Chartist political culture, 1838-1852." Thesis, Aberystwyth University, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2160/eee3b4b8-ba1e-48bd-848e-26391b96af26.

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From 1838 until the end of the European Revolutions in 1852, the French Revolution provided Chartists with a repertoire of symbolism that Chartists would deploy in their activism, histories, and literature to foster a sense of collective consciousness, define a democratic world-view, and encourage internationalist sentiment. Challenging conservative notions of the revolution as a bloody and anarchic affair, Chartists constructed histories of 1789 that posed the era as a romantic struggle for freedom and nationhood analogous to their own, and one that was deeply entwined with British history and national identity. During the 1830s, Chartist opposition to the New Poor Law drew from the gothic repertoire of the Bastille to frame inequality in Britain. The workhouse 'bastile' was not viewed simply as an illegitimate imposition upon Britain, but came to symbolise the character of class rule. Meanwhile, Chartist newspapers also printed fictions based on the French Revolution, inserting Chartist concerns into the narratives, and their histories of 1789 stressed the similarity between France on the eve of revolution and Britain on the eve of the Charter. During the 1840s Chartist internationalism was contextualised by a framework of thinking about international politics constructed around the Revolutions of 1789 and 1830, while the convulsions of Continental Europe during 1848 were interpreted as both a confirmation of Chartist historical discourse and as the opening of a new era of international struggle. In the Democratic Review (1849-1850), the Red Republican (1850), and The Friend of the People (1850-1852), Chartists like George Julian Harney, Helen Macfarlane, William James Linton, and Gerald Massey, along with leading figures of the radical émigrés of 1848, characterised 'democracy' as a spirit of action and a system of belief. For them, the democratic heritage was populated by a diverse array of figures, including the Apostles of Jesus, Martin Luther, the romantic poets, and the Jacobins of 1793. The 'Red Republicanism' that flourished during 1848-1852 was sustained by the historical viewpoints arrived at during the Chartist period generally. Attempts to define a 'science' of socialism was as much about correcting the misadventures of past ages as it was a means to realise the promise announced by the 'Springtime of the Peoples'.
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Jones, Rhys Peter. "The manipulation of time and the legitimacy of power during the American and French Revolutions, 1774-1815." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2017. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/265160.

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The four decades that span the collapse of British imperial authority in the American colonies in 1774, to the disintegration of the Napoleonic Empire in 1815 witnessed unfathomable social and political change. There emerged a transformation from one ‘type’ of time to another: a change in the nature of change itself. Following the onset of the American and French Revolutions, time became more than a constitutive element in the lived experience of history – it also became the chief assassin of political legitimacy. Widespread considerations and perceptions of time in both American and French revolutionary contexts complicated and deranged the efficacy of power. Drawing upon contemporary temporal theories to explain how legitimate political authority eroded (before revolution), remained unstable (during revolution), and was finally reassembled (after revolution), this thesis presents two empirical case-studies for assessing the validity of German historian Reinhart Koselleck’s thesis, and other’s, regarding temporality and historicity. Although Koselleck’s viewpoint is largely dependent upon anecdote and abstraction to support theoretical observations, this thesis explores the application of time conceptions to five sites of political contestation: (1) the peculiar historicity of the ancien regime, which contributed to its own collapse by producing a time temperament that desensitised it to political urgency; (2) deliberative processes of the early Revolutions and the way in which time was transformed from an absolute or constant conceptual presence into an historical actor in its own right; (3) experimentations with time and history that were both a response to, and an attempt to rectify, the instability of political power during the mid-1780s in America and the early-1790s in France; (4) manipulations of revolutionary historical experience as a strategy for justifying the quasi-legal enterprises of the Constitutional Convention, 1787, and the coup of Brumaire, 1799; and (5) a comparative analysis of the interaction between power politics and temporality under the administration of George Washington and the Napoleonic Empire.
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Books on the topic "French Revolution of 1830"

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Pilbeam, Pamela M. The French Revolution of 1830. St. Martin's Press, 1991.

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Pinkney, David H. The French Revolution of 1830. UMI Out-of-Print Books on Demand, 1989.

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The French Revolution. Routledge, 1998.

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French instrumental music between the revolutions (1789-1830). Da Capo Press, 1987.

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Schwarz, Boris. French instrumental music between the revolutions (1789-1830). Da Capo Press, 1987.

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John, Hardman, ed. The French Revolution sourcebook. Arnold, 1999.

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Britain and the French Revolution. Longman, 2000.

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Je suis la révolution: Histoire d'une métaphore, 1830-1975. Belin, 2008.

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Portrayals of revolution: Images, debates, and patterns of thought on the French Revolution. Southern Illinois University Press, 1990.

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Portrayals of revolution: Images, debates, and patterns of thought on the French Revolution. Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "French Revolution of 1830"

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Pinkney, David H. "PREFACE." In French Revolution of 1830. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780691198514-001.

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Prickett, Stephen. "France and England 1795–1820." In England and the French Revolution. Macmillan Education UK, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19614-2_3.

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Barnes, Whitney Abernathy. "Alexis de Tocqueville: Civil Religion, Race, and the Roots of French Universalism, 1830–1857." In The French Revolution and Religion in Global Perspective. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-59683-9_5.

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Price, Roger. "War and Revolution." In Documents on the Second French Empire, 1852–1870. Macmillan Education UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-50734-1_13.

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Hunt, Lynn. "The French Revolution in Global Context." In The Age of Revolutions in Global Context, c.1760–1840. Macmillan Education UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-01415-3_2.

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Lyons, Martyn. "France in 1800." In Napoleon Bonaparte and the Legacy of the French Revolution. Macmillan Education UK, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-23436-3_5.

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"Revolution Unresolved, August–November 1830." In French Revolution of 1830. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvfjd0tb.13.

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"2. 1830, The Liberal Revolution." In French Revolutions, 1815-1914. Edinburgh University Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780585060590-005.

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"The Crowd in the Revolution." In French Revolution of 1830. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvfjd0tb.11.

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"The Revolution in the Provinces." In French Revolution of 1830. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvfjd0tb.9.

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Conference papers on the topic "French Revolution of 1830"

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Marinković, Milica. "RAZVITAK FRANCUSKE ADVOKATURE U XIX VEKU." In XVII majsko savetovanje. Pravni fakultet Univerziteta u Kragujevcu, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/uvp21.1067m.

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The paper is dedicated to the development of advocacy in France throughout history, and special attention is paid to the struggle of lawyers to repair the damage caused to their position by the Bourgeois Revolution. The goals of the legal struggle were fully achieved in the period of the Third Republic, rightly called the "Republic of Lawyers", when they took over the legislative and executive power. French lawyers, especially in the 19th century, were often real political dissidents. With their work as a politival opposition, they redefined the relationship between the state and society and set a clear border of state power, all of which enabled the easier emergence of a liberal constitutional monarchy, and then a republic. Due to the constant opposition activities in the courtroom, the lawyers demonstrated in the best possible way how closely law and politics stand in each state. In the introductory chapter of the paper, the author gives an overview of the historical development of advocacy from the Frankish period to the Revolution itself. During the Old Regime, lawyers enjoyed the status of "secular clergy" and, although members of the Third Class, were an unavoidable political factor in absolutist France. The second chapter contains an analysis of the devastating impact of the Revolution on the legal profession and timid attempts to improve the position of the legal profession with the advent of the Restoration. The third chapter provides an overview of the period from 1830 to 1870, which was characterized by the increasingly serious interference of lawyers in politics in order to fight for the advancement of the profession. The chapter on the Third Republic talks about the successful outcome of the lawyer's fight for their own rights, and the final chapter talks about the tendencies in the French legal profession in the 20th century.
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Целищев, Алексей. "THE GREAT FRENCH REVOLUTION AND THE EMERGENCE OF GERMAN NATIONALISM." In HISTORICAL EVENTS AS A FACTOR IN THE FORMATION OF ETHNIC IDENTITY: a collection of materials of the seminar held within the framework of the All-Russian Youth Scientific School-Conference. Baskir State University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.33184/iskffei-2022-03-17.9.

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Yu, Peixia. "From Glory to Darkness-the Tragedy Faith of the French Revolution." In 2021 6th International Conference on Social Sciences and Economic Development (ICSSED 2021). Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210407.106.

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Lor, Kennedy, and Jongeun Rhee. "The Restrictive Dress, Experimental and Modern Take on the French Revolution." In Innovate to Elevate. Iowa State University Digital Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa.15859.

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Chergui, Samia, and Dehbia Haddad. "Les abords de la citadelle d’Alger au XIXème siècle." In FORTMED2020 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2020.2020.11370.

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The surroundings of the Algiers’s citadel in the nineteenth centuryThe major works undertaken between 1817 and 1830 transformed the citadel of Algiers into a most important place of sovereignty and power, boasting different administrative, economic and religious centres. However, today, the physiognomy of the surroundings of this palace-fortress is marked by the upheaval of the French colonial period between 1830 and 1870. The creation of the Boulevard de la Victoire and the demolition, for security reasons, of the surrounding buildings, definitively altered the landscape and urban typology of the Ottoman period. This article examines the urban fabric of the ancient surroundings of the Citadel and their transformation during the nineteenth century. It traces back the development of the surroundings, and explains the reasons behind their demolition. The study tries also to give an assessment of the principle characteristics of the architectural components within their urban fabric.
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Dzholos, S. V. "THE POLITICAL AND LEGAL LESSONS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION OF 1789–1799." In LEGAL SCIENCE, LEGISLATION AND LAW ENFORCEMENT PRACTICE: REGULARITIES AND DEVELOPMENT TRENDS. Baltija Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.30525/978-9934-588-92-1-5.

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Le Mouelic, S., F. Chauvet, M. Giraud, E. Le Menn, Caroline Leynia, and Olivier Barbet. "Investigation of a painting dating the French revolution using visible and near infrared hyperspectral imagery." In 2013 5th Workshop on Hyperspectral Image and Signal Processing: Evolution in Remote Sensing (WHISPERS). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/whispers.2013.8080713.

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Ki, Chan Hau, Anrui Li, and Tianran Wangchen. "The Concept of Nationalism in the French Revolution and Its Possible Relationship with the Pillnitz Declaration." In 2022 3rd International Conference on Language, Art and Cultural Exchange(ICLACE 2022). Atlantis Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.220706.003.

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Marinković, Milica. "ZAŠTITA ŽIGA U FRANCUSKOM PRAVU XIX VEKA." In XVIII Majsko savetovanje. University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Law, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/xviiimajsko.543m.

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The author presents an overview of the origin and development of trademark protection in France, with special reference to the 19th century. Industrial property, and within it, the trademark, is the fruit of the modern age. The need for trademark protection in France appeared at the beginning of the civil revolution, and since then this institute has been constantly developing, following the needs of the economy. The author gives a brief analysis of the most important provisions of legal acts that have regulated the matter of trademarks since the beginning of the 19th century. In the last decades of the 19th century, multilateral conventions for the protection of industrial property joined the domestic French legislation, led by the famous Paris Convention.
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Orduña Giró, Paula. "Ordenación del suelo allende la ciudad: desarrollo conceptual y tendencias desde principios del s. XX en el planeamiento territorial en Francia." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Facultad de Arquitectura. Universidad de la República., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.6100.

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En Europa las preocupaciones del planeamiento urbanístico han evolucionado: el ámbito rural se descubre como sede de valores y estructuras que la cultura urbanística desea ver preservados. En el pensamiento urbanístico francés del s. XX se aprecia esa evolución. Con la particularidad de que en la cultura de ese país la campiña no solo representa un entorno de producción agraria o una referencia artístico-literaria constante, sino también una seña de identidad histórica, pues la distribución de la propiedad agraria actual se remonta al legado de la Revolución.&#x0D; El trabajo estudia esa evolución a tenor de las directrices emanadas para abordar las intervenciones en la aglomeración urbana de Lyon, un área con una larga historia de planeamiento, a menudo señalada como ejemplar. In Europe, concerns regarding urban planning have evolved: rural areas are now recognized as a seat of value or principles and structures that urban culture wishes to see preserved. This change is reflected in 20th century french urban planning. In France, countryside represents not only an environment of agricultural production or a recurrent artistic and literary reference, but also a sign of historical identity, as the distribution of the current landownership dates back to the legacy of the Revolution.&#x0D; This paper examines these developments in accordance with planning guidelines issued to tackle operations in the urban agglomeration of Lyon, often viewed as exemplary.
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Reports on the topic "French Revolution of 1830"

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Becuwe, Stéphane, Bertrand Blancheton, and Christopher Meissner. The French (Trade) Revolution of 1860: Intra-Industry Trade and Smooth Adjustment. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w25173.

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Groth, Karen. Louis de Potter and the Belgian Revolution of 1830. Portland State University Library, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.3128.

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Acemoglu, Daron, Davide Cantoni, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson. The Consequences of Radical Reform: The French Revolution. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w14831.

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Richardson, Gary, and Dan Bogart. Institutional Adaptability and Economic Development: The Property Rights Revolution in Britain, 1700 to 1830. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w13757.

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Krefft, Maria Carolina. Reproduction of 'The Consequences of Radical Reform: The French Revolution'. Social Science Reproduction Platform, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.48152/ssrp-cw8g-bv55.

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Lamoreaux, Naomi, and Jean-Laurent Rosenthal. Contractual Tradeoffs and SMEs Choice of Organizational Form, A View from U.S. and French History, 1830-2000. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w12455.

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Franck, Raphaël, and Stelios Michalopoulos. Emigration during the French Revolution: Consequences in the Short and Longue Durée. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w23936.

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Geloso, Vincent, and Chandler S. Reilly. Did the ‘Quiet Revolution’ Really Change Anything? CIRANO, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54932/itzr4537.

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The year 1960 is often presented as a break year in the economic history of Quebec and Canada. It is used to mark the beginning of the “Quiet Revolution” during which Canada’s French-speaking province of Quebec under rapid socio-economic change in the form of rapid economic convergence with the rest of Canada and the emergence of a more expansive state. Using synthetic control methods, we analyze whether 1960 is associated with a departure from previous developments. With regards to GDP per capita, GDP per worker, household-size adjusted income, life expectancy at birth, and enrollment rates in primary and secondary schools, we find that 1960 was not an important date. For most of these measures, the counterfactual scenario is slightly better than the actual data but not by significant margins. Only with respect to the size of government do we find sign of a break.
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Krushelnytska, Sofiia. UKRAINE’S IMAGE IN THE FRENCH MEDIA DURING THE EVENTS OF 2004. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.49.11065.

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The article examines the formation of the image of Ukraine by the French media during the Orange Revolution. The main factors influencing the tone of publications and difficulties in creating a positive external image of Ukraine in the French media are identified. The article is aimed at the analysis of scientific research on the influence of the French media on the formation of the image of Ukraine and its role in international socio-political processes. The study analyzes the materials of French journalists in the media, written during the events in 2004. The main factors influencing the formation of positive features of the Ukrainian state are identified. The main changes in perceptions of Ukraine in the French media are systematized. The influence of the media on the formation of the image and security of the state is determined. The main peaks of interest in Ukraine from foreign mass media are analyzed. Stereotypes and myths in the image of Ukraine that should be destroyed have been identified. The article also analyzes the role of the Orange Revolution in forming a positive image of Ukraine for foreign recipients. It is also investigated what factors influence the information space of the state and its role in image formation. Examples of Russian influence on the French media in order to undermine Ukraine’s image at the international level are given. Articles, radio and TV materials are offered as an example of interest and attention to the events of 2004. At the same time, the need to control the information that enters the information space outside Ukraine has been demonstrated. However, the positive effects of the image on the support of Ukraine by foreign partners have been identified.
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