Academic literature on the topic 'Paris (France) – 1914-1918'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Paris (France) – 1914-1918.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Journal articles on the topic "Paris (France) – 1914-1918"
Pust, Hans-Christian. "Ausstellung "1914-1918. In Papiergewittern. Die Kriegssammlungen der Bibliotheken" in der Württembergischen Landesbibliothek." WLBforum 11, no. 1 (April 15, 2009): 30–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.53458/wlbf.v11i1.406.
Full textSoutou, Georges-Henri. "La France et le problème des nationalités pendant la guerre de 1914-1918: Le cas de la Serbie." Balcanica, no. 45 (2014): 369–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/balc1445369s.
Full textJulien, Élise. "Philippe Nivet, La France occupée 1914-1918, Paris, Armand Colin, 2011, 480 p., ISBN 978-2-200-35094-9." Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine 59-4, no. 4 (2012): 218. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rhmc.594.0218.
Full textIllyés, Boglárka. "L’ambassadeur parisien de la nouvelle musique hongroise, Géza Vilmos Zágon Sa carrière et sa correspondance choisie." Studia Musicologica 58, no. 2 (June 2017): 255–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/6.2017.58.2.7.
Full textCarley, Michael Jabara. "Le Declin D’une Grande Puissance: La Politique Etrangere de la France en Europe, 1914-24Les relations franco-soviétiques, 1914-1924, par Anne Hogenhuis Seliverstoff. Paris, Publications de la Sorbonne, 1981. 316 pp.La marine française et la mer Noire, 1918-1919, par Philippe Masson. Paris, Publications de la Sorbonne, 1982. 669 pp. 120F.French war aims against Germany, 1914-1919, par David Stevenson. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1982. vii, 283 pp. $73.50." Canadian Journal of History 21, no. 3 (December 1986): 397–407. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.21.3.397.
Full textLafleur, Gérard, and Anne Lebel. "Comptes rendus de lecture. Sur les ruines de la Pointe-à-Pitre; Chronique du 8 février 1843. Hommage à l’amiral Gourbeyre. Texte établi, présenté et annoté par Claude Thiébaut. Préface d’Hélène Servant. 2 volumes, 586 p. Paris, L’Harmattan, 2008. Illustrations, bibliographie, index des noms, des navires et des sujets La plantation coloniale esclavagiste XVII-XVIII siècles. Actes du 127 congrès national historiques et scientifiques, Nancy, 2002. Sous la direction de Danielle Bégot. 343 p. Paris, Éditions du comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques, 2008 Joseph de Saint George : Le chevalier noir, Pierre Bardin, 243 p. Editions Guenegaud, Paris. Discographie, bibliographie, index BROUSSILLON (Ary), Parcours de soldats guadeloupéens « morts pour la France » durant la Grande guerre. « Ceux de Petit-Bourg » au front. 1914-1918. Gourbeyre, Editions Nestor, 2008, 240 p. BROUSSILLON (Ary), La Guadeloupe dans la Première Guerre mondiale. Gourbeyre, Editions Nestor, 2008, 276 p." Bulletin de la Société d'Histoire de la Guadeloupe, no. 152 (2009): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1036872ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Paris (France) – 1914-1918"
Cronier, Emmanuelle. "L'échappée belle : permissions et permissionnaires du front à Paris pendant la première Guerre mondiale." Paris 1, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA010684.
Full textJulien, Élise. "Paris, Berlin : la mémoire de la Première Guerre mondiale, 1914-1933." Paris 1, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA010655.
Full textBonzon, Thierry. "Les assemblées locales parisiennes et leur politique sociale pendant la Grande Guerre (1912-1919)." Paris 1, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA010539.
Full textSegond-Genovesi, Charlotte. "Les chemins du patriotisme : musique et musiciens à Paris pendant la Grande Guerre." Thesis, Paris 4, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA040018.
Full textHow did the musicians who remained in Paris during the Great War (because of their age or their inability to serve in combat because of physical disability) take part in the nation’s effort against Germany ? This thesis explores the many ways in which performers, music critics and composers on the domestic front showed their commitment to and worked on behalf of the paths of patriotism, by using their specific skills, from August 1914 to Novembre 1918.Part One documents the process leading to the restarting of Parisian musical life, after four months of interruption. This section will explore the many facets of musical patriotism in action, first in terms of intellectual positions, then in the particular context of art-music concerts. Part Two focuses more specifically on the œuvres de guerre, the official term used to designate all charitable-aid organizations during World War I. These numerous and diverse organizations permitted, sometimes motivated and often framed in a decisive manner – economically, ethically and ideologically – the initiatives and efforts made by musicians on the domestic front. As the conflict bogged down over time, and as Parisian musical life progressively accommodated itself to wartime conditions and constraints, the initial aims of these associations, which began as purely charitable works, progressively transformed into organizations with specifically artistic and musical goals. The last part explores another aspect of musicians who worked “behind the scenes” in the war effort: it was they who thought about and prepared the advent of the postwar musical world, through artistic stances and debates, but also through the musical works they composed
Maingon, Claire. "Les Salons du rappel à l'ordre, Paris 1914-1925 : des artistes français aux artistes indépendants." Paris 10, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA100135.
Full textThis study of Art history focuses on the “Salons des Beaux-Arts” from 1914 to 1925. It gathers a corpus of several hundred works by painters and sculptors. The purpose is to demonstrate the resilience of the Culture of Great World War and the importance of the artistic national tradition. It uses unreleased archives, exhibitions books and documents found by the inheritors of the artists. The study shows the State deficiencies and the influence of art dealers and industry people in the art market. The iconographic work shows that the cultural demobilisation was a slow and painful process coming from the 1870’s warrior ideology. It points out the birth of a tradition of independent art, what we call the Third way, which opens the prism of the call to order and announces the menacing times of the 1930’s
Savoye, André. "La vie quotidienne dans la banlieue Nord et Nord Ouest de Paris pendant la Grande Guerre." Paris 4, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040027.
Full textWhen World War I bursts, the northern part of “la Seine” department, preserved from military operations , takes part nevertheless by means of requisitions in the effort devoted to the defence of France. This suburb hardly knows fire but through the German air raids and explosions occurring in ammunitions dumps. The first consequences of war are the shifts in population which affect it in the beginning and throughout the conflict, in particular the ceaseless flood of the refugees fleeing the german army. Suffering from the lack and dearness of foodstuffs and fuel, it could, thanks to the interventionist policy of their local representatives, pass this difficult period of time not without some deprivations but through debts contracted by their communes. However, the conflict is for the north and northwestern suburb of Paris, a time of full employment which contrast with the post-war situation. The rise of industry provides jobs to long established residents and to newcomers, but due to the vertiginous rise of the cost of living, the last years of war see a development of important social movements as well as a progression of the socialists ideas in a materially and morally deteriorated environment
Blair, Scott G. "La France et le pacte de la Société des Nations : le rôle du gouvernement français dans l'élaboration du pacte de la Société des Nations, 1914-1919." Paris 1, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992PA010529.
Full textSufficient historical attention has not been paid to the role of the French governement in the elaboration and drafting, between 1914 and 1919, of the covenant of the league of nations. This role was one of reticence and ambivalence. On one hand, no wartime government gave active, unconditional or persuasive support for the idea of creating a league in order to guarantee french security and international peace on the other hand, for diverse political reasons, each government quietly pursued the league idea, particularly those of Ribot and Clemenceau. A committee, directed by leon bourgeois, was created in 1917 to drait a plan reflecting the french viewpoint of an effective league. This ambivalence, along with the divergent views between the french and anglo-american conceptions of the league, as well as with the poor and distrustful relations between clemenceau and bourgeois, and later btween bourgeois and wilson, all weakened french league diplomacy during the paris peace conference. This permitted the form ation of a secret, anglo-american front that was able to impose and win international acceptance of the final league covenant-a document in which the french had little input and even less confidence
Loez, André. ""Si cette putain de guerre pouvait finir" : histoire et sociologie des mutins de 1917." Montpellier 3, 2009. https://www-numeriquepremium-com.ezpaarse.univ-paris1.fr/content/books/9782070355235.
Full textThis dissertation studies the mutinies of 1917 as a social movement within the French army. It endeavors to reconstuct the social and symbolic framework of obedience which ensures combatants' participation and obedience in the war before 1917, then discusses the contexts of spring 1917, when multiple news and events (military advance then failure, stikes, Russian revolution, pacifist conference in Stockholm) open up the possibility for a collective action against the war. The intensity with which war is refused is reevaluated, through a description of disobedient soldiers' practices ( desertion, demonstration, unrest, refusal to march to the front lines), and a study of the mutineers' attempts to reach Paris in order to discuss or enforce peace talks. These actions are led by soldiers whose social characteristics (youth and level of qualification) differ from that of most combatants. They employ protest techniques and practices available in civilian life, improvising disobedience while officers and the military institution attempt to suppress and repress their movement. Finally, a study of the vocabulary and languages of protest deployed by mutineers permits to understand the originalities of their action within the political cultures of contemporary France
Schmitt, Olivier. "Les mutations de l’orgue en France entre 1840 et 1914." Paris 4, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040251.
Full textThe economic and social upheavals within the 19th century deeply modified the conditions in which the organ takes place. The organ and its production processes had to comply to the free trade system, and to the economic needs. The organ-builder became the main player within a complex network. Aristide Cavaillé-Coll illustrated this period with his bigger instruments, when art and industry went hand in hand in order to satisfy the costumer’s needs at competitive prices. Meanwhile, others builders developed their businesses in the provincies, for example Dalstein-Haerpfer in the Moselle, achieving a synthesis from several european styles. From a tonal point of view, the french organs of the 19th century went towards a secular, recital use. This trend was reinforced by the composition of music for organ and orchestra, be them transcriptions or new music, which were intended for newly built concert-halls and symphonic organs. Among this music, the most significant works were composed by Alexandre Guilmant and Camille Saint-Saëns
Dauss, Markus. "Die architektonische Symbolisierung politischer, sozialer und kultureller Institutionen in Berlin und Paris (1871-1918) : Studien zur politischen Ikonologie öffentlicher Architekturen im deutschen Kaiserreich und der dritten Republik." Paris, EPHE, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004EPHE4029.
Full textOur study tries to examine the role of public buildings in the capitals of the German Empire (Berlin) and the third French Republic (Paris) from 1871 to 1918. The urban space is therefore being considered as a crystallization of the national community and its construction of identity. Political history has since some time focussed on the study of collective identity and its symbolization. The approach we have adopted for our study is a crossing of this current of political history and of a more classical kind of history of architecture. It could be called political iconology of architecture in Paris and Berlin. Our study which tries to close this gap hopes to find its readers in both countries. It treats the following building types: Basilique of the Holy Heart, parliamentary assemblies, government and post offices, town halls, museums, churches and Synagogues
Books on the topic "Paris (France) – 1914-1918"
Jean-Louis, Robert, ed. Capital cities at war: Paris, London, Berlin, 1914-1919. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
Find full textUne publicité de guerre: Les annonces dans le journal L'Illustration, 1914-1918. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2011.
Find full textImages et violence: 1914-1918 : quand le miroir racontait la grande guerre. Paris: Nouveau monde, 2007.
Find full textMark, Pottle, and Great Britain. Committee of Imperial Defence, eds. The march on Paris: The memoirs of Alexander Von Kluck, 1914. London: Frontline Books, 2012.
Find full text1919, le tour renaît de l'enfer: De Paris-Roubaix au premier maillot jaune. Toulouse: Pas d'oiseau, 2014.
Find full textJulie, Martin, ed. Kiki's Paris: Artists and lovers 1900-1930. New York: Abrams, 1989.
Find full textLa révolution russe et la guerre mondiale: Nouvelles de Russie : janvier 1917-mars 1918 : décryptage à partir du journal L'Illustration. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2010.
Find full textLansing, Robert. The Big Four and others of the Peace Conference. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1990.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Paris (France) – 1914-1918"
"La SARL Téfal est créée le 2 mai Le slogan publicitaire est immortel : « La pile Wonder ne s’use que si l’on s’en 1956, à Sarcelles, dans un ancien sert! » Et cela dure depuis 1914, date à laquelle M. et Mme Courtecuisse créent pavillon de chasse de l’impératrice leur petite affaire dans un minuscule atelier, au 6 de la rue Marcadet, dans le Eugénie Effectif : trois 18 arrondissement de Paris. Ils fabriquent là des piles électriques pour les personnes. Dans une grange voisine lampes de poche, spéculant sur le fait que cet article serait de vente facile, tant du pavillon, le premier atelier est auprès des civils que des militaires, en cette période de troubles graves. installé. On y fabrique la première Premier client d’importance : l’armée britannique, stationnant alors en France, poêle antiadhésive. C’est la mise en et qui passe une commande fabuleuse à la petite entreprise, commande application des recherches de M. baptisée, dans un éclair de génie commercial, « Wonderful ». Wonderful Hartmann pour les besoins d’un devient Wonder et, à dater de cette époque, les ventes battent leur plein. En appareil électronique spécial qu’il a 1926, le chiffre d’affaires atteint trente fois idée d’appliquer sur une poêle... Le celui de 1918 ! Wonder se met ensuite à succès est immédiat, malgré la fabriquer, outre des lampes de poche, des concurrence de Du Pont de lampes industrielles, des batteries pour les." In Francotheque: A resource for French studies, 158–61. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/978020378416-28.
Full text