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Rare and modern books

Manceron, Claude

[5 Vol.] Age of the French Revolution. Vol. 1: Twilight of the Old Order, 1774-1778. Vol. 2: The Wind from America, 1778-1781. Vol. 3: Their Gracious Pleasure, 1782-1785. Vol. 4: Toward the Brink, 1785-1787. Vol. 5: Blood of the Bastille, 1787-1789.

New York, London, Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo: Touchstone Books, - 1989.,

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ISBN
9780671680183
Author
Manceron, Claude
Publishers
New York, London, Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo: Touchstone Books,, 1989.
Size
Vol. 1: XIX, 650 p., Vol. 2: XX, 584 p., Vol. 3: XVIII, 451 p., Vol. 4: XX, 470 p., Vol. 5: 559 p. Mixed Edition: Vol. 1-4: Paperback, Vol. 5: Hardcover with dust jacket.
Dust jacket
No
Languages
English
Inscribed
No
First edition
No

Description

Aus der Bibliothek von Prof. Wolfgang Haase, langj�igem Herausgeber der ANRW und des International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT) / From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Vol. 1: Einband leicht berieben, Vorderschnitt weist kleine Flecken auf, schwarzer Markerstrich auf Fu�chnitt, sonst guter Zustand, Vol. 2: Einband leicht berieben, schwarzer Markerstrich auf Fu�chnitt, sonst guter Zustand, Vol. 3: Einband leicht berieben, au�rdem leicht besto�n, Kopf- und Fu�chnitt angeschmutzt, sonst guter Zustand, Vol. 4: Einband leicht berieben, minimale Randl�ren, Kopfschnitt angegraut, schwarzer Markerstrich auf Fu�chnitt, Fleck auf Fu�chnitt, sonst guter Zustand, Vol. 5: Schutzumschlag leicht berieben, mit leichten Randl�ren, Sticker auf Cover des Schutzumschlags, Buchschnitt angegraut, innen gut und sauber / Vol. 1: binding slightly rubbed, fore-edge has small stains, black marker line on bottom edge, otherwise good condition, Vol. 2: binding slightly rubbed, black marker line on bottom edge, otherwise good condition, Vol. 3: binding slightly rubbed, also slightly scuffed, head and bottom edges soiled, otherwise good condition, Vol. 4: binding slightly rubbed, minimal edge wear, top edge tarnished, black marker line on bottom edge, stain on bottom edge, otherwise good condition, Vol. 5: dust jacket slightly rubbed, with light edge wear, sticker on cover of dust jacket, bottom edge grayed, inside good and clean. - Vol. 1: Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xv CHRONOLOGY OF PRINCIPAL EVENTS: 1774-1778 1 DECEMBER 1773: Incident at Saint-Denis 2 JANUARY 1774: France and the World in 1774 3 JANUARY 1774: The Men of Liberty 4 JANUARY 1774: Franklin Denounced in London 5 JANUARY 1774: Fersen and Marie Antoinette at the Opera 6 FEBRUARY 1774: Beaumarchais Disgraced in Paris 7 MARCH 1774: Dumouriez, a Privileged Prisoner 8 APRIL 1774: La Fayette�s Wedding 9 APRIL 1774: Diderot Returns from Russia 10 APRIL 1774: Gluck and Jean-Jacques Rousseau 11 APRIL 1774: Marat Publishes The Chains of Slavery 12 APRIL 1774: Beaumarchais�s Mission to London 13 MAY 1774: Illness and Death of Louis XV 14 MAY 1774: Louis XVI Comes to the Throne 15 MAY 1774: Brissot Comes to Live in Paris 16 MAY 1774: Domestic Strife in the Mirabeau Household 17 JUNE 1774: The King�s Inoculation 18 AUGUST 1774: Beaumarchais�s German Adventure 19 AUGUST 1774: The Ministers� St. Bartholomew 20 SEPTEMBER 1774: Beaumarchais Freed in Vienna 21 SEPTEMBER 1774: Pugachev Goes to His Death 22 SEPTEMBER 1774: Dupont de Nemours in Poland 23 SEPTEMBER 1774: Mirabeau Imprisoned in the Chateau d�lf 24 SEPTEMBER 1774: Condorcet and Turgot 25 SEPTEMBER 1774: The Death of Pope Clement XIV 26 NOVEMBER 1774: Recall of the Parliaments 27 FEBRUARY 1775: Wanted: the Marquis de Sade 28 FEBRUARY 1775: The Conclave Elects Pius VI 29 FEBRUARY 1775: The Barber of Seville 30 MARCH 1775: The Abb�orellet Versus Linguet 31 MARCH 1775: Gilbert Romme, Paris Student 32 MARCH 1775: Franklin Returns to America 33 APRIL-MAY 1775: The Grain War 34 APRIL-MAY 1775: Joseph II and the Peasant Uprising of Bohemia 35 MAY 1775: Chateaubriand and the Virgin Mary 36 JUNE 1775: Danton and Talleyrand at the Coronation 37 JUNE 1775: Choiseul Goes Down to Defeat 38 JUNE 1775: Mirabeau Meets Sophie de Monnier 39 JUNE 1775: Pombal at the Founding of Lisbon 40 JUNE 1775: Lavoisier in Charge of the State Gunpowder Commission 41 JUNE 1775: Malesherbes Enters the Government 42 AUGUST 1775: La Fayette at the Luncheon in Metz 43 AUGUST 1775: Tom Paine Discovers America 44 OCTOBER 1775: Biron Courts the Queen 45 NOVEMBER 1775: Restif de La Bretonne�s Le Paysan perverti 46 NOVEMBER 1775: Metamorphosis of the Chevalier d�E 47 JANUARY 1776: The Rolands� First Meeting 48 MARCH 1776: Turgot Imposes Reform 49 MAY 1776: Turgot�s Fall 50 MAY 1776: The Death of Julie de Lespinasse 51 MAY 1776: Mirabeau�s Escapes 52 JUNE 1776: Goethe Takes an Oath at Weimar 53 JUNE 1776: Aljieri Meets the Countess of Albany 54 JUNE 1776: Sade Leaves Italy 55 JUNE 1776: Barras Sails for India 56 JULY 4, 1776: Independence Day 57 AUGUST 1776: Mirabeau Elopes with Sophie de Monnier 58 OCTOBER 1776: Jean-Jacques Rousseau�s Accident 59 OCTOBER 1776: Beaumarchais and Silas Deane 60 OCTOBER 1776: Franklin�s Longest Voyage 61 DECEMBER 1776: Diderot and the Rise of Necker 62 FEBRUARY 1777: Fabre d�Eglantine Elopes with �Catiche� 63 FEBRUARY 1777: Sade Imprisoned in Vincennes 64 MARCH 1777: La Fayette Flees Paris 65 MARCH 1777: Fabre d�Eglantine Escapes the Hangman 66 APRIL 1777: La Fayette Hesitates 67 APRIL 1777: Joseph II Examines His Sister�s Marriage 68 MAY 1777: Derues the Murderer Goes to His Death 69 MAY 1777: The Gluck-Piccinni Dispute 70 MAY 1777: Joseph H�s Grand Tour of Paris 71 MAY 1777: Mirabeau and Sophie in Holland 72 MAY 1777: Joseph II, Lavoisier, and Others 73 MAY 1777: The Friend of Man Scores a Twofold Victory 74 MAY 1777: The Extradition of Mirabeau 75 MAY 1777: La Fayette Between Two Worlds 76 JUNE 1777: Mirabeau and Sophie: Torn Apart 77 JUNE 1777: La Fayette at Charleston 78 JUNE 1777: The Double Life of Dr. Marat 79 JULY 1777: Marie Antoinette�s Hopes Brighten 80 JULY 1777: La Fayette: Insult at Philadelphia 81 JULY 1777: Malouet and the Runaway Slaves 82 JULY 1777: La Fayette Forces Destiny�s Hand 83 JULY 1777: One Last Chance Named Washington 84 SEPTEMBER 1777: La Fayette Wounded at the Brandywine 85 OCTOBER 1777: La Fayette Among the Quakers 86 NOVEMBER 1777: Death of a Robespierre 87 DECEMBER 1777: Pablo d�Olavide Before the Inquisition 88 DECEMBER 1777: The Wreck of �Enlightened� Europe 89 FEBRUARY 1778: Voltaire�s Final Journey 90 MARCH 1778: Voltaire�s Credo 91 MARCH 1778: Santerre�s Second Marriage 92 MARCH 1778: Triumph of Voltaire and Franklin 93 MAY 1778: Voltaire�s Assassination 94 JULY 1778: Death of JeanJacques NOTES INDEX. / Vol. 2: ACKNOWLEDGMENTS PREFACE THE HISTORIAN AND HIS PEMMICAN 1 APRIL 1778: John Paul Jones Strikes in England 2 JULY 1778: The Death of Mme Mozart 3 JULY 1778: Admiral d�Orvilliers Takes Out the Fleet 4 JULY 1778: A Chance for Philippe Egalit� JULY 1778: Ouessant, a Battle for Nothing 6 AUGUST 1778: Will There Be War with Munich? 7 OCTOBER 1778: How to Assassinate an Orl�s 8 OCTOBER 1778: The Death of the Mirabeau Child 9 OCTOBER 1778: Louis XVIII Confronts His Destiny 10 DECEMBER 1778: Birth of the King�s Daughter 11 DECEMBER 1778: Napoleon Comes to France 12 JANUARY 1779: The Reconquest of Senegambia 13 FEBRUARY 1779: La Fayette�s First Return 14 MARCH 1779: The Queen, La Fayette, and Fersen 15 APRIL 1779: The First Wrath of P� Duchesne 16 AUGUST 1777: Manon Phlipon and the Elders 17 AUGUST 1777: Fran�s de Neufch�au�s Vanishing Act 18 SEPTEMBER 1777: Greuze and Manon Phlipon 19 APRIL 1779: Betrothal of the Rolands 20 JULY 1779: Is Jacques Roux a Murderer? 21 JULY 1779: Suffren Against d�Estaing 22 JULY 1779: Du Petit-Thouars at the Capture of Grenada 23 JULY 1779: Vergennes, Viceroy of England? 24 APRIL 1779: Death Rattle of the Chevalier d�Eon 25 APRIL 1779: More Disgrace for the Broglies 26 SEPTEMBER 1779: �Admiral Scurvy� Saves the English 27 SEPTEMBER 1779: Abbe Sieys at Treguier 28 SEPTEMBER 1779: Dorn Gerle Meets Suzette Labrousse 29 DECEMBER 1779: Talleyrand�s Ordination 30 DECEMBER 1779: The Beauharnais Marriage 31 FEBRUARY 1780: Marriage of the Rolands 32 APRIL 1780: Vergniaud Reaches Bordeaux 33 APRIL 1780: Franklin Will Not Wed Mme Helvetius 34 APRIL 1780: La Fayette�Here 1 Am! 35 MAY 1780: Rochambeau Leaves Without Berthier 36 MAY 1780: The Marat-Condorcet Quarrel 37 MAY 1780: Brissot Meets Marat 38 MAY 1780: Dupont de Nemours Masters Mirabeau 39 MAY 1780: Mirabeau�s �Conversion� 40 JULY 1780: Rochambeau Disembarks at Newport 41 SEPTEMBER 1780: La Fayette Harries Rochambeau 42 OCTOBER 1780: Washington Hangs Major Andr�3 NOVEMBER 1780: Gilbert�s Suicide 44 NOVEMBER 1780: Death of Maria Theresa 45 JANUARY 1781: Necker�s Account Rendered 46 MARCH 1781: Mesmer and Marie Antoinette 47 MARCH 1781: La Fayette in Virginia 48 MAY 1781: The Ladies of Baltimore 49 MARCH 1781: Turgot�s Death 50 MAY 1781: Raynal in the Ring Again 51 MAY 17 81 : Diderot�s New Lease on Life 52 MAY 1781: The Revolt of the Peruvian Indians 53 MAY 1781: Death of the Last Inca 54 MAY 1781: Necker Resigns 55 MAY 1781: A Lesson for Germaine de Sta�56 MAY 1781: Louis XVI and the Abb�aury 57 MAY 1781: Diderot, Rousseau, Grimm, and Seneca 58 JUNE 1781: Mirabeau�s Release 59 JUNE 1781: The End for Gabriel and Sophie 60 JULY 1781: La Fayette and Jefferson 61 JULY 1781: Rochambeau and Washington Join Forces 62 JULY 1781: Cornwallis Draws Back 63 AUGUST 1781: The Disobedience of the Comte de Grasse 64 AUGUST 1781: Gilbert Romme in Russia 65 AUGUST 1781: Catherine the Great and Her Boy Friends 66 AUGUST 1781: Golovkin and the Russia of the Enlightenment 67 AUGUST 1781: Cornwallis Holes Up at Yorktown 68 AUGUST 1781: De Grasse Arrives 69 SEPTEMBER 1781: La Fayette Pays His Debt 70 SEPTEMBER 1781: The Battle of the Chesapeake 71 SEPTEMBER 1781: Washington, De Grasse, Rochambeau 72 OCTOBER 1781: Saint-Simon�s Mind on Other Things 73 OCTOBER 1781: There Will Be a New World NOTES INDEX. / Vol. 3: Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS PREFACE TRANSLATOR�S NOTE 1 NOVEMBER 1781: Collot D�Herbois and the Dauphin 2 MARCH 1782: Junipero Serra Founds Los Angeles 3 APRIL 1782: The Zong and William Pitt 4 JANUARY 1782: Louis-Philippe and His Cousins 5 APRIL 1782: F�cit�e Genlis at Bay 6 APRIL 1782: Pius VI Visits Joseph II 7 APRIL 1782: De Grasse and Suffren Attack 8 APRIL 1782: Suffren Wins by a Nose 9 APRIL 1782: De Grasse Loses at Les Saintes 10 JUNE 1782: The Cond�Give the Party of the Century 11 JUNE 1782: Paul Petrovich and Catherine II 12 JUNE 1782: La Fayette �Resting� 13 MAY 1782: Beaumarchais Censured by Louis XVI 14 MAY 1782: Who Wrote Les Liaisons Dangereuses? 15 MAY 1782: Laclos Expelled from La Rochelle 16 JUNE 1782: Condorcet Appeals to the Despots 17 JUNE 1782: Brissot in Geneva 18 JUNE 1782: Clavi� and the Revolution 19 JULY 1782: Cornuaud the Collaborator 20 JULY 1782: Vergennes Crushes Geneva 21 AUGUST 1782: Mirabeau: Revenge in Pontarlier 22 AUGUST 1782: Mercier, Prophet and Parisian 23 JULY-SEPTEMBER 1782: The Hawks of Neuch�l 24 SEPTEMBER 1782: Schiller�s Escape 25 SEPTEMBER 1782: Schiller, Storm, and Stress 26 OCTOBER 1782: The French Court That Autumn 27 OCTOBER 1782: The Tragedy of Gibraltar 28 DECEMBER 1782: Suffren and Revolt in the Indies 29 JANUARY 1783: George III Will Not Be Louis XIV 30 FEBRUARY 1783: Peace or Truce? 31 APRIL 1783: The Death of St. Benoit Labre 32 MAY 1783: Mirabeau: The Hearings in Aix 33 MAY 1783: Mirabeau Playing Loser Wins 34 JUNE 1783: Maximilien�s D�t 35 JUNE 1783: Robespierre and Franklin 36 JUNE 1783: The Montgolfiers Take a Chance 57 AUGUST 1783: A Lawyer Named Barnave 38 AUGUST 1783: The Boyhood of General Rossignol 39 MARCH 1783: A Scrap Among the Scholars 40 AUGUST 1783: The Gonesse Balloon 41 JULY 1783: Marat Wants to Go to Spain 42 SUMMER 1783: Goya and the Court of Spain 43 NOVEMBER 1783: Marat Goes Underground 44 OCTOBER 1783: Candidates Pil�e and d�Arlandes 45 NOVEMBER 1783: The First Men in the Sky 46 APRIL 1784: Beaumarchais�s Triumph 47 APRIL 1784: Another Marriage: Buzot 48 JULY 1784: Exeunt d�Alembert and Diderot 49 AUGUST 1784: The Itinerary of Lazare Carnot 50 AUGUST 1784: Meetings with Gaspard Monge 51 AUGUST 1784: Carnot, Vauban, and the Prince de Cond�2 AUTUMN 1784: La Fayette and Washington, for the Last Time OCTOBER 1784: Napoleon from Brienne to Paris 54 MARCH 1785: A Bonaparte Dies, a Bourbon Is Born NOTES INDEX. / Vol. 4: Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS PREFACE A NOTE: JOHANN-HEINRICH PESTALOZZI THE SITUATION AT THE BEGINNING OF THIS BOOK 1 MARCH 1785: Beaumarchais's Arrest 2 MARCH 1785: The Suard-Beaumarchais Duel 3 MARCH 1785: A Spanking at Saint-Lazare 4 MAY 1785: The Birth of Sadism 5 MAY 1785: Barere�s Marriage 6 JULY 1785: Franklin�s Departure 7 MARCH-JULY 1785: A Little Peasant Girl from Creil 8 MARCH-JULY 1785: Mesmer�s Condemnation 9 MAY 1785: The Death of Choiseul 10 APRIL-AUGUST 1785: Beugnot and Jeanne de La Motte 11 AUGUST 1785: Barras and Jeanne de La Motte 12 AUGUST 1785: A Poor Little Girl�s Revenge 13 AUGUST 1785: The Comte de La Motte Leaves the Country 14 AUGUST 1785: Storming a Cardinal 15 AUGUST 1785: The Lie That Makes It All Clear 16 AUGUST 1785: Mud on a White Gown 17 AUGUST 1785: The Purchase of Saint-Cloud 18 AUGUST 1784: The Farce in Venus Grove 19 SPRING 1785: The Stolen Necklace 20 AUGUST 1785: Rohan in the Bastille 21 APRIL-AUGUST 1785: Doctor Gallot and the Epidemics 22 OCTOBER 1785: H�ult de S�elles and Le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau 23 OCTOBER 1785: H�ult Calls on Buffon 24 OCTOBER 1785: Carrier�s Debuts in Auvergne 25 JANUARY 1786: Germaine Necker and Her Suitors 26 JANUARY-FEBRUARY 1786: Madame de Sta� a Father, and a Spouse 27 FEBRUARY 1786: Abb�auchet Makes a Name for Himself 28 FEBRUARY 1786: Who Is Monsieur de Calonne? 29 FEBRUARY 1786: Talleyrand�s Son 30 JANUARY 1786: Mirabeau Tries Prussia 31 FEBRUARY 1786: La Fayette and Frederick II 32 JANUARY-FEBRUARY 1786: Mirabeau Will Not Serve Prussia 33 APRIL-MAY 1786: Mozart and Le Nozze di Figaro 34 APRIL-MAY 1786: Brissot and the Romanian Jacquerie 35 NOVEMBER 1782-JULY 1785: Brissot�s English Tour 36 MAY 1786: The Hapsburgs� Good Intentions 37 MAY 1786: The Necklace Trial 38 MAY 1786: Rohan�s Acquittal 39 JUNE 1786: Louis XVI in Cherbourg 40 JUNE 1786: Du Mouriez: Ambitions and Illusions 41 AUGUST 1786: Madame Roland and the Working Class 42 MARCH-MAY 1784: The Rolands, Amiens to Lyons 43 AUGUST 1786: Lyons: A Two-Sou Uprising 44 AUGUST 1786: Nerin�s Demands 45 AUGUST 1786: The Underground Movements 46 AUGUST 1786: Three Men Hanged for Two Sous 47 AUGUST 1786: Mirabeau Spectator 48 AUGUST 1786: The Death of Frederick II 49 AUGUST 1786: Mirabeau Lectures Royalty 50 AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 1786: Brunswick, the Coming Man 51 SEPTEMBER 1786: Illuminati vs. Enlightened 52 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 1786: Saint-Just Runs Away 53 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 1786: The Marriage of Marie-Anne Robinot 54 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 1786: Saint-Just, Daunou, and History 55 SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 1786: The Loves of Organt 56 JULY-OCTOBER 1786: Saint-Just at Twenty 57 SEPTEMBER 1786: Billaud-Varenne�s First Communion 58 SEPTEMBER 1786: Old Billaud�s Marriage 59 DECEMBER 1786: Louis XVI Convenes the Notables 60 FEBRUARY 1787: Vergennes Dies 61 FEBRUARY 22, 1787: The Notables Assemble NOTES INDEX. / Vol. 5: Contents The Situation at the Beginning of This Book 1 DECEMBER 1786 Taking the Plunge Condorcet�s Marriage 2 DECEMBER 1786 Her Love of Balls Had Passed Away Sophie de Condorcet and President du Paty 3 DECEMBER 1786 So Long as It Shall Please God. Du Paty and the Three Men on the Wheel 4 FEBRUARY 1787 My Heart Swelled with Vanity Chateaubriand Presented to Louis XVI 5 FEBRUARY 22, 1787 In an Agricultural Kingdom Calonne Admits the Debt 6 FEBRUARY 1787 His Prostituted Name Mirabeau and the Assembly of Notables 7 FEBRUARY 1787 Everything Is Rising Up in Me at Once Goethe�s Travels in Italy 8 FEBRUARY 1787 The Only Remedy in My Power Is the Future Saint-Just Gets Out of Jail 9 APRIL 1787 Like Ai. Restif de la Bretonne Louvet Publishes Faublas 10 MARCH�APRIL 1787 This Infamous Bankrupt Calonne Rides for a Fall 11 MARCH�APRIL 1787 Come, the Danger Is Not So Great Calonne Dismissed 12 APRIL 1787 As a Prime Minister Brienne Called to Power 13 FEBRUARY-APRIL 1787 A Citizen of the World Miranda Meets Catherine II 14 FEBRUARY-APRIL 1787 The Europe Caf�he Empress in the Crimea 15 APRIL 1787 Young, Enterprising, and Muddleheaded Miranda�s Grand Tour 16 JUNE 8, 1787 This Triumph Was Somewhat Soured Beaumarchais�s Tarare at the Op� 17 JUNE 1787 The Blood Went to My Head Beaumarchais vs. Bergasse: The Kornman Affair 18 JUNE 1787 Our Dear and Beloved Danton Danton Ties the Knot 19 JUNE 1787 The Assembly of Demigods The Philadelphia Convention 20 JUNE 1787 The Important Question Hamilton, Madison and Others 21 JUNE 1787 A Key to All This History Mably and John Adams 22 JUNE�JULY 1787 My Mother Feudality The Young Babeuf 23 JUNE�JULY 1787 Prelude to the Change of the Whole World Babeuf and Dubois de Fosseux 24 AUGUST 1787 Renewed Energy and Life The Parlements Against Louis XVI 25 AUGUST 1787 The Most Ungovernable of the Magistrates The Political Baptism of Duport 26 SEPTEMBER 17, 1787 A Rising Sun United States: The Constitution Is Adopted 27 SEPTEMBER 26, 1787 You Have Never Seen Me So Thin Fouchy Teaching at Juilly 28 OCTOBER 10, 1787 The Dutch Were a Free People The Capitulation of Amsterdam 29 NOVEMBER 22, 1787 0, My Bowels! Babeuf Loses His Daughter 30 NOVEMBER 1787 The Great Affair The Edict of Toleration 31 NOVEMBER 1787 My New Name Is Saint-Etienne Rabaut�s Youth 32 NOVEMBER 1787 Le vieux C�nol A Parable of Intolerance 33 NOVEMBER 1787 The Fanaticism of Democracy Pastor Jeanbon the Troublemaker 34 NOVEMBER 19�21, 1787 It Is Legal Because I Wish It! Philippe d�Orl�s Protests 35 NOVEMBER 22, 1787 A Person Has to Live Napoleon Loses His Virginity 36 FEBRUARY 5, 1788 The Pretty Girls at Valmunster Merlin de Thionville Marries 37 FEBRUARY 1788 I�ve Lost My Emulation David and Drouais�s Death 38 FEBRUARY 1788 He Took the Whole Habitable Globe for His Fatherland Brissot Founds the �Amis des Noirs� 39 APRIL 24, 1788 Laudable Courage Displayed Facing the Enemy Poniatowski Wounded by the Turks 40 APRIL�MAY 1788 Viva la libert�Mozart, Joseph II and Don Giovanni 41 MAY 3-5, 1788 An Aristocracy of Magistrates Goislard and d�Epr�snil Arrested 42 MAY 6�12, 1788 The Restoration That My Love Has Prepared Brienne Sends the Parlement Home 43 MAY 1788 The Old Spirit of Discovery Lap�use Comes to a Sorry End 44 JUNE 7, 1788 First Blood The Day of the Tiles: Stendhal and Bernadotte 45 JUNE 8-JULY 18, 1788 A New Light Barnave and Mounier Get Ready for the Vizille Estates 46 JULY 19�22, 1788 Powder Does Not Explode More Quickly The Vizille Day at the Periers� 47 JULY�AUGUST 1788 I See a Storm Gathering Malesherbes Submits the Reform to the King 48 AUGUST 1788 Tear Up the Gospels, or Conform to Their Morality Abb�r�ire Pleads for the Jews 49 AUGUST 1788 The Nation Has Stepped Forward a Century Brienne Convenes the Estates General 50 AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 1788 So Close to the Rocks Necker Recalled 51 SEPTEMBER 1788 More Evils and Men Lamoignon Dismissed and du Paty Dead 52 SEPTEMBER-NOVEMBER 1788 A True Peasant Child Versailles and Fersen 53 NOVEMBER 1788 This Conspiracy of Decent People The Society of Thirty 54 NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 1788 How Easy It Would Be to Do Without the Privileged! The Third Doubled 55 DECEMBER 1788 Cries of Freedom The Pen Pushers Have the Floor: From Mably to Marat 56 DECEMBER 1788 So There Is One Man Left in France! The Pen Pushers Have the Floor: From Antraigues to Siey�57 JANUARY 1789 The Plot of Every Play Belongs to Me Fabre d�Eglantine Booed at the The�e-Fran�s 58 JANUARY 21, 1789 God Preserve Atheism D�Holbach Is Dead, Long Live Volney! 59 JANUARY 26�FEBRUARY 4, 1789 The Youths Became Quite Frightening Volney and the Rennes Riots 60 FEBRUARY 4�MARCH 5, Between the Nobility and the Third Estate Mirabeau�s Electoral Campaign 61 MARCH 15�APRIL 2, 1789 The Church of Autun, My Spouse Enthronement and Election of Talleyrand 62 APRIL 3, 1789 He Deserves the Scaffold Carnot Imprisoned at B�une 63 APRIL 6, 1789 I Was Obeyed Like a Beloved Father Mirabeau, Tribune of Provence 64 APRIL 26, 1789 Let Us Grasp the Unique Moment Arras: Robespierre Gets In 65 APRIL 27�28, 1789 In Paris People Were Cutting Each Other�s Throats The Faubourg Saint-Antoine Riot 66 APRIL 30, 1789 Ground Which Has Never Been Trodden Before Washington, President of the United States 67 APRIL 30�MAY 4, 1789 God, Country, Fellow Citizens: All Had Become Myself Opening of the Estates General 68 MAY 5, 1789 An Exaggerated Desire for Innovation A Wasted Day 69 MAY 6�JUNE 11, 1789 Let Us Cut the Cable A Wasted Month 70 JUNE 10�17, 1789 / Assumed the Uniform of a Deputy Bailly and the Proclamation of the National Assembly 71 JUNE 18-23, 1789 Well, Dammit, Let Them Stay! The Tennis Court Oath 72 JULY II�13, 1789 How Quickly the Fire Spread Then! Camille Desmoulins at the Palais-Royal 73 JULY 14, 1789 The Greatest Revolution Surrender of the Bastille NOTES INDEX. ISBN 9780671680183
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