Research Projects C-H (by author)


THE ENLIGHTENMENT IN QUESTION: ESSAY COMPETIONS AND THE FRANCOPHONE REPUBLIC OF LETTERS, 1670-1794
Jeremy L. Caradonna, Ph.D Cand.
Adviser: Prof. David Bell, The Johns Hopkins University

My dissertation explores the cultural, political, and intellectual history of essay competitions, from the first academic concours held by the Académie française in 1670, to the last of the concours offered by various revolutionary bodies in the Year II. Although I use Daniel Roche's Le Siècle des Lumières en province as a springboard, the project is only partially concerned with the académies (who sponsored the vast majority of essay competitions in the eighteenth century). The study charts the transformation of essay competitions--academic, civic, and collegiate--from a deferential ritual obsessed with glorifying the monarchy, to a critical mode of discourse. The principal focus of the study is the international community of intellectuals who competed annually on the concours circuit, seeking fame, fortune, and a home in the Republic of Letters. A subsidiary focus is on the private and public individuals--people such as Sartine, Raynal, and the King himself--who sponsored various competitions, through civic bodies, in the hopes of soliciting public knowledge. Ultimately, the dissertation argues three points: one, that the concours were the most public and most accesible form of intellectual dialogue in eighteenth-century France; two, that the Enlightenment should be understood as critical mode of discourse rather than as a specific set of ideas or philosophers; and three, that while the concours reflect the changing political and cultural climate from Louis XIV to the fall of Robespierre, they also yield surprising continuities in the exploitation of public knowledge by civic institutions.  jeremycaradonna@hotmail.com, or     jcarado2@jhu.edu. (7/05)

GENTILHOMMES SIMPLEMENT': THE MINOR SWORD NOBILITY IN BURGUNDY, 1695-1789
Sue Carr, MPhil/PhD candidate
Supervisor: Dr Julian Swann, Birkbeck College, University of London

By the beginning of the eighteenth century the minor sword noble community had visibly declined in terms of its personal fortunes and its diminishing influence and authority in provincial milieus. The growing populations of provincial robe nobles, combined with increasing infiltration of wealthy bourgeois into noble circles and state encroachment on traditional areas of noble influence and authority had effectively marginalized the minor sword. Vilified by his contemporaries and the subject of polemic by some modern historians, the poverty-stricken provincial seigneur or 'gentilhomme ' of the Ancien Regime became a derisory figure (viz. the popular myth of the 'hobereau' languishing in provincial obscurity). My research aims to contradict this negative and unrepresentative image and place the existence of the provincial Burgundian sword nobles in a realistic and constructive context. Using documentary evidence from the regional archives, I aim initially to identify these nobles and establish the size of their community, and to consider their financial /social status vis-à-vis other noble groups. An examination of a representative sample of provincial minor sword families will, hopefully provide an insight into their social condition, philosophy, and relationships with other noble/non-noble groups in the region, and demonstrate to what extent they were still an active and positive force in provincial society. s.carr@ucl.ac.uk (*7/05)


THE GIRARD/CADIERE AFFAIR: SEDUCTION, CONSPIRACY, AND PUBLIC OPINION IN 1731 plus NUNS IN FRENCH THOUGHT, 1740-1794
Mita Choudhury , PhD (1997)
Associate Professor, Vassar College

I am currently working on a project on the highly-publicized trial involving Cathérine Cadière and the Jesuit Jean-Baptiste Girard that was tried before the parlement of Aix in 1731. Accusations against Girard included those of seduction, heresy, and abortion while the Jesuits sought to tar Cadière's reputation beyond repair. As many contemporaries noted, this affair was about more than the individuals but was flashpoint for the tensions between the Jesuits and the Jansenists, between elites and the popular classes. The notoriety of the case was such that a large excerpt of Thérèse philosophe was devoted to recounting the bizarre relationship between Cadière and Girard. My objective is to write a microhistory that is especially tailored to undergraduates, providing them with access to some of the current trends in early modern French history: the religious controversies of the eighteenth century, especially those involving the Jansenists and the Jesuits, the link between sexuality, pornography, and politics, and the relationships between elites and non-elites. I am under contract with Prentice Hall to this microhistory for their new series "Microhistories in Western Civilization," which I am co-editing with Steven Ozment.

My book School of Virtue, School of Vice: Convents and Nuns in French Thought and Culture, 1730-1794 (Cornell UP, 2004) examines how a host of writers, namely lawyers and men of letters, brought the conflicts and debates surrounding the convent to bear on larger incendiary issues such as despotism, citizenship and female sexuality. michoudhury@vassar.edu (2/06)


THE MAKING OF A NATIONAL LANGUAGE IN EARLY MODERN FRANCE and THE MEDIATION OF LINGUISTIC DIFFERENCE IN NEW FRANCE
Paul Cohen, Ph.D. (2001)
Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
Dissertation Chair: Professor Natalie Zemon Davis, Princeton University

My research examines several interrelated concerns: the social history of language, the relationship between language and national sentiment, cultural exchange in culturally plural contexts, and sociocultural change. I am in currently completing a book-length study of the emergence of French as a national language, entitled " Kingdom of Babel: The Making of a National Language in France, from the Late Middle Ages to the Revolution." I examine on the one hand how, in a period when upwards of half the kingdom's population did not speak French, the monarchy came to associate itself closely with one particular vernacular, and on the other hand how and why notables in non-French-speaking regions embraced French and incorporated it into their social identites. I have also begun work on a second book-length project which proposes to examine the history of the mediation of linguistic difference between French settlers and Amerindians in New France between the sixteenth and the eighteenth centuries. I argue that such a study is interesting not only for the light it can shed on the history of French-Amerindian cultural exchange. Linguistic mediation constituted a privileged site for social, commercial, and cultural exchange, as well as for the exercise of war, diplomacy and political control. Linguistic intermediaries themselves intervened in decisive ways in a range of contexts – trade, social interactions, religious change, colonial government and warfare – in which success or failure in bridging linguistic gaps in fact helped shape the outcomes of these activities. p.cohen@utoronto.ca   (3/07)

PARENTAL AUTHORITY, LEGAL PRACTICE AND STATE BUILDING IN EARLY MODERN FRANCE
Christopher R. Corley, Ph.D (Aug) 2001
Assistant Professor, Minnesota State University Mankato
Dissertation Director Dr. James R. Farr, Purdue University

My dissertation, which I am currently revising for publication, explores the legal foundations of paternal authority and its practical application in Burgundy from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries. In the first part of my dissertation, I try to untangle the web of Burgundian juristic writings on paternal authority from the province's annexation through the last years of the Old Regime. I explain the intellectual inheritance that the Burgundian jurists claimed in the sixteenth century, the interpretive changes that occurred in the following two centuries, and the employment of these ideas in the courtroom. One simply couldn't consider paternal authority alone. The jurists had to wrestle with the everyday realities of family crises caused by death, abandonment, and other more mundane circumstances. Reality was hard to suppress, and in the average early modern life-cycle fathers were more often than not the first parent to die. The jurists' writings on the legal rights of mothers and other family guardians over their children and property allow another window into family authority. In the second part of my dissertation, I explore family practices and negotiations through Dijon's excellent collection of notarial and civil court records. Set within the contexts of legal culture and the growth of the absolutist state, I argue for a fundamentally more complex picture of family authority than has previously been acknowledged by historians. While the father might have been idealized, everyday realities forced the family and government to wrestle with instances where that order was explicitly threatened. christopher.corley@mnsu.edu (8/04)


PERILOUS PERFORMANCES: GENDER AND REGENCY IN EARLY MODERN FRANCE
Katherine Crawford, Ph.D (1997)
Assistant Professor at Vanderbilt University.
Dissertation Director: Colin Lucas, University of Chicago

My dissertation, which I am currently revising for publication, is about regency government in Early Modern France. While I explore the early precedents for regency briefly, the project really begins with Catherine de Medicis and her efforts to carve out a political logic for having the queen mother as regent. Her efforts depended centrally on gender performance and presenting herself as an acceptable woman, a difficult thing to do when she was utilizing that to claim a political role that was problematic in French political traditions. The project analyzes the gender politics behind regency, laid down in the sixteenth century and elaborated in the seventeenth century by Marie de Medicis and Anne d'Autriche. Integral to the gendered elements of regency authority was the relationship of regency to the monarchy, an aspect that becomes especially apparent when the regency goes to a male regent, Philippe d'Orleans, in 1715. Regency tradition itself is very much an issue at the end of the Old Regime, when Marie-Antoinette is caught up in a discussion of regency that has important implications concerning her fate. Throughout, my interest is in the complex conjunction of gender performance and political power in the early modern French political system. While the focus is in many ways on "high politics," I am interested in how power circulates (and often fails to circulate) through culturally determined notions of acceptable behavior. In this sense especially, I examine the relational elements of political exchange that are laid bare in episodes of regency government. katherine.b.crawford@vanderbilt.edu (1/04)

LE « SECOND PEUPLE » DE NANTES (1667-1792)
Vincent Danet, doctorant en histoire moderne
Allocataire de recherche (bourse d’étude du ministère)
Université de Nantes – école doctorale CLC (Connaissances, Langage, Culture)
Laboratoire de rattachement : CRHIA (Centre de Recherche en Histoire Internationale et Atlantique)
Directeur de recherche : Mr Guy Saupin

Mon travail de recherche porte sur l’étude socioéconomique du « Second Peuple » de la ville de Nantes, des années 1667 à 1792. Cette partie de la population du plus grand port de France de la fin du XVIIIe siècle, seconde parce que se plaçant derrière un premier groupe composé principalement de la bourgeoisie, des professions libérales, des marchands ou négociants et des maîtres de métiers, se caractérise par la fragilité et l’instabilité économique mais également culturelle de ses membres. Ceux-ci sont notamment représentés par toute la foule des petits travailleurs qui font vivre et prospérer les activités portuaires mais aussi par l’ensemble des ouvriers des manufactures, des artisans qui ne font partie d’aucune corporation juridiquement établie, des nombreux compagnons et garçons de métiers ainsi que de la population, importante, des domestiques. Le point commun de tous ces travailleurs est de vivre dans une précarité quotidienne et une incertitude du lendemain tout en menant une véritable vie sociale dont les bases sont l’environnement familial et amical. Mon étude, grâce à la prise en compte de sources tant quantitatives (registres paroissiaux et de capitation, inventaires après décès, minutes notariales) que qualitatives (témoignages des sources judiciaires), a pour but d’approcher au plus près de la réalité de la vie quotidienne de ce « Second Peuple » en montrant que si cette vie tient de l’instabilité (géographique, économique, familiale) et de la domination socioculturel et économique d’autres groupes sociaux, elle s’enracine dans une sociabilité bien vivante et solide. Site internet: http://histmoderne.club.fr/ Addresse:  histmoderne@club-internet.fr    (5/05)


LES ASSEMBLÉES POLITIQUES DES HUGUENOTS, DE LEUR ORIGINE A 1629
Hugues Daussy (doctorat, mai 2000)
Maître de conférences en histoire moderne à l'Université du Maine
Membre de l'Institut Universitaire de France
Directeur: Arlette Jouanna (Université de Montpellier)

Après avoir analysé les relations entre les protestants et la monarchie française (thèse de doctorat : Les huguenots et le roi. Le combat politique de Philippe Duplessis-Mornay (1572-1600), Collection Travaux d'Humanisme et Renaissance n°364, Genève, Droz, 2002, 694 p.) j'oriente désormais mes recherches vers l'étude des assemblées politiques tenues par les huguenots depuis leur création jusqu'à leur interdiction, par l'édit d'Alès, en 1629. Il s'agit non seulement d'étudier l'institution en elle-même, mais aussi de préciser son rôle au sein du parti huguenot ainsi que l'existence probable de dissensions internes à ces assemblées. L'unique et ancienne étude (Anquez, 1859) portant sur les assemblées politiques s'est en effet bornée à restituer le contenu de ces actes officiels, sans chercher à utiliser d'autres sources dont l'exploitation devrait permettre, outre l'identification et la connaissance précise des députés, de cerner les contours des groupes aux intérêts divergents et de dissiper les incertitudes qui pèsent encore sur les luttes pour le contrôle du parti. Cette analyse permettra également de percevoir le poids respectif des différents groupes ainsi définis, de mieux connaître le fonctionnement interne du parti et de comprendre avec davantage d'acuité les prises de position successives des huguenots vis-à-vis du roi de France. La mise en relation de l'action des députés des assemblées générales avec les positions exprimées lors des assemblées provinciales permettra enfin d'évaluer le degré de "représentativité" de cette institution. Parallèlement à la conduite de cette étude, la publication annotée des procès-verbaux des assemblées politiques sera entreprise en collaboration avec Mark Greengrass . hdaussy@club-internet.fr (1/06)


THE WINE AND BRANDY TRADE BETWEEN FRANCE AND THE DUTCH REPUBLIC IN ITS ATLANTIC FRAMEWORK, 1600-1650
Henriette de Bruyn Kops, Ph.D (2005)
Research Associate, Georgetown University
Dissertation director: Dr. James B. Collins, Georgetown University

Wines and brandy were among the key commodities shipped from south-western to northern Europe, so the study of the alcohol trade in particular allows us to discover more about the coastal trade in general and to properly recognize the significance of that sector to the Dutch maritime economy. My book [Brill Academic Publishers, summer 2007] on the Dutch trade in French wines and brandy, with the strong commercial ties between Nantes and Rotterdam at its core, addresses a serious gap in the economic historiography of the Republic. The rise of Rotterdam as Holland’s second strongest economic center after Amsterdam coincided with the blossoming of its wine and brandy trade with France and with a boom in the brandy production around Nantes. The broader conclusions derived from my research into the Dutch alcohol trade have significant implications for the historiography of the early modern Atlantic economy at the time of Dutch hegemony in those waters.  

My current research is an offshoot of the alcohol trade project. Dutch interest in the brandy and wines from Nantes peaked at the time of the most concerted Spanish efforts to enforce the trade embargo against the Republic. I focus on the mutually advantageous relationship between Dutch international merchants with the Sephardic communities along the Atlantic coast of Europe, be they openly Jewish or officially New Christian. I explore how this symbiotic relationship facilitated European coastal trade in general and the evasion of the Spanish trade embargoes in particular. debruynh@georgetown.edu   (3-07)


FINANCES PUBLIQUES ET PENSÉES ÉCONOMIQUES ET FISCALES AU XVIIIe SIÈCLE
Arnaud Decroix, Doctorat, Histoire du droit, Aix-en-Provence, 2004
Chercheur post-doctoral, Université de Montréal

Après la publication de Question fiscale et réforme financière en France (1749-1789). Logique de la transparence et recherche de la confiance publique (Presses universitaires d'Aix-Marseille, 2006), mes recherches continuent de porter sur les enjeux liés à l'affirmation de l'économie politique au XVIIIe siècle. Les lieux de rencontre entre la politique et la fiscalité sont particulièrement explorés et la question de l'émergence de l'opinion publique durant cette période y est particulièrement étudiée.

Au milieu du XVIIIe siècle, le mouvement des Lumières s'accentue et s'efforce d'introduire une plus forte transparence au sein de la culture française d'Ancien Régime. Ces exigences accrues de publicité se manifestent particulièrement en matière financière. L'administration fiscale, présentée comme arbitraire, fait l'objet d'une volonté de rationalisation. Dans ce but, le contrôleur général des finances Machault d'Arnouville établit, en 1749, l'imposition du vingtième. Cet impôt universel contraint désormais les contribuables à présenter au fisc une déclaration exacte de leurs revenus. Toutefois, il est intéressant de relever qu'en retour, une plus grande transparence est également exigée de la part de la monarchie. Ainsi, les Cours souveraines réclament, à plusieurs reprises, la communication de l'état des comptes de la monarchie. Le débat public se cristallise également autour de la publication de nombreux pamphlets financiers. En effet, au sortir de la guerre de Sept Ans et sous le ministère libéral de Turgot, des dizaines d'écrits sont imprimés et diffusés, favorisant une discussion inédite en matière de réforme fiscale. arnauddecroix@yahoo.fr     (8/06)


THE PRACTICE OF ABSOLUTISM: THE ELITES OF BESANÇON AND THE MONARCHY OF LOUIS XIV, 1674-1715
Darryl Dee, PhD (2004)
Assistant Professor, Wilfred Laurier University
Director: Dr. William Beik, Emory University

My dissertation examines how absolutism functioned in Besancon, capital of the province of Franche-Comte, from its annexation by Louis XIV to the end of the reign. It aims to get beneath formal institutional structures in order to determine how absolutist rule worked on the ground and day to day. It focuses on the politics of annexation and integration; the establishment of the formal and informal mechanisms of French governance; the formation and implementation of political and fiscal policies; and the relationships between the expansion of venality, the spread of privilege and the growth of conflict among elite groups. In all of these areas, I am finding that local elites played a larger role than previously thought. They displayed a remarkable ability to exploit absolutist rule to further their own interests. They were also able to enter into a dialogue with the crown over matters of policy, thus influencing both their form and their implementation. In the end, the practice of absolutism in Besancon was as much a product of local society as of royal authority. (ddee@emory.edu)   (9/04)


NETWORKS OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE FRENCH ATLANTIC WORLD, 1650-1760
Nicholas Dew, DPhil ( Oxford, 2000)
Assistant Professor, History Department, McGill University
Supervisor: Prof. Laurence W. B. Brockliss

My doctoral project, which is now a book manuscript near to completion, was an exploration of the social history of Oriental scholarship in France in the period of Louis XIV. The book explores the circulation of knowledge about China, India, and the Ottoman empire in the Republic of Letters, and aims to recover the importance of 'oriental' interests for the 'culture of curiosity'.  My second project grew out of the first, and is on the scientific uses of the French Atlantic colonial network (connecting Paris to West Africa, the Antilles, Guyane, and Canada) in the period 1660-1760. As part of this second project, I have co-edited (with James Delbourgo) "a volume of essays entitled Science and Empire in the Atlantic World, which is forthcoming from Routledge (late 2007 or early 2008)." I am also involved in Montreal's new Groupe d'histoire de l'Atlantique français / French Atlantic History Group, which will run a series of workshops and seminars over the next three years.  The website of this project will shortly be online at: http://www.atlantique.mcgill.ca. My publications include, "Reading travels in the culture of curiosity: Thévenot’s collection of voyages", Journal of Early Modern History, 10 (2006), 39-59; and "The order of Oriental knowledge: the making of d’Herbelot’s Bibliothèque Orientale," in Christopher Prendergast, ed., Debating World Literature ( London: Verso, 2004), 233-252. [e-mail removed at request of author]. Departmental webpage:  http://www.mcgill.ca/history/faculty/faculty/dew/    (9/07)


FRANÇOIS DE LORRAINE, DUC DE GUISE (1520-1563). RECHERCHES SUR L’IDENTITÉ ET L’ENGAGEMENT
Éric Durot, Doctorant à l’Université de Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV), Professeur en lycée.
Directeur de thèse : M. le Professeur Denis Crouzet (Paris IV).

Paradoxalement peu étudiés avant la Ligue, les Guise sont une famille incontournable pour les problématiques nobiliaire, monarchique et confessionnelle. L’aîné de la deuxième génération – le duc François – retient particulièrement notre attention, de part les sources exploitables et les questionnements possibles à propos de : l’identité et l’engagement ; « l’individu », la monarchie et la société ; la fracture confessionnelle. Il ne s’agit ni de vouloir faire du duc un « modèle » ni de le positionner hors de son temps. D’une manière en partie introspective, il importe de questionner l’homme pour rechercher sa vision du monde, sa quête d’identité – concept à définir pour le premier XVIe siècle afin d’éviter tout anachronisme – et établir les interactions avec son engagement militant et ses « practiques » pour un catholicisme exclusiviste (souvent stigmatisé dans l’historiographie). L’historicisation de concepts issus des sciences sociales, nous paraît profitable (identité, rôle, ressources, interactions dynamiques…).

En mettant en exergue les différentes temporalités, la recherche ne procèdera pas par strict enchaînement cumulatif des faits, mais privilégiera une étude dynamique pour mettre en valeur et les évolutions, les différents contextes, et la grammaire des imaginaires, de l’imagination et de l’engagement du duc de Guise. Un intérêt particulier est accordé aux sources exemplaires, qui, davantage que l’accumulation sérielle, « fondent la puissance du témoignage » (Alphonse Dupront) et peuvent permettre d’éviter les universaux. Les liens particuliers avec son frère Charles, cardinale de Lorraine (1525-1574), seront mis en exergue pour travailler les politiques du pouvoir et de l’image.
eric.durot@9online.fr   (10/04)


LIVING WITH GHOSTS: 1300-1700; also THE BURGUNDIAN FRONTIER 1450-1650
Kathryn A. Edwards, Ph.D. (1993)
Associate Professor, University of South Carolina
Dissertation Chair: William J. Bouwsma, University of California, Berkeley

I have two, concurrent research projects. The first is a continuation of my first book: a socio-cultural study of daily life in, and the significance of, the frontier in the duchy and country of Burgundy, c. 1450-1650. The second is a history of belief in ghosts, c. 1300-1700, tentatively titled Living with Ghosts: The Dead in European Society from the Black Death to the Enlightenment. My objectives are 1) to assess the ways in which European attitudes towards apparitions evolved during an era of religious confrontation and social change and 2) to provide a transnational comparison of "folk" and learned culture (for want of less schematic terms). For this second project, I am working in French sources but also in German, English, Spanish, Italian, and Latin.  KathrynEdwards@sc.edu  (4/06)

TERRITORIAL MAGNATES IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE 1660-1715: A COMPARISON OF THE ENGLISH LORD LIEUTENANTS IN THE LATE STUART PERIOD AND FRENCH PROVINCIAL GOVERNORS IN THE REIGN OF LOUIS XIV
Michael Essex, MPhil/PhD, Birkbeck College,University of London
Supervisors: Dr Julian Swann and Professor Barry Coward

Studies of both England and France in the late Seventeenth Century have concentrated on the development of government organisation but tended to downplay the role of the higher aristocracy. I am looking at Lord Lieutenants in

England and French Provincial Governors, the most influential members of the aristocracy in both countries, to study their role in the politics of the period as well as their contribution to the government of the day. The study looks at the grandees position in the state and at local level: their organisation of local militia, their influence in municipal, county and provincial politics and their role in patronage at court. There will also be a prosopographical element concerned with the person, their environment and social status.   Michael.Essex@dti.gsi.gov.uk  (8/05)



LES PROCÈS POLITIQUES DU PREMIER XVIIe SIÈCLE
Hélène Fernandez, doctorante
Directeur de thèse : Joël Cornette (Université de Paris VIII)

Cette thèse voudrait examiner la (longue) série de procès que l'on peut appeler rapidement «politiques», et qui iraient de Biron à Cinq-Mars et de Thou, en passant par Chalais, Rohan, Montmorency, Mathieu de Morgues, Saint-Preuil, et tant d'autres, condamnés à mort et exécutés--en effigie ou pas--par des commissaires, des parlements ou des chambres spécialement constituées comme celle de l'Arsenal. Souvent citée comme une spécificité de la période du ministériat de Richelieu, cette série n'est pas, contrairement à ce que l'expression de « procès politiques » pourrait laisser penser, constituée de façon extérieure à la réalité du XVIIe siècle, bien au contraire: il s'agit d'un objet constitué par les contemporains eux-mêmes, d'une façon qu'il faudra aussi le mettre en question. Il s'agit aussi d'étudier les procès eux-mêmes dans leur déroulement procédural, mais aussi leur mise en scène (à travers le retravail politique du rituel de l'exécution, par exemple) et leur usage comme arme politique (comment ? contre qui ?).   helenef@noos.fr  (2/04)  homepage


FAIRE LA PAIX. MISSIONS ET COMMISSIONS D'APPLICATION DES ÉDITS DE PACIFICATION SOUS LE REGNE DE CHARLES IX (1560-1574).
Jérémie Foa, Doctorant en histoire,
ATER à l'Université Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand 2.
Directeur de thèse: Olivier Christin (Université Lumière Lyon 2)

L’étude des missions d’application des édits de pacification permet de saisir au vif le rôle du pouvoir central dans l’apaisement des affrontements religieux. Au début des années 1560, Catherine de Médicis inaugura une politique radicalement neuve de tolérance religieuse: on pouvait désormais être citoyen et hérétique. Pourtant, de la loi à son application, les rouages restaient nombreux. Le respect des édits religieux dépendait moins des injonctions royales que des relais locaux de l’obéissance. Or le souverain se trouva confronté à une résistance plus ou moins camouflée des organes officiellement chargés de relayer ses volontés: gouverneurs, parlements, échevinages etc. Catherine de Médicis dut alors mettre en place une stratégie de réaffirmation du monopole de commandement incarné par l’Etat: Deux par deux le plus souvent, des "commissaires de l'édit" furent envoyés dans les provinces pour tenter de prévenir les violences confessionnelles. Cette stratégie se comprend d’autant mieux que le nomadisme du pouvoir royal représentait une réponse possible aux forces centrifuges qui animaient les différentes provinces du royaume. En ce sens, les missions, comme le tour de France royal (1564-1566), doivent être lues comme des stratégies de contrôle du territoire, tant la mise en cause de l’Etat central revêtait alors des caractères spatiaux manifestes. Il convient de ce fait de se pencher sur la réalité de ces missions de pacification, leur composition, leurs ambitions et leurs échecs, et surtout leur action concrète : création de consulats mixtes (Lyon, Montélimar), attribution de lieux de culte et de cimetières, désarmement des villes etc. Et d'interroger la participation de la période des guerres de religion à la construction de l'Etat moderne. jeremie.foa@gmail.com (1/06)


HISTOIRE COMPARÉE DES COMMUNAUTÉS RURALES EN FRANCE, XVe-XIXe SIÈCLE, RAPPORTS ENTRE LA SOCIETE ET l'ETAT, HISTOIRE FISCALE, HISTOIRE SOCIALE DE LA JUSTICE.
Antoine Follain, professeur des universités, université Mac Bloch (Strasbourg 2).

Nos travaux portent, d’une part, sur l’histoire politique et sociale du monde rural, les rapports entre les collectivités locales et l’Etat, l’Eglise et la seigneurie, d’autre part sur l’histoire sociale de la justice et le fonctionnement du système judiciaire, notamment au niveau des juridictions « subalternes» et seigneuriales. Nous avons réalisé pour notre Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches une synthèse : Le Village sous l’Ancien Régime et l’exemple normand (vers 1450 - vers 1780), mémoire de recherche, Université de Caen, décembre 2002, (dir. Jean-Marc MORICEAU). Nous avons organisé plusieurs colloques sur l’histoire du village et de l’Etat : [1] L’Argent des villages. Comptabilités paroissiales et communales, fiscalité locale du XIIIe au XVIIIe siècle. Actes du colloque d’Angers des 30-31 octobre 1998 édités par Antoine Follain, Rennes, Association d’Histoire des Sociétés Rurales, 2000 ;  [2] Les Justices de village. Administration et justice locales de la fin du Moyen Âge à la Révolution. Actes du colloque d’Angers « Justice seigneuriale et régulation sociale… » des 26-27 octobre 2001, édités par François Brizay, Antoine Follain et Véronique Sarrazin, Rennes, PUR, 2002, prolongé par [3] Les Justices locales dans les villes et villages du XVe au XIXe siècle, Rennes, PUR, 2005 ; [4] Enquête nationale « La taille et ses équivalents... » : L'Impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'État (dit) moderne : la Taille et ses équivalents de la fin du Moyen Âge au XVIIe siècle. Actes du colloque de Bercy des 2 et 3 décembre 2002 édités par Antoine Follain et Gilbert Larguier, Paris, Comité pour l’Histoire Economique et Financière de la France, 2005. Travaillant toujours dans deux directions, d’une part nous étudions avec des collègues le « cahier des actes et affaires de la paroisse de Saint-Bonnet près Orcival (1628-1645) » (analyse et édition d’un registre d’assemblée auvergnat), ainsi que le corpus des registres normands de délibération et nous avons relancé l’enquête nationale « La taille et ses equivalents » ; d’autre part, dans le prolongement de nos travaux en histoire sociale de la justice, nous avons lancé une enquête sur les procès criminels et de sorcellerie aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles dans les archives judiciaires et financières du duché de Lorraine.  (11/07)  afollain@umb.u-strasbg.fr   site web http://pagesperso-orange.fr/villanelle/index.htm


FRENCH DIPLOMACY, THE REVOLUTION, AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
Linda Frey, University of Montana and
Marsha Frey, Kansas State University and Marsha Frey

We are currently working on two projects on French diplomacy during the Revolution. One examines the cultural constructs of the diplomacy and their attack on the diplomacy of the old regime. The other analyzes the impact of the French Revolution on international law and the international order. lfrey@selway.umt.edu and mfrey@ksu.edu    (8/07)


LA VILLE FACE AU SOLDAT, METZ, 1589-1715
Martial Gantelet, Professeur agrégé d'histoire
Doctorant de l'Université Paris VIII Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Directeur de thèse: Joël Cornette

Mes recherches portent sur la mise en place de l'absolutisme au travers de l'outil militaire, perçue à partir du point de vue d'une ville frontière au long passé d'indépendance, et saisie dans ses relations avec le pouvoir central. Il s'agit d'expliciter les marges de manœuvres d'une communauté urbaine face aux soldats. Metz, intégrée définitivement au royaume en 1648 seulement, doit en effet soutenir l'effort militaire de la monarchie au travers de quartiers d'hiver, de garnisons et de passages de troupes, mais aussi affronter les courses des soldats ennemis venant du Luxembourg ou de Lorraine. Les différentes stratégies et tactiques de la ville dévoilent ainsi tout un complexe politico-social fait de clientélisme et de corruption, destiné à détourner ou à amoindrir le poids du soldat ; mais aussi toute la complexité du financement de ces charges se traduisant par un véritable système fisco-financier à l'échelle municipale. Mes propos se centrent sur les années 1630-1650, marquées en Lorraine par une véritable " guerre de Trente ans ", mais s'inscrivent aussi sur l'ensemble du xviie siècle analysé dans le cadre politique du compromis de la bonne ville.   m.gantelet@ac-nancy-metz.fr    (3/04)


FOREST EXPLOITATION AND WOODLAND 'CRIME' IN SOUTHWESTERN FRANCE DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
Hamish Graham (PhD, 2002)
Lecturer, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Thesis supervisor: the late Iain A. Cameron (University of Sydney)

This work investigates the competing demands for timber and forest resources during an important phase of France's development. French forests were extensive throughout the early modern period, particularly in the South-West. Besides the various applications that forest products found in agriculture and manufacturing, wood provided fuel for both domestic and industrial needs, while construction timber was a high priority for the state, especially for use in the naval dockyards and public works. My research aims to unravel those multiple links, primarily by examining the effectiveness of royal officials in managing different forms of woodland property, and assessing their contributions to the Old Regime's judicial system. The variety of interests involved in the exploitation of eighteenth-century forests provide a suitably broad context in which to locate and explain the incidence of woodland contention. My strategy starts by considering the provincial scale (Aquitaine/the Guyenne), and then focuses on a region (the Périgord), before examining more localised examples of disputes over the ownership of trees and timber. Several key themes of Old Regime historiography are evaluated - the forestry service (Eaux et Forêts) as agents of a dirigiste state, and the effects of seigneurial authority in the French countryside, plus recent debates about legal centralism and the 'rent-seeking' foundations of mercantilism. In each case, my work questions the utility of overarching explanatory models, preferring to explore specific instances of forest exploitation and woodland 'crimes' through the use of microhistory.   h.graham@unsw.edu.au   (3/04)


WOMEN’S TASTE IN THE FRENCH ENLIGHTENMENT: FROM THE HONNÊTE MODEL TO THE DOMESTIC PARADIGM, 1674-1762
Katharine Hamerton, Ph.D. ( University of Chicago, 2002)
Assistant Professor of History, Dept. of Liberal Education, Columbia College Chicago
Dissertation Advisor: Jan Goldstein

My dissertation explored changing ideas about women’s taste in eighteenth-century France. As a new literary public and consumer society began to emerge in the seventeenth century, taste became a highly valued sign of social distinction, and the mondain salon-going public agreed that refined, cultured women possessed superior taste and were the most powerful arbiters of French literary taste. By 1750, debates over women’s taste and their influence on the nation’s taste had become much more extensive and heated. The thesis showed how women’s taste was dramatically redefined from pre-eminently public quality to quintessentially private one, as the legitimate sites for women’s taste shifted to the commercial and domestic spheres, and feminine taste came to seem generally ill-suited for deployment in serious literary and aesthetic realms. I am thus trying to understand modern gendered consumption and taste from within a longer historical context. Currently, I am working on an article derived from this research, “The Philosopher and the Salonnière: Honnêteté and Sensibility in the Emerging Enlightenment Discourse of Taste,” which examines the thought of Malebranche and Madame de Lambert on women’s taste as a function of sensibility. Part of my project here is to try to cast some light on current questions about the agency of Enlightenment salonnières: how they functioned, intellectually and institutionally, within the enabling potential and limiting constraints of the ideology and practices of honnêteté, and whether there was a shift from a seventeenth-century “feminocentric” salon to an eighteenth-century salon that privileged the male philosophe.  khamerton at colum.edu


ENGLISH REPUBLICANISM IN FRANCE, 1700-1789
Rachel Hammersley, D.Phil. (2002)
Lecturer in History, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK
D.Phil. Supervisors: Professor Blair Worden and Dr Richard Whatmore (University of Sussex)

In my recently published book French Revolutionaries and English Republicans: The Cordeliers Club 1790-1794, I investigated and analysed the uses made of English republican ideas in Revolutionary France (and particularly among members of the radical, Paris-based Cordeliers Club). I am now building on that research in examining the uses made of those same English ideas prior to the Revolution. During the eighteenth century a number of English republican works were translated into French, including texts by Edmund Ludlow, Algernon Sidney, Marchamont Nedham, Thomas Gordon, and Viscount Bolingbroke. In addition, a number of eighteenth-century French writers - including Henri de Boulainvilliers, the Marquis d’Argenson, Montesquieu, the abbé Mably, and Jean-Paul Marat - drew heavily on English republican ideas. My published work on this project to date has focused on Marat and what I have called the ‘British origins of his revolutionary radicalism’. While continuing to work on Marat, my current focus is on the French translations of English republican works – and particularly those produced by French Huguenots during the first half of the eighteenth century. Rachel.Hammersley@ncl.ac.uk     (9/05)


SEIGNEURIAL JUSTICE IN NORTHERN BURGUNDY, 1750-1790; VILLAGE INTERACTIONS WITH THE OUTSIDE WORLD
Jeremy Hayhoe, Ph.D. (2001)
Professeur Adjoint, Université de Moncton (New-Brunswick, Canada)
Advisor, Donald Sutherland (University of Maryland, College Park).

I am currently completing revisions to a manuscript on seigneurial justice in northern Burgundy in the second half of the eighteenth century (originally my dissertation). The research involved compiling data on about 3000 court cases (civil, criminal and police) in fifteen small local courts. I argue that seigneurial justice worked well in northern Burgundy, and that, by and large, people liked the institution. Justice was cheap, fast, simple (procedure was largely oral), and most important, getting better. Far from representing the imposition of elite sensibilities in the village, then, seigneurial courts provided an essential service to ordinary people and allowed them to police themselves. The only problem arose in cases where the lord sued one or more vassals. Lords always won these cases, and popular perception was that seigneurs could use the threat of destitution to force their judges to find in their favour. Paradoxically, procedural reforms initiated by the province's Parlement and Estates, simultaneously improved access to justice for ordinary people, and allowed lords better to maintain their authority and wealth. I have also begun work on the question of village interaction with the outside world, and am using sources of all kinds (especially notarial, communal and judicial) to see how often peasants travelled, moved and generally interacted with strangers, inhabitants of other villages and towns. Preliminary work in judicial records suggest that eighteenth-century peasant society was much more on the move than we think, and that accepted notions of village "immobility" and isolation need to be revised.   hayhoej@umoncton.ca   (9/04)

LANCASHIRE ON THE SEINE:REGIONAL INDUSTRIALIZATION IN FRANCE, 1750-1840
Jeff Horn, Manhattan College

My next research project is tentatively entitled Lancashire on the Seine:Regional Industrialization in France, 1750-1840. I plan to explore such subjects as entrepreneurialism, labor relations, the shifting gender component of industrial labor, government intervention, the development of transportation networks and how Normandy formed a coherent industrial region that performed many of the same functions in the course of French industrialization that Lancashire did for Britain or the Ruhr did for Prussia/Germany. As a result of an extensive comparison, I plan to explore the decisive role played by these regions in fostering technological change, developing paradigms of industrial success and ensuring international industrial competitiveness. I have completed a significant portion of the research for this project in the course of working on my forthcoming book The Path Not Taken: French Industrialization in the Age of Revolution (2006), but I have a great deal of research left to conduct. Some of the sources and approaches to the topic will be available this spring (2005) on the website for the Western Society for French History (http://www.lib.umich.edu/wsfh/). Jeff.horn@manhattan.edu (1/05)

ENCLOSING THE COMMONS: PROPERTY RIGHTS AND AGRARIAN MODERNIZATION IN EARLY MODERN BURGUNDY, 1600-1789
Jeffrey Houghtby (PhD, 2006)
Visiting Assistant Professor, Emory University
Dissertation Director: William Beik, Emory University

Historians of early modern France long construed agrarian modernization as a process working to transform, and eventually to eliminate, traditional peasant agriculture and collective property rights.  Finding no such transformation, they focused attention on the causes and long-term consequences of agricultural underdevelopment and even stagnation.  This long-term historical study of communal property rights in Burgundy contends that transformational modernization theories tend to minimize, if not ignore, the positive contributions that traditional rural societies have made to the making of the modern world.  It demonstrates that in spite of exploitive lordships and powerful village communities, modern private property rights emerged at the local level when seigneurs adapted traditional feudal prerogatives to secure the benefits of commerce. This process of adaptation created a hybrid property structure that never undermined the basic integrity of traditional open-field agriculture.  People at every level of rural society and government shared deep ideological commitments to common lands and traditional open-field agriculture.  The question was who would dominate the system and for what purposes.  This study therefore focuses attention on the social, cultural, and legal underpinnings of property disputes between village communities, their lords, and landowners.  Those disputes confirm that a dynamic feudalism, not nascent productive capitalism in agriculture, provided the social and legal framework in which agrarian modernization, understood as a process of adaptation rather than transformation, emerged and evolved.  jhoug01@emory.edu   (3/07)


LA RHETORIQUE AU PARLEMENT DE PARIS : MODELES ET PRATIQUES ORATOIRES, 1515-1610.
Marie Houllemare, doctorante, chargée de TD à la Sorbonne (A.T.E.R)
Directeur: Denis Crouzet (Paris IV)

La nécessité de convaincre est au cœur de l’activité du Parlement de Paris, qui joue un rôle politique et judiciaire de premier plan. Cette institution définit une véritable norme oratoire dans la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle, dont il faut comprendre l’origine, le développement et les attributs, à travers l’étude des discours prononcés au Palais tout au long du XVIe siècle. La recherche vise à identifier les modèles oratoires à l’œuvre, en lien avec l’évolution générale de la théorie rhétorique, en s’appuyant surtout sur les discours des orateurs les plus célèbres en leur temps, tels Christophe de Thou, premier président de 1562 à 1582, Simon Marion ou Louis Servin. De plus, les plaidoiries, nourries de citations érudites, constituent un riche témoignage sur la culture littéraire et professionnelle, les valeurs et les représentations des juristes parisiens. A travers l’étude des systèmes d’argumentation et des stratégies oratoires déployées par les orateurs, il s’agit d’éclairer le fonctionnement de la justice d’ancien régime, en étudiant l’importance respective des sources de droit alléguées (droit romain et canonique, coutume, législation royale) à l’époque de la naissance du nationalisme juridique et la place de l’intime conviction dans la décision judiciaire. Les sources de cette étude sont surtout les plaidoiries conservées dans les archives du Parlement, parfois aussi éditées, ce qui permet enfin une réflexion sur le passage de l’oral à l’écrit, l’archéologie du discours, la construction de la mémoire de la prestigieuse institution parisienne et les stratégies éditoriales des orateurs. mariehoullemare@hotmail.com (2/06)


HOW TO, OR MAKING KNOWLEDGE IN EARLY MODERN INSTRUCTIONAL MANUALS
Elizabeth Hyde, (Ph.D. 1998), Adjunct Professor of History, The College of New Jersey and Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick
Thesis Advisor:  Simon Schama, Harvard

Following the publication of my book, Cultivated Power:  Flowers, Culture, and Politics in the Reign of Louis XIV (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005), I continue to work on the culture of flowers in early modern France by extending my study of floriculture to explore the evolution in the cultural meaning of flowers through the eighteenth century.  I am also collaborating on a visual reconstruction of a Louis XIV parterre at Marly.  My work on floriculture, which necessitated the study of numerous early modern French gardening manuals, has now led me to the new project tentatively entitled How To, or Making Knowledge in Early Modern Instructional Manuals.  It recovers the role of print in developing methods to communicate practical knowledge in “how-to” books published in France in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.  The study focuses on the linguistic and pictorial attempts to bridge the chasm between the material nature of the book and the material world of goods over which the reader seeks mastery.  At the same time, it studies the relationship between such manuals and the culture of their consumers as a means to reveal how knowledge traveled in early modern society and explores the often contradictory consequences of the democratization of knowledge facilitated by how-to books, and the simultaneous attempts by the readers of such books to craft identities through the mastery of the techniques contained within their pages.  ehyde59016@aol.com    (7/06)

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