France in the Nineteenth Century

audiobook

France in the Nineteenth Century

by Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer

EN·~15 hours

Chapters

Description

Spanning the tumultuous years from 1830 to 1890, this sweeping portrait of France captures a nation in the throes of change. Drawing on a rich mosaic of private papers, newspapers and contemporary essays, the narrative brings the era’s debates, ambitions and daily life into vivid focus. Readers hear the restless voice of a burgeoning bourgeoisie, the lingering hopes of a displaced aristocracy, and the quiet anxieties of a populace weary of war.

The work follows the early struggles of the Restoration, charting how kings like Louis XVIII and Charles X tried to balance old‑regime loyalties with the rising demand for stability. It then moves toward the rise of new political forces, introducing figures such as Louis‑Philippe, the “Citizen King,” and the early stirrings of republican sentiment. Through lively sketches of leaders, artists and soldiers, the book offers a clear window onto the social and political currents that set the stage for the later dramas of the nineteenth‑century French story.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (894K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Robert J. Hall

Release date

2004-11-28

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer

Elizabeth Wormeley Latimer

1822–1904

An American writer and translator with deep Virginia roots, she turned a cosmopolitan life in Europe and the United States into clear, lively books on history, politics, and literature. Her work helped general readers make sense of major European figures and events in the late nineteenth century.

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