书目名称 | French Royalism under the Third and Fourth Republics | 编辑 | Samuel M. Osgood | 视频video | http://file.papertrans.cn/349/348214/348214.mp4 | 图书封面 |  | 描述 | "Let them come forward, they are thirsty for the sight of a King," said Henri IV to his followers who were trying to push back the curious crowds as he entered Paris in February, I594. It is perhaps to be regretted that seven kings (to say nothing of two emperors) have since more than quenched the French‘s taste for royalty, because they have long been in need of - and periodically have sought - a symbol of national unity. Modern-day France has had far more than her share of revolutions, counterrevolutions, uprisings, days, coups, affairs, crises, scandals - and constitution drafting. While it would be an over simplification to interpret this endemie strife as a seesaw conflict between two well-integrated blocs with the ideology of the Great Revolution as the dividing issue, the fact remains that since I789 political divisions and quarrels among Frenchmen have been deep, bitter, and fundamental. may have been the one solution which After I870, a Republic divided Frenchmen the least (to borrow an expression from Monsieur Thiers); but like any and all of the preceding alternatives it was to incur the relentless, irreconcilable opposition of important segments of the population. This | 出版日期 | Book 1960 | 关键词 | Action; World War I; World War II; politics | 版次 | 1 | doi | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-0645-8 | isbn_softcover | 978-94-015-0155-2 | isbn_ebook | 978-94-015-0645-8 | copyright | Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 1960 |
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