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The Letters of The Duchesse d'Elbeuf: Hostile Witness to the French Revolution: 2023:10 (Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment

Gillian Rogers, John Withrington, Colin Jones, Alex Fairfax-Cholmeley, Simon Macdonald

Hostile Witness to the French Revolution

Barcode 9781802078718
Paperback

Original price £130.63 - Original price £130.63
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£130.63
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Release Date: 09/10/2023

Genre: History
Sub-Genre: Social & Cultural History
Label: Voltaire Foundation
Series: Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment
Contributors: Colin Jones (Edited by), Alex Fairfax-Cholmeley (Edited by), Simon Macdonald (Edited by)
Language: English
Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Hostile Witness to the French Revolution

The recently-discovered letters of the wealthy counter-revolutionary aristocrat, Innocente-Catherine de Rougé, dowager duchess d’Elbeuf (1707-94), offer a vivid and exciting new eye-witness perspective on the French Revolution and the Terror.


The recently-discovered letters of the wealthy counter-revolutionary aristocrat, Innocente-Catherine de Rougé, dowager duchess d’Elbeuf (1707-94), offer a vivid and exciting new eye-witness perspective on the French Revolution and the Terror. Hostile witness to everything about the Revolution, from the noble revolt, the storming of the Bastille and the peasant revolution in 1788-91, through to the outbreak of war, the overthrow and trial of Louis XVI and the Terror in 1791-4, the duchess’s letters to an unknown friend offer an unparalleled real-time narrative by an aristocratic woman struggling to understand radical change. Though tempted by emigration to the Low Countries, the duchess was unusual among her contemporary fellow-aristocrats in remaining in France down to her death in 1794, based in her two homes in Picardy and at the heart of Paris. As well as providing a detailed account of all she saw and read, the correspondence also portrays the anguished mental and spiritual odyssey of a highly devout octogenarian woman, who persisted inplangently declaring her outspokenly counter-revolutionary views even as she approached her own death in conditions of great personal danger. The letters constitute a remarkable example of female life-writing at the heart of the Age of Revolutions from a unique perspective.