¶ … French Revolution" is unlike any of these yawn-producing history books that you have read in the past. It literally covers the days -- Hibbert has chosen ten days -- of major of key themes that shaped the Revolution.
Written for the general reader, the book lacks the depth of one such as Simon Schama's voluminous Citizens, but is vividly told and page-turning providing an excellent overview of the subject for the unenlightened reader.
More historiography than history, Hibbert has produced a work of non-fiction that seems to more largely read as fiction where he describes the momentous events that occurred from the Revolution's beginning on an inner tennis court to the rise and decline of Napoleon. Grand figures trotted the stage: there was the indecisive Louis XVI and his equally immature wife Marie Antoinette. The austere and ambitious Robespierre tyrannized the nation, while the dames knitted at and watched the guillotines. Others, such as Dante, Washington, and Franklin made an appearance too. Finally, the grandiose and unforgettable Napoleon, in all his 'Napoleonic' charm and splendor, strode along the stage, finalized the Revolution, and turned France's...
French Revolution Citizens known as sans-culottes or peasants in the countryside, their role in fueling the French Revolution is inestimable. However, it is quite important to emphasize throughout the paper the areas and periods of the Revolution where they helped trigger events and differentiate these periods from those where they were used as a manipulative mass by the political factions that were leading the country. Less evident for peasants, the manipulation
Garibaldi Christopher Hibbert's award-winning biography Garibaldi: Hero of Italian Liberation is arranged chronologically to cover each phase of the freedom fighter's career: his early life as a sailor, participant in the 1848 Revolution and in liberation struggles in South America in 1807-59; his great victories in Sicily, Naples and southern Italy in 1860; and later years in 1861-82. Hibbert's historical methodology always focused on "individual personalities," including biographies of Queen Victoria
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