Citizen soldiers and the key to the Bastille
2015
355.00944 O83 2015
Available at Main Library
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Title
Citizen soldiers and the key to the Bastille
Published
New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
Description
xiii, 204 p. ; 23 cm.
Call Number
355.00944 O83 2015
System Control No.
(OCoLC)889522071
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 189-200 ) and index.
Contents: Introduction: The Key -- 1. The King's Army -- 2. Defeat in New France -- 3. Soldiers into Citizens -- 4. A Citizen Army in America -- 5. Aristocratic Rupture -- 6. A Dream Deferred -- Conclusion: Guidons Burning.
L2015G8
The author was the SOC's 2009 Tyree-Lamb Research fellow.
"The French army experienced rapid and dramatic change from the 1750s to 1789--and it took the rest of the country with it. Wracked from defeat in the Seven Years' War, where AmerIndian warriors and rugged Canadian militiamen had shown the French army its weaknesses, French officers and philosophers set to work imagining and forging a new kind of army in France: a citizen army, the likes of which had not been seen since the glory days of ancient Greece and Rome. These writers found encouragement for their ideas in the home-grown patriots of the American Revolution and resistance from those who relied on tradition and well-ingrained privilege. By 1789, French officers would declare their citizen army realized, but in the process they would spark a Revolution they could not control"--Provided by publisher.
Contents: Introduction: The Key -- 1. The King's Army -- 2. Defeat in New France -- 3. Soldiers into Citizens -- 4. A Citizen Army in America -- 5. Aristocratic Rupture -- 6. A Dream Deferred -- Conclusion: Guidons Burning.
L2015G8
The author was the SOC's 2009 Tyree-Lamb Research fellow.
"The French army experienced rapid and dramatic change from the 1750s to 1789--and it took the rest of the country with it. Wracked from defeat in the Seven Years' War, where AmerIndian warriors and rugged Canadian militiamen had shown the French army its weaknesses, French officers and philosophers set to work imagining and forging a new kind of army in France: a citizen army, the likes of which had not been seen since the glory days of ancient Greece and Rome. These writers found encouragement for their ideas in the home-grown patriots of the American Revolution and resistance from those who relied on tradition and well-ingrained privilege. By 1789, French officers would declare their citizen army realized, but in the process they would spark a Revolution they could not control"--Provided by publisher.
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