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The Parisian Order of Barristers and the French Revolution
Harvard University Press, 1987 Cloth: 978-0-674-65464-8 Library of Congress Classification KJV173.F57 1987 Dewey Decimal Classification 349.44360922
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Did barristers as a professional group support the French Revolution, or were they most often “in flight from politics”? A close inquiry into the Order of Barristers at Paris—the largest and most important in France, with over six hundred members in 1789—reveals that the vast majority within the Order did not support the Revolution. Unsympathetic to the ideal of the nation asserted by the National Assembly, most members of the Order instead remained loyal to the traditional corporate paradigm that the National Assembly had specifically repudiated. Dismayed by the abolition of their Order, they were disillusioned with the Revolution even before the advent of the Terror, which, along with the arbitrariness of the Directory, deepened their disaffection. The manner in which Bonaparte ultimately restored the Order in 1811 completed their alienation from the Revolution and, as a result, they warmly welcomed the return of the Bourbons in 1814. See other books on: France | French Revolution | Lawyers | Paris | Revolution, 1789-1799 See other titles from Harvard University Press |
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