About This Book
The author lays out the political theory that propelled the late-eighteenth-century upheaval, tracing how ideas of popular sovereignty and corporate initiative translated into action. He examines Rousseau's influence, sketches the leading personalities of the period and assesses how their characters shaped events, and then follows the revolution through successive phases from 1789 to 1794. Significant space is given to the military campaigns and their strategic impact, presented as integral to the political development. The study concludes with an extended analysis of the conflict between revolutionary politics and the Catholic Church, explaining how religion intersected with and intensified the revolution's course.
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