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Informationen zum Autor Peter R. Campbell is Senior Lecturer in History at Sussex University. Thomas E. Kaiser is Professor of History at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Marisa Linton is Senior Lecturer in History at Kingston Unversity Klappentext Fears of conspiracy and political terrorism are not confined to our own time - they were central to the French Revolution. This is the first major study of political conspiracies at this momentous epoch in history. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Conspiracy from the Old Regime to the Revolution: issues and debates. Thomas E. Kaiser, Marisa Linton, & Peter R. Campbell1 Conspiracy at the end of the Old Regime Peter R. Campbell2 Conspiracy thinking in the Constituent Assembly: Mirabeau and the exclusion of deputies from the ministryBarry Shapiro 3 The real and imagined conspiracies of Louis XVI John Hardman4 'Horrible plots and infernal treasons'; conspiracy and the urban landscape in the early Revolution David Andress 5Conspiracy in the village? French revolutionary authorities and the search for "subverters of public opinion" in the rural south-west Jill Maciak Walshaw6 'Do you believe that we're conspirators?' Conspiracies real and imagined in Jacobin politics, 1793-94 Marisa Linton7 The emigrés and conspiracy in the French Revolution, 1789-1799 Simon Burrows8 Never was a plot so holy: Gracchus Babeuf and the end of the French Revolution Laura Mason9 Conclusion. Catilina's revenge: conspiracy, revolution, and historical consciousness from the Old Regime to the Consulate Thomas E. Kaiser
About the author
Peter R. Campbell is Senior Lecturer in History at Sussex UniversityMarisa Linton is Senior Lecturer in History at Kingston UnversityMarisa Linton is Senior Lecturer in History at Kingston Unversity