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Index
Cover Title Page Copyright Table of Contents Dedication Epigraph Preface: Why a New History of the French Revolution? 1: Two French Lives in the Old Regime 2: The Monarchy, the Philosophes, and the Public 3: The Monarchy Adrift, 1774–1787 4: “Everything Must Change”: The Assembly of Notables and the Crisis of 1787–1788 5: A Nation Aroused, June 1788–May 1789 6: Revolution in a Tennis Court: From the Estates General to the National Assembly, May–July 1789 7: A People’s Revolution, July–August 1789 8: From the “Great Fear” to the Declaration of Rights, August 1789 9: Constitution-Making and Conflict, September–December 1789 10: A New World Divided, January 1790–June 1791 11: A Runaway King and a Constitutional Crisis, June–September 1791 12: A Second Revolution, October 1791–August 1792 13: A Republic Born in Crisis, August 1792–May 1793 14: The Revolution on the Brink, June–December 1793 15: The Arc of Terror, January–July 1794 16: The Republic’s New Start, July 1794–October 1795 17: The Republic in Question, October 1795–September 1797 18: From Fructidor to Brumaire, September 1797–November 1799 19: The Slow Death of the Republic, 1799–1804 Epilogue Acknowledgments Discover More About the Author Also by Jeremy D. Popkin Notes
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