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Price: $212.50

Format:
Hardback 384 pp.
16 figures, 1 map, 2 tables, 156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN-10:
0199290458

ISBN-13:
9780199290451

Publication date:
October 2006

Imprint: OUP UK

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Blood and Violence in Early Modern France

Stuart Carroll

The rise of civilized conduct and behaviour has long been seen as one of the major factors in the transformation from medieval to modern society. Thinkers and historians alike argue that violence progressively declined as men learned to control their emotions. The feud is a phenomenon associated with backward societies, and in the West duelling codified behaviour and channelled aggression into ritualised combats that satisfied honour without the shedding of blood. French manners and codes of civility laid the foundations of civilized Western values. But as this original work of archival research shows we continue to romanticize violence in the era of the swashbuckling swordsman. In France, thousands of men died in duels in which the rules of the game were regularly flouted. Many duels were in fact mini-battles and must be seen not as a replacement of the blood feud, but as a continuation of vengeance-taking in a much bloodier form. This book outlines the nature of feuding in France and its intensification in the wake of the Protestant Reformation, civil war and dynastic weakness, and considers the solutions proposed by thinkers from Montaigne to Hobbes. The creation of the largest standing army in Europe since the Romans was one such solution, but the militarization of society, a model adopted throughout Europe, reveals the darker side of the civilizing process.

Readership : Scholars and students of late medieval and early modern French history; social and cultural historians of Europe; social anthropologists.

Introduction
Part I: The Structure of Vindicatory Violence
1. The Origins of Dispute - Blood and Earth
2. The Origins of Dispute - Status and Honour
3. Honours and Prerogatives
4. Escalation: From Verbal Duel to Vindicatory Exchange
5. Conspiracy
6. Combat
7. The Rage of the Gods
Part II: Violence and Society
8. Justice and the Law
9. Peace
10. Women, Sex, and Vindicatory Violence
Part III: Violence and the Polity
11. The Crisis of the Religious Wars
12. Violence and Royal Authority in the Seventeenth Century
13. Solutions
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

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Stuart Carroll is at Senior Lecturer in History, University of York.

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Special Features

  • Original and significant contribution to the history of violence
  • Covers a long timescale
  • Challenges classic theories, eg of Elias, Foucault, and Weber