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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Patterns in Sex Ratios from Villeneuve-sur-Lot, 1610-1711

Rossi, Domenic John 21 March 2014 (has links)
This study analyzes sex ratios garnered from one hundred and one years of baptismal records from the south-western French town of Villeneuve-sur-Lot, between 1610 and 1711. It is the continuation of a larger project attempting to divine infanticide among married couples in early modern Western Europe. By comparing observed sex ratios (OSRs) in baptisms with the Universal Sex Ratio at Birth (USRB) established by Visaria (1967) it has been suggested a number of times that significant and patterned deviations represent sex-selective infanticide. In the case of Villeneuve, swift shifts between preponderances of girl children and boy children during crises suggest compensatory practice, purposefully engaged in to even out potentially imbalanced sex ratios among adults later. In this way it may be suggested that the preference for boys or girls in Villeneuve over time was balanced, based on circumstance, rather than some inherent perceived value of boys over girls.
2

Female peasants, patriarchy, and the credit market in eighteenth-century France

Dermineur, Elise January 2009 (has links)
<p>This paper has been awarded the Ronald S. Love Prize of the Western Society for French History in 2009.</p>
3

The Court of Louis XIII, 1610-1643

Jaffre, Marc W. S. January 2017 (has links)
Louis XIII's reign has long garnered historians' and popular interest. The king of Cardinal Richelieu and the three musketeers, Louis is traditionally viewed as having presided over the development of the French state and facilitated the rise of absolutism. Yet his court has received comparatively little attention. Traditionally understood as the reflection of its master, Louis XIII's court has been assumed to be backwards and inconsequential. On the contrary, this thesis contends that Louis's court experienced substantial institutional development and expansion over the course of his rule. Neither Louis nor Richelieu was the principal instigator of this growth. The main drivers were the courtiers themselves who sought to expand their prerogatives and to find new ways of profiting from their offices. The changes that were initiated from the top down were not determined by a broad, sweeping agenda held by Louis or his minister-favourites but rather by immediate needs and contingencies. Cardinal Richelieu, nonetheless, recognised that Louis's court really mattered for high politics in this period: the royal households produced key players for the governance of the realm, either gravitating from court office to broader governmental office, or holding both simultaneously. Furthermore, Louis's court helped to bind the realm together, not just because it acted as a hub attracting people from the provinces but also because of the time it spent in the provinces. Richelieu, however, struggled to control this court — so vital to the direction of the French monarchy in this period — because its members were so active and vibrant. They shaped the cultural and social environment surrounding and associated with the court because they were heavily invested in the court as an institution. Indeed, the court did not only serve the needs of the monarch: courts could only operate because a large group of people had a stake in ensuring that they functioned. By establishing the importance of Louis XIII's court for the direction of the French monarchy, and his courtiers' role in moulding it, this thesis seeks to throw light on humans' fundamental relationship with power.
4

The Alchemical Order: Reason, Passions, Alchemy and the Social World in the Philosophy and Cosmology of Jean d’Espagnet

Alexander Scott Dessens (12468426) 28 April 2022 (has links)
<p>Jean d’Espagnet (c. 1564–1637?) was a magistrate and presiding judge at the<em> parlement </em>of  Bordeaux  in  the  late  sixteenth  and  early  seventeenth  centuries.    He  served  on  the  court  from 1590 until retiring in 1615, from 1600 as a <em>président</em>, a venal office of significant power and social standing. After retirement he wrote three books which comprise his literary and intellectual legacy.Together they speak to the fertile philosophical ground of the late Renaissance and present a vision of order and God’s cosmos deeply influenced by Neoplatonism,  Hermetism,  Paracelsianism, Neostoicism,  and  medieval  alchemy,  as  well  as  d’Espagnet’s  judicial  education  and  social experience as a magistrate.  This dissertation explores the foundations of d’Espagnet’s philosophy of nature, tracing the development of certain philosophical ideas from ancient sources such as the Platonic and Hermetic traditions through medieval and Renaissance philosophers like Ramon Lull, Pseudo-Geber, and Marsilio Ficino to d’Espagnet and his contemporaries.  Paracelsian chemical medicine found some  acceptance during d’Espagnet’s lifetime, though not without struggle and dangers to its adherents.  This project also examines the context of d’Espagnet’s life and experience as a judicial elite in a kingdom and community beset by religious strife and political uncertainty.It argues that d’Espagnet and his fellow magistrates desperately sought order in the midst of these troubles,  and  that d’Espagnet echoed across all his writings this  concern  for  order  alongside a particular set of ideas about gender, shared by his fellow magistrates, according to which feminine passions  were  the  root  of  disorder  and masculine  reason was  the  antidote.    This gendered understanding of order was fundamental to d’Espagnet’s thought and reinforced by his syncretic reading of ancient and modern philosophical textsalongside his own experience, leading him to produce a unique and consistent syncretic philosophy that sought to answer definitively some of humanity’s oldest questions about the nature of matter, man, and the cosmos.</p>
5

Reality vs. Perceptions: The Treatment of Early Modern French Jews in Politics and Literary Culture

Woods, Michael 05 May 2014 (has links)
Although historians have written extensively on both the early modern era and the development of an absolute monarchy, the history of Jewish communities in France and the role they played has been largely ignored. Beginning with the French Wars of Religion, this study analyzes to what extent France’s religious situation affected the growth of absolutism and how this in turn affected the Jews. Taking advantage of the fractured nature of the early French monarchy, Jews began settling in provinces along the border of both Spain and the Holy Roman Empire. Affected by economic jealousies and cultural perceptions of Jews, the treatment of these communities by local officials led to requests by Jews for royal intervention in these regions. Perceptions of Jews evolved through the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as the French Enlightenment influenced the way Jewish characters were presented. This study then ties these perceptions of Jews to the political and economic reality of these communities in an attempt to create a unified history of France’s early modern Jewish population.
6

Réforme catholique et sociétés urbaines en France : les congrégations mariales jésuites aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles / Catholic Reformation and urban societies in France : the Jesuit Marian congregations in the 17th and 18th centuries

Yamamoto, Taeko 22 June 2017 (has links)
Apparues en 1563, sous la forme d’associations d’élèves de collèges jésuites, les congrégations mariales se développent rapidement dans le contexte de la Réforme catholique, en s’étendant à l’ensemble des fidèles, encadrés selon leur âge et milieu social. Encouragées par la papauté, les autorités civiles et religieuses, comme « un rempart contre les hérétiques », ces congrégations restent liées entre elles du fait de leur agrégation à la congrégation, initiale, du Collège romain (Prima Primaria). Ses membres suivent les mêmes Règles communes, et ils bénéficient de ses indulgences. En se soumettant à divers exercices, et en s’obligeant à une vie spirituelle exemplaire, ils créent l’émulation dans leur entourage familial et professionnel. En France, les congrégations mariales s’implantent prioritairement dans les lieux destinés à l’éducation et sur les frontières entre catholiques et protestants, en premier lieu, pour former les futures élites chrétiennes et gagner les élites urbaines. Fondée, vers 1630, dans la maison professe des jésuites de Paris, la Congrégation des Messieurs rassemble les dévots des classes dirigeantes de la capitale. Parmi ceux-ci, on relève plusieurs grandes figures qui s’inscrivent, conjointement, dans d’autres cercles dévots, comme la Compagnie du Saint-Sacrement. Souvent, au sortir de leurs études dans les collèges jésuites, s’étant élevé socialement, ces dévots poursuivent leur vie congréganiste, en s’appuyant sur leur parenté et leurs relations, pour s’efforcer d’agir dans la cité vers une perfection chrétienne. Cette sociabilité, poursuivie de génération en génération, est d’autant plus précieuse dans les milieux de l’artisanat. Le réseau ainsi créé, qui apporte un secours tant spirituel que matériel, constitue également une structure d’accueil dans leur mobilité.Y aurait-il un déclin général des congrégations mariales au siècle des Lumières ? Le nombre de leurs créations diminue, dans un premier temps. Puis, ces associations se trouvent affectées par les querelles qui se développent entre jésuites et jansénistes, autour de la bulle Unigenitus. À Paris, par exemple, on constate surtout un recul du nombre des magistrats des cours souveraines, compensé par une augmentation du nombre des ecclésiastiques antijansénistes et philojésuites. Pourtant, cet apparent déclin est loin d’être unanime, selon les milieux sociaux et les régions. On constate, durant la seconde moitié du XVIIe siècle et jusqu’au XVIIIe siècle, une augmentation des effectifs des Congrégations des Artisans, et même la multiplication de ces congrégations dans la province jésuite de Lyon. Cette extension vers des catégories sociales plus modestes passe également par l’accueil de femmes. On pourrait s’étonner, aussi, d’y constater la vitalité des demandes des messes pour les morts. Le cas de la Congrégation des Artisans de Montpellier est exemplaire. Cette sodalité conserve, en effet, une réelle attractivité dans la vie associative et religieuse montpelliéraine, même après l’expulsion de la Société de Jésus, et elle maintient le réseau tissé avec les autres congrégations mariales affiliées à la Primaria. Les congrégations mariales ont donc évolué : elles ne se limitent plus à des cercles de dévots mais, en s’étendant à des catégories sociales plus modestes, elles forment désormais une communauté de « bons chrétiens ». Elles nous offrent, alors, un nouvel éclairage sur le comportement religieux des sociétés urbaines au siècle des Lumières. / The Marian congregations appeared in 1563, as association of Jesuit College students, and developed rapidly in the context of the Catholic Reformation, extending to all faithful, supervised according to their age and social backgrounds. Encouraged by the papacy, civil and religious authorities, as a "rampart against the heretics", these congregations remained interconnected because of their aggregation to the initial congregation of the Roman College (Prima Primaria). Its members followed the same Common Rules, and they benefited from its indulgences. By submitting to various exercises, and by committing themselves to an exemplary spiritual life, they created emulation in their family connections and professional relationships.In France, Marian congregations were firstly established in places for education and on the borders between Catholics and Protestants, their main purpose being to train the future Christian elites and to gain the urban elites. Founded around 1630 in the Jesuit professed house of Paris, the Congregation of Gentlemen (Messieurs), gathered the “dévots” of the ruling classes of the capital. Among these are several great figures which are jointly inscribed in other devout circles, such as the Company of the Holy Sacrament. Often, as a result of their studies in Jesuit colleges, having risen socially, these dévots pursued their congregation activity, relying on their kinship and their relations, to strive to act in the city towards a Christian perfection. This sociability pursued from generation to generation was all the more valuable among the artisans. The network thus created, which bring both spiritual and material assistance, was also a welcome structure in their mobility.Would there be a general decline of the Marian congregations in the Age of Enlightenment? Indeed, the number of newly created foundations decreased, at first. Then, these associations were affected by the conflict which had developed between Jesuits and Jansenists, around the bull Unigenitus. In Paris, for example, the number of sovereign courts magistrates, specifically, declined. This decrease was compensated by an increase in number of anti-Jansenist and philo-Jesuit clergy. However, this apparent decline is far from unanimous, depending on social categories and regions. Research shows, in the second half of the seventeenth century and up until the eighteenth century, an increase of the numbers of the Congregations of Artisans, and even the multiplication of these congregations in the Jesuit province of Lyon. This extension to more modest social categories also involves the reception of women. It is remarkable, too, to note the vitality of the demands of the masses for the dead. The case of the Congregation of the Artisans in Montpellier is exemplary. This sodality retained a real attractiveness in Montpellier's religious and associative life, even after the expulsion of the Society of Jesus, and it maintained the network with the other Marian congregations affiliated to the Primaria.Marian congregations have evolved: they are no longer confined to circles of dévots, but by extending to more modest social categories, they now form a community of "good Christians". They then give us a new insight into the religious behavior of urban societies during the Age of the Enlightenment.
7

Sex crime appeals at the Parlement of Paris, 1564-1655

Semmens, Justine 20 August 2021 (has links)
This dissertation examines the intersection of the prosecution of criminal justice, sexual morality and the family at the parlement of Paris, which was the highest court of appeal in France, during the height of its power and influence in the kingdom from 1564-1655. This dissertation argues that in its adjudication of the crimes of seduction, infanticide, adultery, and bigamy the parlement of Paris interpreted the law according to a paternal theory of state by prioritizing family integrity and patriarchal honour in its decisions. In so doing, it presents a unique synthesis of statute and published legal opinion with a systematic survey of judicial decisions, based on archival findings, relating to these sex crimes in early modern France. It concludes that these judicial decisions were ensconced in the concepts of family, the king’s justice, and sovereignty, which were foundational to the interconnected theories of state and society in early modern France. The parlement tended to separate elite and modest appellants according to the socio-economic priorities of lignage and ménage, or the protection of the integrity of elite lineages and the stability of artisanal households within broader networks of family and community. Ultimately, this study exposes the expectations and values that gendered authority placed on men and women in early modern French society, reveals the ways that the most powerful judges in France interpreted the law according to these values, and unveils the narratives that women and men crafted when they confronted these expectations before these powerful judges. In so doing, this dissertation sheds new light on the relationships between gender and the law, gender relations in state and society, and the lived experience of marriage in early modern France. / Graduate / 2022-08-09
8

Gendered Virtue: A Study of its Meaning and Evolution in Early Modern France

Saad, Mariela 01 January 2016 (has links)
Virtue in early modern France was a broad concept considered by clergymen, philosophers, and moralists as an instrument for measuring and implementing human ethics. This unprecedented research seeks to track the development of the notion of virtue from a gendered and dichotomous notion to a unique and undivided term. The word virtue is constantly present in French texts such as manuels de conduite1 , since the medieval period. Thus, it can be regarded as one of the most significant concepts defining genders in Western civilization. However, it is difficult for modern readers to grasp the complexity of the debate unless it is explained through its socio-historical and cultural implications regarding gender behavior. What is the author referring to when he/she uses the word virtue? Is it chastity for women, strength for men, or just the achievement of the highest moral standard? What are the social implications of virtue? Through an inter and multidisciplinary study involving literature, religion, philosophy, folklore, women and gender studies, and sociology, this cutting-edge research revolves around the literary analysis of conduct manuals, plays, novels and treatises, from the middle ages to the 18th century. Its objective is to map the evolution of the notion of virtue by evidencing social fluctuation of gender differences and conceptualizing our western civilization through the lenses of its moral discourse.
9

Popular Song, Opera Parody, and the Construction of Parisian Spectacle, 1648–1713

Romey, John Andrew, III 04 June 2018 (has links)
No description available.
10

Publishing in Paris, 1570-1590 : a bibliometric analysis

John, Philip Owen January 2011 (has links)
This thesis is an examination of the printing industry in Paris between 1570 and 1590. These years represent a relatively under-researched period in the history of Parisian print. This period is of importance because of an event in 1572 – the St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre, and an event in 1588 – the Day of the Barricades and the subsequent exit from Paris of Henry III. This thesis concerns itself with the two years prior to 1572 and two years after 1588 in order to provide context, but the two supporting frames of this investigation are those important events. This thesis attempts to assess what effect those events had upon the printing industry in the foremost print centre of both France and Western Europe. With the religious situation in Paris quietened was there any concrete change in the 1570s and 1580s regarding the types of books printed in Paris? Was there any attempt to exploit this religious stability by pursuing the ‘retreating’ Protestant confession, or did the majority of printers turn away from confessional arguments and polemical literature? What were the markets for Paris books: were they predominantly local or international? The method by which these questions have been addressed is with a bibliometric analysis of the output of the Paris print shops. This statistical approach allows one to address the entire corpus of a city’s output and allows both broad surveys of the data in terms of categorisation of print, but also narrower studies of individual printers and their output. As such this approach allows the printing industry of Paris to be surveyed and analysed in a way that would otherwise be impossible. This statistical approach also allows the books to be seen as an economic item of industrial production instead of purely a culture item of artistic creation. This approach enhances rather than reduces the significance of a book’s cultural importance as it allows the researcher to fully appreciate the achievement and investment of both finance and time that was necessary for the completion of a well printed book.

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