The
history of France has been divided into a
series of historical articles navigable through the list to the
right. The chronological and governmental regimes in France. The
history of other cultural topics such as French art and literature
can be found on their own pages.
For information on the modern country, see
the France
article. For other information, go to .
Prehistory

Cave painting in Lascaux.
The
Neanderthals, a member of the
homo genus, began to occupy
Europe from about 200,000
BC, but seem
to have died out by about 30,000 years ago, presumably out-competed
by the modern humans during a period of cold weather. The earliest
modern humans —
Homo sapiens — entered Europe (including
France) around 50,000 years ago (the
Upper Palaeolithic).
The caves paintings of
Lascaux
and Gargas (Gargas in the Hautes-Pyrénées
) as well as the Carnac
stones are remains of the local prehistoric
activity.
Gaul
Covering
large parts of modern day France, Belgium, northwest Germany and
northern Italy, Gaul was inhabited by many Celtic and Belgae tribes whom
the Romans referred to as Gauls and who spoke the Gaulish language between the Seine
and the
Garonne
.On the lower Garonne the people spoke Aquitanian, an archaic language related
to Basque. The Celts founded
cities such as Lutetia
Parisiorum
(Paris) and Burdigala
(Bordeaux) while the Aquitanians founded Tolosa
(Toulouse).
Long before any Roman settlements, Greek navigators settled in what
would become
Provence.
The Phoceans
founded
important cities such as Massalia
(Marseille) and Nikaia
(Nice),
bringing them in to conflict with the neighboring Celts and
Ligurians. The Phoceans were great navigators such as
Pytheas who was born in Marseille. The Celts
themselves often fought with Aquitanians and Germans, and a Gaulish
war band led by
Brennus
invaded Rome circa 393 or 388 BC following the
Battle of the Allia. However Gaulish
tactics would not evolve and the Romans would learn to counter
them, the Gauls would from then be defeated in battles such as
Sentinum and
Telamon.
In the 3rd century B.C., the Belgae
conquered the surrounding territories of the Somme
in northern
Gaul after a battle supposedly against the Armoricani near Ribemont-sur-Ancre, where a
sanctuary was found.
When
Carthaginian commander Hannibal Barca fought the Romans, he
recruited several Gaulish mercenaries which fought on his side at
Cannae
. It
was this Gaulish participation that caused Provence to be annexed
in 122 BC by the
Roman Republic.
Later, the Consul of Gaul—
Julius
Caesar—conquered all of Gaul.
Despite Gaulish opposition led by Vercingetorix, the Overking of the Warriors,
Gauls succumbed to the Roman onslaught; the Gauls had some success
at first at Gergovia, but were
ultimately defeated at Alesia
.
The Romans
founded cities such as Lugdunum
(Lyon) and Narbonensis
(Narbonne).
Roman Gaul
Gaul was divided into several different provinces. The Romans
displaced populations to prevent local identities from becoming a
threat to the Roman control. Thus, many Celts were displaced in
Aquitania or were enslaved and
moved out of Gaul. There was a strong cultural evolution in Gaul
under the Roman Empire, the most obvious one being the replacement
of the
Gaulish language by
Vulgar Latin. It has been argued the
similarities between the Gaulish and
Latin
languages favoured the transition. Gaul remained under Roman
control for centuries and Celtic culture was then replaced by
Gallo-Roman culture.
Gauls became better integrated with the Empire with the passage of
time. For instance
Marcus
Antonius Primus, an important general of the Roman Empire, and
Emperor Claudius were both born in Gaul, as
were general
Gnaeus Julius
Agricola and emperor
Caracalla;
Antoninus Pius also came from a
Gaulish family. In the decade following
Valerian’s capture by the Persians in 260
Postumus established a short-lived
Gallic Empire, which included the Iberian
Peninsula and Britannia in addition to Gaul itself. Germanic
tribes, the
Franks and the
Alamanni, entered Gaul at this time. The Gallic
Empire ended with Emperor
Aurelian's
victory at
Chalons in
274.

Left
A migration of Celts appeared in the 4th century in
Armorica. They were led by the legendary king
Conan Meriadoc and came from Britain.
They spoke the now extinct
British language which evolved
into the
Breton,
Cornish, and
Welsh languages.
In 418 the Aquitanian province was given to the
Goths in exchange for their support against the
Vandals. Those Goths had previously sacked
Rome in 410 and established a capital in Toulouse. The Roman Empire
had difficulty responding to all the barbarian raids, and
Flavius Aëtius had to use these tribes
against each other in order to maintain some Roman control.
He first
used Huns against Burgundians and these mercenaries destroyed
Worms
, killed king
Gunther, and pushed the Burgundians
westward. The Burgundians were resettled by Aëtius
near Lugdunum
in 443. The Huns, united by
Attila became a greater threat, and Aëtius
used the Visigoths against the Huns. The conflict climaxed in 451
at the
Battle of Chalons, in which
the Romans and Goths defeated Attila.
The Roman Empire was on the verge of collapsing. Aquitania was
definitely abandoned to the
Visigoths, who
would soon conquer a significant part of southern Gaul as well as
most of the Iberian Peninsula. The Burgundians claimed their own
kingdom, and northern Gaul was practically abandoned to the Franks.
Aside of the Germanic peoples the
Vascones
entered
Wasconia from the Pyrenees
and the
Bretons formed three kingdoms in
Armorica:
Domnonia,
Cornouaille and
Broërec.
Frankish kingdoms (486–987)
In 486,
Clovis I, leader of the
Salian Franks, defeated
Syagrius at
Soissons and subsequently united
most of northern and central Gaul under his rule.
Clovis then recorded
a succession of victories against other Germanic tribes such as the
Alamanni at Tolbiac
. In 496, he adopted
Christianity. This gave him greater legitimacy
and power over his Christian subjects and granted him clerical
support against the Visigoths. He defeated
Alaric II at
Vouillé in 507 and annexed Aquitaine,
and thus Toulouse, into his Frankish kingdom.
The Goths retired to
Toledo
in what
would become Spain. Clovis made Paris
his capital
and established the Merovingian
Dynasty but his kingdom would not survive his death.
The
Franks treated land purely as a private possession and divided it
among heirs, so four kingdoms emerged: Paris
, Orleans
, Soissons
, and Rheims
. When
the
majordome of
Austrasia Pepin of
Herstal defeat- his
Neustrian
counterpart at
Tertry the
Merovingian dynasty eventually lost effective
power to their successive
mayors of
the palace (majordomes).
The of Herstal
was to become the Carolingian dynasty. By this time Muslims
invaders had
conquered
Hispania and were threatening the Frankish kingdoms. Duke
Odo the Great defeated a major
invading force at
Toulouse
in 721 but failed to repel a raiding party in 732. The mayor of the
palace,
Charles Martel, defeated that
raiding party at the
Battle of Tours
(actually the battle between Tours and Poitiers) and earned respect
and power within the Frankish Kingdom. The assumption of the crown
in 751 by
Pippin the Short (son of
Charles Martel) established the Carolingian dynasty as Kings of the
Franks.
The new rulers' power reached its fullest extent under Pippin's son
Charlemagne.
In 771 Charlemagne reunited the Frankish domains after
a further period of division, subsequently conquering the Lombards under Desiderius
in what is now northern Italy
(774),
incorporating Bavaria
(788) into his realm, defeating the Avars of the Danubian
plain (796), advancing the frontier with Islamic Spain
as far south as Barcelona
(801), and subjugating Lower Saxony
(804) after prolonged campaigning.
In recognition of his successes and his political support for the
Papacy,
Charlemagne was crowned Emperor of the Romans,
or Roman Emperor in the West, by
Pope Leo
III in 800. Charlemagne's son
Louis
I (emperor 814–840) kept the empire united; however, this
Carolingian Empire would not
survive Louis I's death. Two of his sons —
Charles the Bald and
Louis the German — swore allegiance to each
other against their brother —
Lothair I —
in the
Oaths of Strasbourg, and
the empire was divided among Louis's three sons (
Treaty of Verdun, 843). After a last brief
reunification (884–887), the imperial title ceased to be held in
the western realm which was to form the basis of the future French
kingdom. The eastern realm, which would become Germany, elected the
Saxon dynasty of
Henry the
Fowler.
Under the Carolingians, the kingdom was ravaged by
Viking raiders. In this struggle
some important figures such as
Count
Odo of Paris and his brother
King
Robert rose to fame and became kings. This emerging dynasty,
whose members were called the
Robertines, was the predecessor of the
Capetian Dynasty, who were
descended from the Robertines. Led by
Rollo, some Vikings had settled in
Normandy and were granted the land first as counts and then as
dukes by King
Charles the Simple,
in order to protect it from other raiders. The people that emerged
from the interactions between the new Viking aristocracy and the
already mixed Franks and Gallo-Romans became known as the
Normans.See also:
France in the Middle Ages (987–1453)
France was a very decentralised state during the Middle Ages. The
authority of the king was more religious than administrative. The
eleventh century in France marked the apogee of princely power at
the expense of the king when states like Normandy, Flanders or
Languedoc enjoyed a local authority comparable to kingdoms in all
but name. The Capetians, as they were descended from the
Robertines, were former powerful princes themselves who had
successfully removed the weak and unfortunate Carolingian kings.
The Carolingian Kings had nothing more than a royal title when the
Capetian Kings added their principality to that title.
The Capetians in a
way had this double status of King and Prince, as king they held
the Crown of Charlemagne and as
Count of Paris they held their
personal fief best known as Île-de-France
. The fact the Capetians both held lands as
prince as well as the title of King gave them a complicated status,
thus they were involved in the struggle for power within France as
princes but they also had a religious authority over the
Church of France as King.
However and despite the fact the Capetian kings often treated other
princes more as enemies and allies than subordinates their royal
title was often recognised yet not often respected. The authority
was so weak in some remote places that bandits were the effective
power.
Some of the king's vassals would grow so powerful that they would
be among the strongest rulers of western Europe. The
Normans, the
Plantagenets, the
Lusignans, the
Hautevilles, the
Ramnulfids, and the House of
Toulouse successfully carved lands
outside of France for themselves.
The most important of these conquests for
French history was the Norman
Conquest of England following the Battle of Hastings
by William the
Conqueror because it linked England to France through
Normandy. Although the Normans were now both vassals of the
French kings and their equals as King of England, their zone of
political activity remained centered in France. These Norman nobles
then commissioned the
Bayeux
Tapestry. An important part of the French aristocracy involved
itself in the crusades. French knights founded and ruled the
Crusader states.
An example of legacy
left in the Mideast from these nobles is the Krak des
Chevaliers
' enlargement by the Counts of Tripoli
and Toulouse
.
The Early Capetians (987–1165)
Hugh Capet was elected by an assembly summoned in
Reims
on 1 June 987. Capet was previously "Duke of
the Franks" and then became "King of the Franks" (Rex Francorum).
He was
recorded to be recognised king by the Gauls,
Bretons, Danes, Aquitanians, Goths,
Spanish and Gascons
. The Danes here are certainly the Normans
(of Normandy), and the Spanish entry probably refers to the
Carolingian Spanish marches. Hugh Capet's reign was marked by the
loss of the Spanish marches as they grew more and more independent.
Count Borell of
Barcelona called for Hugh's help against Islamic raids, but
even if Hugh intended to help Borell, he was otherwise occupied in
fighting
Charles of
Lorraine. The loss of other Spanish principalities then
followed. Hugh Capet, the first Capetian king, is not a well
documented figure, his greatest achievement being certainly to
survive as king and defeating the Caroligian claimant, thus
allowing him to establish what would become one of Europe's most
powerful house of kings.
Hugh's son —
Robert the Pious —
was crowned King of the Franks before Capet's demise. Hugh Capet
decided so in order to have his succession secured. Robert II, as
King of the Franks, met
Emperor Henry II in 1023 on the
borderline. They agreed to end all claims over each other's realm,
setting a new stage of Capetian and Ottonian relationships. The
reign of Robert II was quite important because it involved the
Peace and Truce of God and
the
Cluniac Reforms. Although a king
weak in power, Robert II's efforts were considerable. His surviving
charters imply he was heavily relying on the church to rule France,
much like his father did. Although he lived with a mistress
—
Bertha of Burgundy— and was
excommunicated because of this, he was regarded as a model of piety
for monks (hence his nickname, Robert the Pious). He crowned his
son —
Hugh Magnus— King of the
Franks to secure his succession, however Hugh Magnus rebelled
against his father and died fighting him. The next King of the
Franks —
Henry I— was crowned after
Robert's death, which is quite exceptional for a French king of the
times.Henry I was one of the weakest kings of the Franks, and his
reign saw the rise of some very powerful nobles such as William the
Conqueror. However his biggest source of concerns was his brother
—
Robert I of Burgundy—
who was pushed by his mother to the conflict. Robert of Burgundy
was made Duke of Burgundy by King Henry I and had to be satisfied
with that title. From Henry I onward the Dukes of Burgundy were
relatives of the King of the Franks until the end of the Duchy
proper.
King Philip I, named by
his Kievan mother with a typically Eastern European name, was no
more fortunate than his predecessor.
It is from
Louis VI onward that
royal authority became more accepted. Louis VI was more a soldier
and warmongering king than a scholar. The way the king raised money
from his vassals made him quite unpopular, he was described as
greedy and ambitious and that is corroborated by records of the
time. His regular attacks on his vassals, although damaging the
royal image, reinforced the royal power. From 1127 onward the royal
adviser was a skilled politician —
Abbot
Suger. The abbot was the son of a minor family of knights, but
his political advice was extremely valuable to the king. Louis VI
successfully defeated, both military and politically, many of the
robber barons. Louis VI frequently
summoned his vassals to the court, and those who did not show up
often had their land possessions confiscated and military campaigns
mounted against them. This drastic policy clearly imposed some
royal authority on Paris and its surrounding areas. When Louis VI
died in 1137, much progress had been made towards strengthening
Capetian authority.
Thanks to Abbot Suger's political advice,
King Louis VII enjoyed greater moral
authority over France than his predecessors. Even more powerful
vassals such as
Henry
Plantagenet paid homage to the French king. Abbot Suger
arranged the marriage between Louis VII and
Eleanor of Aquitaine in Bordeaux which
made Louis VII Duke of Aquitaine and gave him considerable power.
However,
the couple disagreed over the burning of more than a thousand
people in Vitry
during the conflict against the Count of
Champagne. King Louis VII was deeply horrified by the event
and sought penitence by going to the holy land. He later involved
the Kingdom of France in the
Second
Crusade but his relationship with Eleanor did not improve. The
marriage was ultimately annulled by the pope under the pretext of
consanguinity and Eleanor soon married the Duke of Normandy
—
Henry Fitzempress— who would
become King of England as Henry II two years later. Louis VII was
once a very powerful monarch and was now facing a much stronger
vassal, who was his equal as King of England and his strongest
prince as Duke of Normandy and Aquitaine. Abbot Sugar's vision of
construction became known as the
Gothic Architecture during the later
Renaissance. This style became standard
for most French cathedrals built in the late middle-age.
The late Capetians (1165–1328)
The late direct Capetian kings were considerably more powerful and
influential than the earliest ones. While Philip I could hardly
control his Parisian barons Philip IV, on the other hand, could
dictate popes and emperors. The late Capetians, although they often
ruled for a shorter time than their earlier peers, were often much
more influential. This period also saw the rise of a complex system
of international alliances and conflicts opposing, through
dynasties, Kings of France and England and Holy Roman
Emperor.
Philip II Augustus
The reign of
Philip II Augustus
marked an important step in the history of French monarchy. His
reign saw the French royal domain and influence greatly expanded.
He had set the context for the rise of power to much more powerful
monarchs like Saint Louis and Philip the Fair.
Philip II spent an important part of his reign fighting the
so-called
Angevin Empire, which was
probably the greatest threat to the King of France since the rise
of the Capetian dynasty. During the first part of his reign Philip
II tried using Henry II of England's son against him.
He allied himself
with the Duke of Aquitaine and son of Henry II —Richard Lionheart— and together they
launched a decisive attack on Henry's castle and home of Chinon
and removed
him from power. Richard replaced his father as King of
England afterward. The two kings then went crusading during the
Third Crusade however their alliance
and friendship broke down during the crusade. The two men were once
again at odds and fought each others in France and Richard was on
the verge of totally defeating Philip II. Adding to their battles
in France the Kings of France and England were trying to install
their respective allies at the head of the Holy Roman Empire. If
Philip II Augustus supported
Philip of
Swabia, member of the
House of
Hohenstaufen, Richard Lionheart supported
Otto IV, member of the
House of Welf. Otto IV had the upper hand and
became the Holy Roman Emperor at the expense of Philip of Swabia.
The crown
of France was saved by Richard's demise after a wound he received
fighting his own vassals in Limousin
. John
Lackland, Richard's successor, refused to come to the French
court for a trial against the
Lusignans and
like Louis VI often did to his rebellious vassals Philip II
confiscated John's possessions in France.
John's defeat was
swift and his attempts to reconquer his French possession at the
Battle of
Bouvines
showed being a complete failure. His allies,
most notably Emperor Otto IV, were all defeated or captured and
even as King of England he had no mean to reconquer Normandy and
Anjou. Not only Philip II annexed Normandy and Anjou but he had
captured the Counts of Boulogne and Flanders. Otto IV was
overthrown by
Frederick
II, allied of Philip II of France and member of the House of
Hohenstaufen. The King of France however stopped before conquering
Aquitaine and Gascony who remained loyal to the Plantagenet King.
In
addition to defeating John of
England, Philip Augustus founded the Sorbonne
and made Paris
a city for
scholars. Prince Louis
(the future Louis VIII) was involved in the subsequent
English civil war as French and English (or
rather Anglo-Norman) aristocracies were once one and were now split
between allegiances. While the French kings were struggling against
the Plantagenets, the Church called for the
Albigensian Crusade. Southern France was
then largely absorbed in the royal domains.
Saint Louis
It can be said that France became a truly centralised kingdom under
Louis IX, who initiated several
administrative reforms. Saint Louis has often been portrayed as a
one dimensional character, a flawless representant of the faith and
an administrator caring for the governed ones. However his reign
was far from perfect for everyone, he made unsuccessful crusades
and his expanding administrations raised oppositions. His judgments
were not often practical, although they seemed fair by the
standards of the time. It appears Louis had a strong sense of
justice and always wanted to judge people himself before applying
any sentence. This was said about Louis and French clergy asking
for excommunications of Louis' vassals:
Louis IX was only twelve years old when he became King of France,
his mother —
Blanche of Castile—
was the effective power although the King was indeed Louis IX.
Blanche's authority was strongly opposed by the French barons yet
she could maintain her position as regent (although she did not
formally use the title) until Louis was old enough to rule by
himself.
In 1229 the King had to struggle with a long
lasting strike at the
University of Paris, the Quartier Latin
was strongly hit by these strikes. War was
still going on in the County of Toulouse, the royal army was
occupied fighting resistance in Languedoc and the kingdom was
therefore vulnerable.
Count
Raymond VII of Toulouse finally signed the
Treaty of Paris in 1229, in which he
retained much of his lands to life, but his daughter, married to
Count Alfonso of Poitou,
produced him no heir and so the County of Toulouse went to the King
of France.
King Henry III of
England had not yet recognized the Capetian overlordship over
Aquitaine and still hoped to recover Normandy and Anjou and reform
the Angevin Empire.
He landed in 1230 at Saint-Malo
with a massive force. Henry III's allies in
Brittany and Normandy fell down because they did not dare fight
their king who led the counterstrike himself. This evolved into the
Saintonge War, Henry III was defeated
and had to recognise Louis IX's overlordship although the King of
France did not seize Aquitaine from Henry III. Louis IX was now the
most important landowner of France, adding to his royal title.
There were some opposition to his rule in Normandy, yet it proved
remarkably easy to rule, especially compared to the County of
Toulouse which had been brutally conquered. The
Conseil du Roi, which would evolve into the
Parlement, was founded in these
times.
Saint
Louis also supported new forms of art such as Gothic architecture; his Sainte-Chapelle
became a very famous gothic building, and he is
also credited for the Morgan
Bible. After his conflict with
King Henry III of England Louis
established a cordial relation with the Plantagenet King. An
amusing anecdote is about Henry III's attending the French
Parlement, as Duke of Aquitaine, the King of
England was always late because he liked to stop each time he met a
priest to hear the mass, so Louis made sure no priest was on the
way of Henry III. Henry III and Louis IX then started a long
contest in who was the most faithful up to the point none ever
arrived anymore on time to the Parlement which was then allowed to
debate in their absence.
The Kingdom was involved in two crusades under Saint Louis: the
Seventh Crusade and the
Eighth Crusade. Both proved to be complete
failures for the French King. He died in the Eighth Crusade and
Philip III became king. Philip
III took part in another crusading disaster: the
Aragonese Crusade, which cost him his
life.
More administrative reforms were made by
Philip the Fair. This king was
responsible for the end of the
Templars, signed the
Auld Alliance, and established the
Parlement of Paris. Philip IV was so powerful that
he could name popes and emperors, unlike the early Capetians. The
papacy was moved to
Avignon and all
the contemporary popes were French such as Philip IV's puppet:
Bertrand de Goth.
Capetian Dynasty
The early Valois Kings and the Hundred Years' War
(1328–1453)
The tensions between the Houses of Anjou and Capet climaxed during
the so-called
Hundred Years' War
(actually several distinct wars) when the English descendants of
the former claimed the throne of France from the Valois. This was
also the time of the Black Death, as well as several civil wars.
The French population suffered much from these wars. In 1420 By the
Treaty of Troyes Henry V was made heir to Charles VI.
Henry V failed to outlive Charles so it was Henry VI of England and
France who concildated the Dual-Monarchy of England and France. It
has been argued that the difficult conditions the French population
suffered during the Hundred Years' War awakened French nationalism,
a nationalism represented by
Joan of
Arc. Although this is debatable, the Hundred Years War is
remembered more as a Franco-English war than as a succession of
feudal struggles. During this war, France evolved politically and
militarily.
Although a Franco-Scottish army was
successful at Baugé, the
humiliating defeats of Poitiers and Agincourt
forced the French nobility to realise they could
not stand just as armoured knights without an organised
army. Charles
VII established the first French standing army, the Compagnies d'ordonnance, and
defeated the English once at Patay
and again, using cannons, at Formigny
. The Battle of Castillon
was regarded as the last engagement of this "war",
yet Calais
and the
Channel Islands remained ruled by
the English crown.
French Kings:
English interlude (between Charles VI and VII)
Early Modern France (1453–1789)
The Duke of Burgundy had assembled a large territory including his
native duchy and the
Burgundian
Netherlands.
King Louis XI
faced
Charles the Bold during
Burgundian Wars and the French King
was allied with the
Old Swiss
Confederacy. The Duke of Burgundy was defeated at
Morat,
Battle
of Grandson,
Héricourt
and ultimately defeated at
Nancy in
1477. The Duchy of Burgundy was annexed by France but the part of
Burgundy that formed Franche-Comté was given to
Philip I of Castile in 1493.
From 1487 to 1491, France attacked and defeat Brittany, an
independent duchy.In 1532, Brittany was
incorporated into the
Kingdom of France.
France engaged in the long
Italian Wars
(1494–1559), which marked the beginning of early modern France.
Francis I faced powerful foes,
and he was captured at
Pavia. The
French monarchy then sought for allies and found one in the
Ottoman Empire. The
Ottoman Admiral Barbarossa
captured Nice on 5 August 1543 and handed it down to Francis I.
Around this same time, the
Protestant Reformation, led in France
mainly by
John Calvin, was challenging
the power of the Catholic Church in France.
During the 16th century, the Spanish and Austrian
Habsburgs were the dominant power in Europe. In
addition to Spain and Austria, they controlled a number of kingdoms
and duchies across Europe.
Charles Quint, under the
titles of Count of Burgundy, Holy Roman Emperor, and King of
Aragon, Castile and Germany, among other, encircled France. The
Spanish Tercio was used with great success
against French knights. Finally, on 7 January 1558, the
Duke of Guise seized Calais from the
English.
Despite the challenge to French power posed by the Habsburgs,
French became the preferred language of Europe's aristocracy. Holy
Roman Emperor
Charles
V (born in 1500) said this about languages:
Because of its international status, there was a desire to regulate
the French language. Several reforms of the French language worked
to uniformise it. The Renaissance writer
François Rabelais (probably born in
1494) helped to shape the
French
language as a literary language, Rabelais' French is
characterised by the re-introduction of Greek and Latin words.
Jacques Peletier du Mans
(born 1517) was one of the scholars who reformed the French
language. He improved
Nicolas
Chuquet's
long scale
system by adding names for intermediate numbers ("milliards"
instead of "thousand million", etc.).
During the 16th century, the French kingdom also
established colonies
began to claim North American territories.
Jacques Cartier was one of the great
explorers who ventured deep into American territories during the
16th century.
The largest group of French colonies became
known as New France, and several cities
such as Quebec
City
, Montreal
, Detroit
and New Orleans
were founded by the French. The Italian navigator
Giovanni da Verrazzano worked
for the French crown and discovered New Angoulême which would later come to
be known as New York
City
.
Religious conflicts
Renewed
Catholic reaction headed by the powerful duke of Guise, led to a massacre of
Huguenots at Vassy
in 1562,
starting the first of the French
Wars of Religion, during which English, German, and Spanish
forces intervened on the side of rival Protestant and Catholic
forces. In the most notorious incident, thousands of
Huguenots were murdered in the
St. Bartholomew's Day
massacre of 1572. The Wars of Religion culminated in the
War of the
Three Henrys in which
Henry
III assassinated
Henry de
Guise, leader of the Spanish-backed
Catholic league, and the king was
murdered in return. Following this war Henry III of Navarre became
king of France as
Henry IV and
enforced the
Edict of Nantes (1598).
Religious conflicts resumed under
Louis XIII when
Cardinal de
Richelieu forced Protestants to disarm their army and
fortresses. This conflict ended in the
Siege of La Rochelle (1627–1628), in
which Protestants and their English supporters were defeated. The
following
Peace of Alais confirmed
religious freedom yet dismantled the Protestant defences.
The religious conflicts that plagued France also ravaged the
Habsburg-led Holy Roman Empire. The
Thirty Years War eroded the power of the
Catholic Habsburgs. Although
Cardinal
Richelieu, the powerful chief minister of France, had
previously mauled the Protestants, he joined this war on their side
in 1636 because it was the
raison
d'état.
Imperial Habsburg forces invaded France,
ravaged Champagne, and nearly
threatened Paris
.
Richelieu died in 1642 and was succeeded by
Mazarin, while Louis XIII died one
year later and was succeeded by
Louis XIV. France was served by some
very efficient commanders such as
Louis II de
Bourbon (Condé) and
Henry de la Tour
d'Auvergne (Turenne).
The French forces won a decisive victory at
Rocroi
(1643), and the Spanish army was decimated; the
Tercio was broken. The
Truce
of Ulm (1647) and the
Peace of
Westphalia (1648) brought an end to the war. But some
challenges remained. France was hit by civil unrest known as the
Fronde which in turn evolved into the
Franco-Spanish War in
1653. Louis II de Bourbon joined the Spanish army this time, but
suffered a severe defeat at
Dunkirk (1658) by Henry de la
Tour d'Auvergne. The terms for the peace inflicted upon the Spanish
kingdoms in the
Treaty of the
Pyrenees (1659) were harsh, as France annexed Northern
Catalonia.
Amidst this turmoil,
René
Descartes sought answers to philosophical questions through the
use of logic and reason and formulated what would be called
Cartesian Dualism in
1641.
Louis XIV
The Sun King wanted to be remembered as a patron of the arts, like
his ancestor Louis IX. He invited
Jean-Baptiste Lully to establish the
French opera. A tumultuous friendship
was established between Lully and
Molière.
Jules Hardouin Mansart became
France's most important architect of the period. Louis XIV's long
reign saw France involved in many wars that drained its treasury.
His reign began during the Thirty Years' War and during the
Franco-Spanish war. His military architect,
Vauban, became famous for his pentagonal fortresses,
and
Jean-Baptiste Colbert
supported the royal spending as much as possible.
French dominated
League of the Rhine fought
against the Ottoman Turks at the
Battle of
Saint Gotthard
in 1664. The battle was won by the
Christians, chiefly through the braveattack of 6,000 French troops
led by La Feuillade and Coligny. France fought the
War of Devolution against
Spain in 1667. France's defeat of Spain and
invasion of the Spanish Netherlands alarmed England and Sweden.
With the
Dutch Republic they formed
the
Triple Alliance to check
Louis XIV's expansion.
Louis II de Bourbon had captured Franche-Comté
, but in face of an indefensible position, Louis XIV
agreed to a peace at Aachen. Under its terms,
Louis XIV did not annex Franche-Comté but did gain Lille
.
Peace was fragile, and war broke out again between France and the
Dutch Republic in the
Franco-Dutch
War (1672–1678). Louis XIV asked for the Dutch Republic to
resume war against the Spanish Netherlands, but the republic
refused. France attacked the Dutch Republic and was joined by
England in this conflict. Through targeted inundations of
polders by breaking dykes, the French invasion of the
Dutch Republic was brought to a halt. The Dutch Admiral
Michiel de Ruyter inflicted a few
strategic defeats on the Anglo-French naval alliance and forced
England to retire from the
war in 1674. Because the Netherlands could not resist
eternally, it agreed to peace in the
Treaties of Nijmegen, according to
which France would annex France-Comté and acquire further
concessions in the Spanish Netherlands.
On 6 May 1682, the
royal court moved to the Palace of Versailles
, which Louis XIV had greatly expanded. Peace
did not last, and war between France and Spain again resumed. The
War of the Reunions broke out
(1683–1684), and again Spain, with its ally the Holy Roman Empire,
was easily defeated. Meanwhile, in October 1685 Louis signed the
Edict of Fontainebleau
ordering the destruction of all Protestant churches and schools in
France. Its immediate consequence was a large Protestant exodus
from France. The two massive
famines struck
France between 1693 and 1710, killing over two million
people.
France would soon be involved in another war, the
War of the Grand Alliance. This
time the theatre was not only in Europe but also in North America.
Although the war was long and difficult (it was also called the
Nine Years War), its results were inconclusive.
The Treaty of Ryswick in 1697
confirmed French sovereignty over Alsace
, yet
rejected its claims to Luxembourg
. Louis also had to evacuate Catalonia
and the Palatinate. This peace was
considered a truce by all sides, thus war was to start again. In
1701 the
War of the
Spanish Succession began. The Bourbon
Philip of Anjou was designated heir to the
throne of Spain. The Habsburg
Emperor Leopold opposed a
Bourbon succession, because the power that such a succession would
bring to the Bourbon rulers of France would disturb the delicate
balance of
power in Europe. Therefore, he claimed the Spanish thrones for
himself. England and the Dutch Republic joined Leopold against
Louis XIV and Philip of Anjou. The allied forces were led by
John
Churchill and by
Prince
Eugene of Savoy.
They inflicted a few resounding defeats to
the French army; the Battle of Blenheim
in 1704 was the first major land battle lost by
France since its victory at Rocroi in 1643. Yet, after the
extremely bloody battles of Ramillies
and Malplaquet,
Pyrrhic victories for the allies,
they had lost too many men to continue the war. Led by
Villars, the French
forces recovered much of the lost ground in battles such as
Denain. Finally, a compromise was
achieved with the
Ultrecht in
1713. Philip of Anjou was confirmed as Philip V, king of Spain, and
Emperor Leopold did not get the throne, but Philip V was barred
from inheriting France.
Colonial struggles and the dawn of the revolution
Louis XIV died in 1715 of
gangrene. In
1718, France was once again at war, as
Philip II of Orleans's
regency joined the
War of
the Quadruple Alliance against Spain. King
Philip V of Spain had to withdraw from the
conflict confronted with the reality that Spain was no longer a
great power of Europe. Under
Fleury's
administration, peace was maintained as long as possible. However,
in 1733 another war broke in central Europe, this time about the
Polish succession, and
France joined the war against the Austrian Empire. This time there
was no invasion of the Netherlands, and Britain remained neutral.
As a consequence, Austria was left alone against a Franco-Spanish
alliance and faced a military disaster. Peace was settled in the
Treaty of Vienna , according
to which France would annex, through inheritance, the
Duchy of Lorraine.
Two years later war broke out over the
Austrian succession, and
France seized the opportunity to join the conflict. The war played
out in North America and India as well as Europe, and inconclusive
terms were agreed to in the
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle .
Once again, no one regarded this as a peace, but rather as a mere
truce.
Prussia was then becoming a new
threat, as it had gained substantial territory from Austria. This
led to the
Diplomatic Revolution
of 1756, in which the alliances seen during the previous war
were mostly inverted. France was now allied to Austria and Russia
while Britain was now allied to Prussia.
In the North American
theatre, France was allied with various Native American peoples
during the Seven Years' War and,
despite a temporary success at the battles of the Great
Meadows
and Monongahela,
French forces were defeated at the disastrous Battle of
the Plains of Abraham
in Quebec. In Europe, repeated French
attempts to overwhelm
Hanover
failed. In 1762 Russia, France and Austria were on the verge of
crushing Prussia, when the
Anglo-Prussian Alliance was saved by
The miracle of
the House of Brandenburg.
At sea naval defeats against British fleets
at Lagos and Quiberon
Bay
in 1759 and a crippling blockade forced France
to keep its ships in port. Finally peace was concluded in
the
Treaty of Paris , and
France lost most of its North American empire.
Britain's
success had allowed them to eclipse France as the leading
colonial power.Many sought revenge for this defeat, and under
Choiseul
France started to rebuild.
In 1766 the French Kingdom annexed Lorraine
and the following year bought Corsica
from Genoa.
Having lost its colonial empire, France saw a good opportunity for
revenge against Britain in
assisting insurgent
troops in the
American
War of Independence. Spain, allied to France by the
Family Compact, and the Dutch Republic also
joined the war on the French side.
Admiral de Grasse
defeated a British fleet at
Chesapeake Bay while
Jean-Baptiste
Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau and
Gilbert du Motier,
marquis de La Fayette joined American forces in defeating the
British at
Yorktown. The war was
concluded by the
Treaty of
Paris , under which Britain lost its former American colonies.
Despite
this the war had largely been a disapointment for France, it had
been extremely expensive and they had only received Tobago
for their
efforts.
While the state expanded, new ideas broke on the role of the king
and the powers of the state.
Charles de Secondat,
baron de Montesquieu described the
separation of powers. Many other French
philosophers and intellectuals gained social, political and
philosophical influence on a global scale, including
Voltaire,
Denis
Diderot and
Jean-Jacques
Rousseau, whose essay
The
Social Contract, Or Principles of Political Right was a
catalyst for governmental and societal reform throughout Europe.
Science, mathematics and technology also flourished. French
scientists such as
Antoine
Lavoisier worked to replace the archaic units of weights and
measures by a coherent scientific system, commissioned by king
Louis XVI. Lavoisier also formulated the
law of
Conservation of mass and
discovered
Oxygen and
Hydrogen.
The Early Modern period in French history spans the following
reigns:
See also:
France in modern times I (1789–1914)
From the Revolution to World War I.
The Revolution
The immediate trigger for the Revolution was Louis XVI’s attempts
to solve the government’s worsening financial situation. In
February 1787 his finance minister,
Charles Alexandre de Calonne,
convened an
Assembly of
Notables, a group of nobles, clergy, bourgeoisie, and
bureaucrats selected in order to bypass the parlements. This group
was asked to approve a new
land tax that
would, for the first time, include a tax on the property of nobles
and clergy. The assembly did not approve the tax, instead demanding
that Louis XVI call the
Estates-General. In August 1788 the
King agreed to convene the
Estates-General in May of 1789.
While the
Third
Estate demanded and was granted "double representation" so as
to balance the First and Second Estate, voting was to occur "by
orders" - votes of the Third Estate were to be weighted -
effectively cancelling double representation. This eventually led
to the Third Estate breaking away from the Estates-General and
joined by members of the other estates, proclaiming the
National Assembly, an assembly not of the
Estates but of "the People." In an attempt to keep control of the
process and prevent the Assembly from convening, Louis XVI ordered
the closure of the Salle des États where the Assembly met. After
finding the door to their chamber locked and guarded, they met
nearby on a tennis court and pledged the
Tennis Court Oath on 20 June 1789, binding
them "never to separate, and to meet wherever circumstances demand,
until the constitution of the kingdom is established and affirmed
on solid foundations". They were joined by some members of the
second and first estates.
After the king fired his finance minister,
Jacques Necker, for giving his support and
guidance to the Third Estate, worries surfaced that the legitimacy
of the newly-formed National Assembly might be threatened by
royalists. Paris was soon consumed with riots, anarchy, and
widespread looting. The mobs soon had the support of the French
Guard, including arms and trained soldiers, because the royal
leadership essentially abandoned the city. On 14 July 1789 the
insurgents set their eyes on the large weapons and ammunition cache
inside the Bastille fortress, which also served as a symbol of
royal tyranny. Insurgents
seized the Bastille prison, killing
the governor and several of his guards. The French now celebrate
July 14 each year as a symbol of the shift away from the
Ancien Regime to a more modern democratic
state.
Gilbert
du Motier, hero of American independence, took command of the
National Guard, and the king was forced to recognize the
Tricolour Cockade. Although peace was found, several
nobles did not regard the new order as acceptable and migrated to
push neighbouring kingdoms to war against the new rule. Because of
this new period of instability, the state was struck for several
weeks in July and August of 1789 by the
Great
Fear, a period of violent class conflict.
The
Declaration of the
Rights of Man and Citizen was adopted by the National Assembly
in August 1789 as a first step in their effort to write a
constitution. Considered to be a precursor to modern international
rights instruments and using the
U.S. Declaration of Independence
as a model, it defined a set of individual rights and collective
rights of all of the estates as one. Influenced by the doctrine of
natural rights, these rights were deemed universal and valid in all
times and places, pertaining to human nature itself. The Assembly
also replaced France's historic provinces with eighty-three
départements, uniformly administered and approximately equal to one
another in extent and population. On 4 August 1789 the Assembly
abolished feudalism, in what is known as the August Decrees,
sweeping away both the seigneurial rights of the Second Estate and
the tithes gathered by the First Estate. In the course of a few
hours, nobles, clergy, towns, provinces, companies, and cities lost
their special privileges. The Assembly abolished the symbolic
paraphernalia of the Ancien Régime, armorial bearings, liveries,
etc., which alienated the more conservative nobles. Amidst these
intrigues, the Assembly continued to work on developing a
constitution. A new judicial organization made all magistracies
temporary and independent of the throne. The legislators abolished
hereditary offices, except for the monarchy itself. Jury trials
started for criminal cases. The King would have the unique power to
propose war, with the legislature then deciding whether to declare
war. The Assembly abolished all internal trade barriers and
suppressed guilds, masterships, and workers' organizations: any
individual gained the right to practice a trade through the
purchase of a license; strikes became illegal.
The Revolution brought about a massive shifting of powers from the
Roman Catholic Church to the state. Under the Ancien Régime, the
Church had been the largest landowner in the country. Legislation
enacted in 1790 abolished the Church's authority to levy a tax on
crops, cancelled special privileges for the clergy, and confiscated
Church property. The Assembly essentially addressed the financial
crisis in part by having the nation take over the property of the
Church.
The republican government also enforced the
Système International
d'Unités, commissioned by Louis XVI, which became known as the
Metric System.
Charles-Augustin de Coulomb and
André-Marie Ampère's
works on electricity and electromagnetism were also recognised, and
their units are integrated into the Metric System.
When a mob from Paris attacked the royal palace at Versailles in
October 1789 seeking address of severe poverty conditions, the
royal family was forced to move to the Tuileries Palace in Paris.
Later in June 1791 the royal family secretly fled Paris in disguise
for Varennes near France's northeastern border to seek royalist
support the king sensed he could trust, but they were soon
discovered en route. They were brought back to Paris, after which
they were essentially kept under house-arrest at the
Tuileries.
Factions within the Assembly began to clarify. The opposition to
revolution sat on the right-hand side of the Assembly. The
"Royalist democrats" or monarchiens inclined toward organizing
France along lines similar to the British constitutional model. The
"National Party", representing the centre or centre-left of the
assembly represented somewhat more extreme views. The increasingly
middle-class National Guard under Lafayette also slowly emerged as
a power in its own right. With most of the Assembly still favoring
a constitutional monarchy rather than a republic, the various
groupings reached a compromise that left Louis XVI little more than
a figurehead. He had perforce to swear an oath to the constitution,
and a decree declared that retracting the oath, heading an army for
the purpose of making war upon the nation, or permitting anyone to
do so in his name would amount to de facto abdication. Under the
Constitution of 1791,
France would function as a constitutional monarchy. The King had to
share power with the elected Legislative Assembly, but he still
retained his royal veto and the ability to select ministers.
The Legislative Assembly first met on 1 October 1791, and
degenerated into chaos less than a year later. The Legislative
Assembly consisted of about 165 Feuillants (constitutional
monarchists) on the right, about 330 Girondists (liberal
republicans) and Jacobins (radical revolutionaries) on the left,
and about 250 deputies unaffiliated with either faction. Early on,
the King vetoed legislation that threatened the émigrés with death
and that decreed that every non-juring clergyman must take within
eight days the civic oath mandated by the Civil Constitution of the
Clergy. Over the course of a year, disagreements like this would
lead to a constitutional crisis, leading the Revolution to higher
levels.
On the foreign affairs front, in the
Declaration of Pillnitz of August
1791
Emperor Leopold
II,
Count Charles of Artois
and
King William II of
Prussia made Louis XVI's cause theirs. These noblemen also
required the Assembly to be dissolved through threats of war, but,
instead of cowing the French, it infuriated them. The borderlines
were militarised as a consequence. Under the
Constitution of 1791 the
solution of a constitutional monarchy was adopted, and the king
supported a war against Austria to increase his popularity,
starting the long
French
Revolutionary Wars. On the night of the
10th of August the
Jacobins, who had mainly opposed
the war, suspended the monarchy. With the Prussian army entering
France, more doubts were raised against the aristocracy, and these
tensions climaxed during the
September Massacres.
After the first great
victory of the French revolutionary troops at the Battle of
Valmy
on 1792 20 September, the French First Republic was proclaimed
the day after on 1792 21 September. The
French Republican Calendar was
enforced.
The Mountain is the English translation for the French word,
Montagnards, which was the radical
political faction of the
National
Convention who considered themselves the true patriots of the
French Revolution. Customarily, its members sat on the highest
tiered benches in the Convention hall, therefore giving the party
its name. An alternate meaning of the name, one more metaphorical,
implied that mountains are a natural, pure landscape preferred to
the corruption of the city, which was represented by its opposing
faction, the
Girondins. The Mountain had
302 members during its reign in 1793 and 1794, including committee
members and deputies who voted with the faction. Most of its
members came from the middle class and tended to represent the
Parisian population. Its leaders included
Maximillian Robespierre,
John Paul Marat, and
Georges Danton. This party eventually gained
overwhelming power in the Convention and governed France during the
Reign of Terror.
The Montagnards and the Girondins were both originally
Jacobins, a political club which was
founded in republican beliefs whose members wanted a French
democratic republic. The Jacobin Club, however, encountered
political tension beginning in 1791 due to conflicting viewpoints
in response to several revolutionary events and how to best achieve
a democratic republic. As a result, two factions emerged: the
Girondins and the Montagnards. The latter sided with the Parisian
militants, also known as the
sans-culottes, who aimed for
a more repressive form of government that would institute a price
maximum on essential consumer goods and would punish all traitors
and enemies of the Republic. Additionally, between war and
political differences, the Montagnards believed these crises
required emergency solutions.
Possibly the two most significant factors in the quarrel and
consequential split between the Montagnards and the Girondins
include the Trial of King Louis XVI and the September Massacres.
The official fall of the monarchy came on August 10, 1792 after
Louis XVI refused to rescind his veto of the constitution of the
National Assembly. The Mountain argued for immediate execution of
the king by military court-martial, insisting that he was
undermining the Revolution. A trial would prove to “presume the
possibility of innocence” and therefore contradict the mission of
the National Convention. The Girondins, in contrast, agreed the
king was guilty of treason but argued for his clemency and favored
the option of exile or popular referendum as his sentence. However,
the trial progressed and Louis XVI was executed by guillotine on
January 21, 1793.
The second key factor in the split between the Montagnards and the
Girondins was the September Massacres of 1792. Radical Parisians,
members of the National Guard, and fédérés were angry with the poor
progress in the war against Austria and Prussia and the forced
enlistment of 30,000 volunteers. On August 10 radicals went on a
killing spree, slaughtering roughly 1,300 inmates in various Paris
prisons, many of whom were simply common criminals, not the
treasonous counterrevolutionaries condemned by the Mountain. The
Girondins did not tolerate the massacres, but neither the
Montagnards of the Legislative Assembly nor the Paris Commune took
any action to stop or condemn the killings. Members of the
Girondins later accused Marat, Robespierre, and Danton as inciters
of the massacres in an attempt to further their dictatorial
power.
Members of the Mountain went on to establish the Committee of
Public Safety under Robespierre, which would be responsible for the
Terror, the bloodiest and one of the most controversial phases of
the French Revolution. The time between 1792 and 1794 was dominated
by the ideology of the Mountain until the execution of Robespierre
on July 28, 1794.
When the
Brunswick
Manifesto of July 1792 threatened once more the French
population from Austrian (Imperial) and Prussian attacks, Louis XVI
was suspected of treason and taken along with his family from the
Tuileries Palace in August 1792 by insurgents supported by a new
revolutionary Paris Commune. The King and Queen ended up prisoners,
and a rump session of the Legislative Assembly suspended the
monarchy. Little more than a third of the deputies were present,
almost all of them Jacobins. The King was later tried and convicted
and on 21 January 1793 was guillotined. Marie Antoinette, would
follow him to the guillotine on 16 October.
What remained of a national government depended on the support of
the insurrectionary Commune. When the Commune sent gangs into
prisons to try arbitrarily and butcher 1400 victims, and addressed
a circular letter to the other cities of France inviting them to
follow this example, the Assembly could offer only feeble
resistance. This situation persisted until a
National Convention, charged with
writing a new constitution, met on 20 September 1792 and became the
new de facto government of France. The next day it abolished the
monarchy and declared a republic.
When war went badly, prices rose and the sans-culottes (poor
labourers and radical Jacobins) rioted; counter-revolutionary
activities began in some regions. This encouraged the Jacobins to
seize power through a parliamentary coup, backed up by force
effected by mobilising public support against the Girondist
faction, and by utilising the mob power of the Parisian
sans-culottes. An alliance of Jacobin and sans-culottes elements
thus became the effective centre of the new government. Policy
became considerably more radical. In September of 1793 a period
known as the
Reign of Terror ensued
for approximately 12 months. The
Committee of Public Safety, set
up by the National Convention on April 6, 1793, formed the de facto
executive government of France. Under war conditions and with
national survival seemingly at stake, the Jacobins under
Maximilien Robespierre centralized
denunciations, trials, and executions under the supervision of this
committee of twelve members. At least 18,000 people met their
deaths under the guillotine or otherwise, after accusations of
counter-revolutionary activities. In 1794 Robespierre had
ultra-radicals and moderate Jacobins executed; in consequence,
however, his own popular support eroded markedly. On 27 July 1794,
the
Thermidorian Reaction led
to the arrest and execution of Robespierre. The new government was
predominantly made up of Girondists who had survived the Terror,
and after taking power, they took revenge as well by banning the
Jacobin Club and executing many of its former members in what was
known as the White Terror.
After the stated aim of the National Convention to
export revolution, the guillotining of
Louis XVI of France, and the French opening of the Scheldt, a
military coalition was formed and set up against France. Spain,
Naples, Great Britain and the Netherlands joined Austria and
Prussia in the
The First Coalition
(1792–1797), the first major concerted effort of multiple European
powers to contain Revolutionary France. It took shape after the
wars had already begun. The Republican government in Paris was
radicalised after a diplomatic coup from the Jacobins and said it
would be the
Guerre Totale and called for
a
Levée en masse. Royalist
invading forces were defeated at
Toulon in 1793, leaving the French
republican forces in an offensive position and granting a young
officer, Napoleon Bonaparte, a certain fame.
Following their
victory at Fleurus
, the Republicans occupied Belgium and the
Rhineland. An invasion of the Netherlands established the
puppet
Batavian Republic. Finally
a peace agreement was found between France, Spain and Prussia in
1795 at
Basel.
The Convention approved a new "Constitution of the Year III" on 17
August 1795; a plebiscite ratified it in September; and it took
effect on 26 September 1795. The new constitution created the
Directory and created the first bicameral legislature in French
history. The parliament consisted of 500 representatives — le
Conseil des Cinq-Cents (the Council of the Five Hundred) — and 250
senators — le Conseil des Anciens (the Council of Elders).
Executive power went to five "directors," named annually by the
Conseil des Anciens from a list submitted by the le Conseil des
Cinq-Cents. The nation desired rest and the healing of its many
wounds. Those who wished to restore Louis XVIII and the Ancien
Régime and those who would have renewed the Reign of Terror were
insignificant in number. The possibility of foreign interference
had vanished with the failure of the First Coalition. Nevertheless,
the four years of the Directory were a time of arbitrary government
and chronic disquiet. The late atrocities had made confidence or
goodwill between parties impossible. As the majority of French
people wanted to be rid of them, they could achieve their purpose
only by extraordinary means. The Convention habitually disregarded
the terms of the constitution, and, when the elections went against
them, appealed to the sword. They resolved to prolong the war as
the best expedient for prolonging their power. They were thus
driven to rely upon the armies, which also desired war and were
becoming less and less civic in temper. The Directory lasted until
1799 when
Napoleon staged a coup and
installed the Consulate. The Consulate still operated within the
First Republic, which was replaced by the First Empire, established
by Napoleon in 1804.
The Napoleonic Era
During the War of the First Coalition the
Directoire had replaced the National
Convention. Five directors then ruled France. As Great Britain was
still at war with France, a plan was made to
take Egypt from the Ottoman
Empire, a British ally. This was
Napoleon's
idea and the Directoire agreed to the plan in order to send the
popular general away from the mainland.
Napoleon captured
Malta
from the Knights of
Saint John on the way to Egypt
.
The French army met Ottoman forces during the
Battle of the Pyramids and defeated
them.
While the land campaign was so far a
success, the British fleet, led by Admiral Nelson,
destroyed the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile
. Hearing of the French defeat, the Ottoman
Empire gathered armies to attack Napoleon in Egypt, and Napoleon
again adopted a policy of attack. An invasion of Syria was planned
but failed during the
Siege of
Acre, and Napoleon had to return to Europe, leaving a
significant part of his army behind.
These men were
supposed to be given honourable terms by the British forces, yet
Admiral Keith decided to attack them anyway with a Mameluk force,
although this force was defeated at Heliopolis
in March 1800. Disease had hit the
French troops to such a point they were forced to surrender. The
Rosetta Stone was discovered during
this campaign and
Champollion translated
it.
When Napoleon came back to France, the Directoire was threatened by
the
Second Coalition.
Royalists and their allies still dreamed of restoring the monarchy
to power, while the Prussian and Austrian crowns did not accept
their territorial losses during the previous war.
The Russian army
expelled the French from Italy in battles such as Cassano while the Austrian army
defeated the French in Switzerland at Stockach
and Zurich. Napoleon then
seized power through a coup and established the
Consulate in 1799. The Austrian army was
defeated at
Marengo in 1800
and again at
Hohenlinden. While at sea
Admiral
Louis-René
Levassor de Latouche Tréville had some success at Boulogne
against a British fleet.
The British Admiral Nelson would destroy an
anchored Danish and Norwegian fleet at Copenhagen
because the Scandinanian kingdoms were against
the British blockade on France. The Second Coalition was
beaten and peace was settled in two distinct treaties: The
Treaty of Lunéville and the
Treaty of Amiens. In 1803 Napoleon
sold French Louisiana to the
American government, a territory he considered indefensible.
On 21 March 1804 the
Napoleonic Code
was applied over all the territory under French control, and on May
18 Napoleon was titled Emperor by the senate, thus founding the
French Empire. Technically
Napoleon's rule was constitutional, and although autocratic, it was
much more advanced than other European monarchies of the time. The
proclamation of the French Empire was met by the
Third Coalition. The French army
was renamed the
Grande Armée in
1805 and Napoleon used propaganda and nationalism to control the
French population.
The French army achieved a resounding
victory at Ulm
, where an
entire Austrian army was captured. A Franco-Spanish
fleet was defeated at Trafalgar
and all plans to invade Britain were then made
impossible. Despite this naval defeat, it was on the
ground that this war would be won, Napoleon inflicted the Austrian
and Russian Empires one of their greatest defeats at Austerlitz
, destroying the third coalition.
The peace
was settled in the Treaty of
Pressburg, the Austrian Empire lost the title of Holy Roman
Emperor and the Confederation of the Rhine
was created by Napoleon over former Austrian
territories.
The destruction of the
Holy Roman
Empire and the dramatic Austrian defeat caused Prussia to join
Britain and Russia, thus forming the
Fourth Coalition. Although the
Coalition was joined by other allies, the French Empire was also
not alone since it now had a complex network of allies and
submitted states.
Largely outnumbered, the Prussian army was
crushed at Jena-Auerstedt
in 1806, Napoleon captured Berlin
and went
as far as Eastern Prussia. There the Russian Empire was defeated at
the Battle of
Friedland
. Peace was dictated in the
Treaties of Tilsit, in which Russia had
to join the
Continental System
and Prussia handed down half of its territories to France.
The
Duchy of
Warsaw
was formed over these territorial losses, and the
Polish troops entered the Grande Armée in significant
numbers.
Freed from his obligation in the east, Napoleon then went back to
the west, as the French Empire was still at war with Britain. Only
two countries remained neutral in the war: Sweden and Portugal, and
Napoleon then looked toward the latter. In the
Treaty of Fontainebleau, a
Franco-Spanish alliance against Portugal was sealed as Spain eyed
Portuguese territories. French armies entered Spain in order to
attack Portugal, but then seized Spanish fortresses and took over
the kingdom by surprise.
Joseph
Bonaparte, Napoleon's brother, was made King of Spain after
Charles IV's abdication.
This
occupation of the Iberian peninsula fueled local nationalism, and
soon the Spanish and Portuguese would fight the French using
guerilla tactics, defeating the
French forces at the Battle of Bailén
. Britain sent a short-lived ground support
force to Portugal, and French forces evacuated Portugal as defined
in the
Convention of Sintra
following the Allied victory at
Vimeiro.
France was only controlling Catalonia
and Navarre
and could have been definitely expelled from the
Iberian peninsula had the Spanish armies attacked again, but the
Spanish did not. Another French attack was launched on
Spain, led by Napoleon himself, and was described as "an avalanche
of fire and steel." However, the French Empire was no longer
regarded as invincible by European powers. In 1808 Austria formed
the
War of the Fifth
Coalition in order to break down the French Empire.
The
Austrian Empire defeated the French at Aspern-Essling
, yet was beaten at Wagram
while the Polish allies defeated the Austrian
Empire at Raszyn.
Although not as decisive as the previous Austrian defeats, the
peace treaty caused
Austria to lose a large amount of territories, reducing it even
more.

Napoleon Bonaparte retreating from
Moscow, Russia after a disastrous campaign.
In 1812 war broke out with Russia, engaging Napoleon in the
disastrous
Patriotic
War. Napoleon assembled the largest army Europe had ever seen,
including troops from all submitted states, to invade Russia, which
had just left the continental system and was gathering an army on
the Polish frontier.
Following an exhausting march and the bloody
but inconclusive Battle of Borodino
, near Moscow, the Grande Armée entered and captured
Moscow, just to find it burning, as part of the Russian scorched earth tactics. Although there still
were battles such as Maloyaroslavets
the Napoleonic army left Russia decimated most
of all by the Russian winter, exhaustion and scorched earth
warfare. On the Spanish front the French troops were
defeated at
Vitoria and then at
the
Battle of the Pyrenees.
Since the Spanish guerrillas seemed to be uncontrollable, the
French troops eventually evacuated Spain. France having been
defeated on these two fronts, the states controlled and previously
conquered by Napoleon saw a good opportunity to strike back. The
Sixth Coalition was
formed and the German states of the Confederation of the Rhine
switched sides, finally opposing Napoleon.
Napoleon was largely
defeated in the Battle of
the Nations
and was overwhelmed by much larger armies during
the Six Days Campaign, although,
because of the much larger amount of casualties suffered by the
allies, the Six Days Campaign is often considered a tactical
masterpiece.
Napoleon
abdicated on 6 April 1814, and was exiled to Elba
.
The
conservative Congress of Vienna reversed the political
changes that had occurred during the wars.
Napoleon's attempted
restoration, a period known as the Hundred
Days, ended with his final defeat at Waterloo
in 1815. The monarchy was subsequently
restored and
Louis XVIII
became king.
The Restored Monarchy and the Second Empire

Napoleon III, Emperor of the
French
This period of time is called the
Bourbon Restoration and was marked by
conflicts between reactionary
Ultra-royalists and more liberal movements.
Louis XVIII was the brother of Louis XVI, and ruled from 1814 to
1824. He was succeeded by his brother, Charles X, who reigned from
1824 to 1830. On 12 June 1830
Polignac,
King Charles X's minister, exploited the
weakness of the Algerian Dey by invading Algeria and establishing
French rule in Algeria. The
news of the fall of Algiers had barely reached Paris when Charles X
was deposed and replaced by
King Louis-Philippe during the
July Revolution. Louis-Philippe's
"July Monarchy" (1830–1848) is generally seen as a period during
which the
haute bourgeoisie was dominant.
Anarchism, as formulated by
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, began to take
root in France. To honour the victims of the July Revolution,
Hector Berlioz composed a
Requiem; he also rearranged
La Marseillaise, which would become the
French national anthem.
In 1838 the French government declared war on Mexico after a French
pastry cook in Mexico accused Mexican officers of looting his shop.
The Mexican government was defeated in the short
Pastry War. Finally, the last King of France
abdicated, and the
French Second
Republic was proclaimed.
Louis Napoleon Bonaparte was elected
president and proclaimed himself President for Life following a
coup that was confirmed and accepted in a dubious referendum.
Napoleon III of France took the imperial title in 1852 and held it
until his downfall in 1870.
The era saw great industrialization, urbanization (including the
massive rebuilding of Paris by
Baron
Haussmann) and economic growth, but Napoleon III's foreign
policies were not so successful.
In 1854, The Second Empire joined the
Crimean War, which saw France and
Britain opposed to the Russian Empire, who were decisively defeated
at Sevastopol in 1855
and at Inkerman
. In 1856 France joined the
Second Opium War on the British side
against China; a missionary's murder was used as a pretext to take
interests in southwest Asia in the
Treaty of Tientsin.
In 1859 the
Second
Italian War of Independence broke out between the northern
Italian kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia and Austria.
The Second French
Empire joined the war on the Italian side, which was concluded by
an Austrian defeat at Solferino
. In return for this intervention, Piedmont
ceded the County of Nice (which
included the city of Nice
and the
rugged Alpine territory to its north and east) and the Duchy of
Savoy. In 1861 Napoleon III largely supported
Maximilian in his claim to Mexico, a
move that was also supported by Britain and Spain but condemned by
the U.S. This led to the
French intervention in Mexico,
which turned out to be a failure.
When France was negotiating with The Netherlands about purchasing
Luxembourg, the Prussian Kingdom threatened the French government
with war. This came as a shock to French diplomats as there
previously was an agreement between the Prussian and French
governments about Luxembourg. Napoleon III suffered stronger and
stronger criticism from Republicans like
Jules Favre, and his position seemed more
fragile with the passage of time. France was looking for more
interests in Asia and
interfered in Korea in
1866 taking, once again, missionaries' murders as a pretext. The
French finally withdrew from the war with little gain but war's
booty. The next year a
French
expedition to Japan was formed to help the
Tokugawa shogunate to modernize its army.
However, Tokugawa was defeated during the
Boshin War at the
Battle of Toba-Fushimi by large
Imperial armies.
Rising tensions about a possible Prussian succession in Spain
raised the scale of animosity between the two states, and finally
the
Franco-Prussian War
(1870–1871) broke out. German nationalism united the German states,
with the exception of Austria, against Napoleon III.
The French Empire was
defeated decisively at Metz and
Sedan
.
The last straw was the
Siege of
Paris.
The newly-formed German Empire subsequently
annexed Alsace-Lorraine
in the Treaty
of Frankfurt.
The Third Republic and the Belle Epoque
The French legislature established the Third Republic, which was to
last until the military defeat of 1940 (longer than any government
in France since the Revolution).
The birth of the republic saw France
occupied by foreign troops, the capital in a popular socialist
insurrection — the Paris Commune
(which was violently repressed by Adolphe
Thiers) — and two provinces (Alsace-Lorraine
) annexed to Germany. Feelings of national
guilt and a desire for vengeance ("
revanchism") would be major preoccupations of the
French throughout the next half century. The repression of the
Commune was bloody.
Hundreds were executed in front of the
Communards'
Wall
in the Père Lachaise
cemetery, while thousands of others were marched to
Versailles for trials.
The
number killed during La Semaine Sanglante (The Bloody
Week) can never be established for certain, but the best estimates
are 30,000 dead, many more wounded, and perhaps as many as 50,000
later executed or imprisoned; 7,000 were exiled to New Caledonia
. Thousands of them fled to Belgium, England,
Italy, Spain and the United States.
Besides this defeat, the
Republican
movement also had to confront
counterrevolutionaries who rejected
the legacy of the 1789 Revolution. Both the
Legitimist and the
Orleanist royalist
rejected republicanism, which they saw as an extension of
modernity and
atheism,
breaking with France's traditions. This lasted until at least the
16 May 1877 crisis, which finally
led to the resignation of royalist
Marshal MacMahon in January 1879. The death
of
Henri, comte de Chambord
in 1883, who, as the grandson of Charles X, had refused to abandon
the
fleur-de-lys and the
white flag, thus jeopardizing the
alliance between Legitimists and Orleanists, convinced many of the
remaining Orleanists to rally themselves to the Republic, as
Adolphe had already done. The vast majority of the Legitimists
abandoned the political arena or became marginalised.
Some of them founded
Action Française in
1898, during the Dreyfus Affair,
which became an influent movement throughout the 1930s, in
particular among the intellectuals of Paris' Quartier
Latin
. In 1891,
Pope Leo XIII's encyclic
Rerum Novarum brought legitimacy to the
Social Catholic movement, which
in France could be traced back to
Hughes Felicité Robert
de Lamennais' efforts under the July Monarchy.
The initial republic was in effect led by pro-royalists, but
republicans (the "
Radicals")
and
bonapartists scrambled for power.
The period from 1879–1899 saw power come into the hands of moderate
republicans and former "radicals" (around
Léon Gambetta); these were called the
"Opportunists". The newly found Republican control of the Republic
allowed the vote of the 1881 and 1882
Jules Ferry laws on a free, mandatory and
laic public
education.
The moderates however became deeply divided over the
Dreyfus Affair, and this allowed the
Radicals eventually to gain power
from 1899 until World War I. During this period, crises like the
potential "Boulangist" coup d'état (see
Georges Boulanger) in 1889, showed the
fragility of the republic. The Radicals' policies on education
(suppression of local languages, compulsory education), mandatory
military service, and control of the working classes eliminated
internal dissent and regionalisms. Their participation in the
Scramble for Africa and in the
acquiring of overseas possessions (such as
French Indochina) created myths of French
greatness. Both of these processes transformed a country of
regionalisms into a modern
nation
state. Conflicts between the Chinese Emperor and the French
Republic over Indochina climaxed during the
Sino-French War,
Admiral Courbet destroyed the
Chinese fleet anchored at
Foochow.
France then put a protectorate over northern and central Vietnam,
which it divided into
Tonkin and
Annam.
In an
effort to isolate Germany, France went to great pains to woo
Russia
and the United Kingdom
to its side, first by means of the Franco-Russian Alliance of 1894, the
1904 Entente Cordiale with the U.K,
and finally, with the signing of the Anglo-Russian Entente in 1907 which
became the Triple Entente and
eventually led Russia and the U.K. to enter World War I as Allies. France still had interests in Asia and
looked for alliances and found in Japan a possible ally. During his
visit to France,
Iwakura Tomomi asked
for French assistance in reforming Japan. French military missions
were sent to Japan in
1872–1880, in
1884–1889 and
the last one much later in
1918–1919 to
help modernize the Japanese army.
Distrust of Germany, faith in the army and native French
anti-semitism combined to make the
Dreyfus Affair (the unjust trial and
condemnation of a Jewish military officer for treason) a political
scandal of the utmost gravity. The nation was divided between
"dreyfusards" and "anti-dreyfusards," and far-right Catholic
agitators inflamed the situation even when proofs of Dreyfus'
innocence came to light. The writer
Emile
Zola published an impassioned editorial on the injustice, and
was himself condemned by the government for libel. Once Dreyfus was
finally pardoned, the progressive legislature enacted the 1905 laws
on
laïcité, which created a
complete
separation
of church and state and stripped churches of most of their
property rights.

Eiffel Tower under construction in
July 1888.
The period at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th
century is often termed the
belle
époque.
Although associated with cultural
innovations and popular amusements (cabaret, can-can, the cinema,
new art forms such as Impressionism
and Art Nouveau), France was
nevertheless a nation divided internally on notions of religion,
class, regionalisms and money, and on the international front
France came repeatedly to the brink of war with the other imperial
powers, including Great Britain (the Fashoda Incident
). World War I was
inevitable, but its human and financial costs would be catastrophic
for the French.
In 1889
the Exposition
Universelle took place in Paris, and the Eiffel Tower
was built as a temporary gate to the fair.
Meant to last only a few decades, the tower was never removed and
became France's most iconic landmark.
See also:
France in modern times II (1914–today)
World War I
On 28 June 1914 a Bosnian member of the
Mlada Bosna assassinated
Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to
the Austria-Hungary throne, in Sarajevo, the capital of the
Austrian province of Bosnia. This event ultimately triggered a
complex set of formal and secret military alliances between
European states, causing most of the continent, including France,
to be drawn into war within a few short weeks. Austria-Hungary
declared war on Serbia in late July, triggering Russian
mobilization. On August 1 both Germany and France ordered
mobilization. Germany was much better prepared militarily than any
of the other countries involved, including France. Later on that
day the German Empire, as an ally of Austria, declared war on
Russia, when it heard no response to its request for Russia's
demobilization. France was allied with Russia and Serbia and so was
ready to commit to war against the German Empire. Germany
occupied
Luxembourg on August 2 and gave neutral Belgium an ultimatum:
let German armies pass through on their way to invade France or
face invasion itself. The Belgians refused, so Germany invaded and
declared war on France. Britain entered the war on August 4,
although was relatively unprepared militarily and thus couldn't
assist France much until August 7. (See main entry for World War I
for more detailed background about events leading up to France's
entry into the war.)
The war on the
Western
Front was fought largely in France and characterized by
extremely violent battles, often with new and more destructive
military technology.
Famous battles in France include First Battle of the Marne,
Battle of
Verdun
, Battle of the
Somme and the Second
Battle of the Marne. Germany's plan (see
Schlieffen Plan) was to defeat the French
quickly and then shift from defense to offense against Russia on
the Eastern Front. The Germans captured Brussels by August 20 and
soon had taken over a large portion of northern France. The
original plan was to continue southwest and attack Paris from the
west. By early September they were within 40 miles of Paris, and
the French government had relocated to Bordeaux. The Allies finally
stopped the advance northeast of Paris at the Marne River. This was
the farthest push west by the Germans during the entire war.
On the Western Front the small improvised trenches of the first few
months rapidly grew deeper and more complex, gradually becoming
vast areas of interlocking defensive works. The land war quickly
became dominated by the muddy, bloody stalemate of
Trench warfare, a form of war in which both
opposing armies had static lines of defense. The war of movement
quickly turned into a war of position. Attack followed others
counterattack after counterattack. Neither side advanced much, but
both sides suffered hundreds of thousands of casualties. German and
Allied armies produced essentially a matched pair of trench lines
from the Swiss border in the south to the North Sea coast of
Belgium. Trench warfare prevailed on the Western Front from
September 1914 until the Germans launched their "Spring Offensive",
Operation Michael, in March 1918. The space between the opposing
trenches was referred to as "no man's land" (for its lethal
uncrossability) and varied in width depending on the battlefield.
On the Western Front it was typically between 100 and 300 yards
(90–275 m), though sometimes much less. The common infantry soldier
had four weapons to use in the trenches: the rifle, bayonet,
shotgun, and hand grenade.
Britain introduced the
first tanks to
the war, while Renault enhanced the concept by
adding a turret. The use in large quantity of
these light tanks by
Jean-Baptiste Estienne
can be considered a decisive evolution in World War I's
strategies.
When Russia exited the war in 1917 due to revolution, the
Central Powers controlled all of the Balkans
and could now shift military efforts to the Western Front. The U.S.
had entered the war also in 1917, so the Central Powers hoped this
could be achieved mostly prior to America's delivery of military
support. In March 1918 Germany launched the last major offensive on
the Western Front. By May Germany had reached the Marne again, as
in September 1914, and was again close to Paris. In
Second Battle of the Marne,
however, the Allies were able to defend and then shift to offense
due in part to the fatigue of the Germans and the arrival of more
Americans. The Germans were ultimately pushed back toward the
German border. Other Central Power strongholds in Europe had
fallen, and in early October, when a new government assumed power
in Germany, it asked for an armistice.

A French woman returns when the
Germans retreat from her district and finds her home in
ruins.
Peace terms were agreed upon in the
Treaty of Versailles on November 11,
largely negotiated by
Georges
Clemenceau for French matters.
Germany was required to take full
responsibility for the war and to pay war reparations; and the German industrial
Saarland
, a coal and steel region, was occupied by
France. The German African colonies were partitioned between
France and Britain such as
Kamerun.
Alsace-Lorraine was returned to France, and the German Empire lost
eastern territories such as the
Danzig
Corridor.
Ferdinand Foch wanted a
peace that would never allow Germany to be a threat to France
again. After the peace was signed he said,
This is not a
peace. It is an armistice for 20 years. The war
brought great losses of troops and resources. Fought in large part
on French soil, the war led to approximately 1.4 million French
dead including civilians (see
World War I casualties), and four
times as many casualties. From the remains of the Ottoman Empire,
France acquired the
Mandate of
Syria and the
Mandate of
Lebanon.
Les années folles (The mad years)
Ferdinand Foch supported Poland in the
Greater Poland
Uprising and in the
Polish-Soviet
War and France also joined Spain during the
Rif War. This period of time is also called
the
Great Depression.
Leon Blum, leading the
Popular Front was elected Prime
Minister from 1936 to 1937 and became the first Jew to lead France.
During the
Spanish Civil War he
did not support the Spanish Republicans because of the French
internal political context of complex alliances and risk of war
with Germany and Italy. In the 1920s, France established an
elaborate system of border defences (the
Maginot Line) and alliances (see
Little Entente) to offset resurgent German
strength and in the 1930s, the massive losses of the war led many
in France to choose a policy guaranteeing peace, even in the face
of Hitler's violations of the Versailles treaty and (later) his
demands at Munich in 1938; this would be the much maligned policy
of
appeasement.
Édouard Daladier refused to go to war against Germany and Italy
without British support as [[Neville Chamberlain wanted to save
peace at
Munich.
World War II
The
Invasion of Poland
finally caused France and Britain to declare war against Germany.
But the allies did not launch massive assaults and kept a defensive
stance: this was called the
Phoney War in
Britain or
Drôle de guerre—the funny sort of war—in
France.
It did not prevent the German army from
conquering Poland
in a matter of weeks with its innovative Blitzkrieg tactics and helped by the Soviet Union
's attack on Poland. When Germany had its
hands free for an attack in the west, the
Battle of France began in May 1940, and the
same tactics proved just as devastating there. The
Wehrmacht bypassed the
Maginot Line by marching through the Ardennes
forest.
A
second German force was sent into Belgium
and the Netherlands
to act as a diversion to this main thrust.
In six weeks of savage fighting the French lost 90,000 men. Many
civilians sought refuge by taking to the roads of France: some two
million refugees from Belgium and Holland were joined by between
eight and ten million French civilians, representing a quarter of
the French population, all heading south and west. This movement
may well have been the largest single movement of civilians in
history prior to 1947.
French
leaders surrendered to Nazi Germany on 24 June 1940, after the
British
Expeditionary Force was evacuated from Dunkirk
. Nazi Germany occupied three fifths of
France's territory, leaving the rest in the south east to the new
Vichy government. This regime sought to
collaborate with Germany. It was established on 10 July 1940. The
Vichy Regime was led by
Philippe
Pétain, the aging war hero of First World war. It was
originally intended to be a temporary, care-taker regime, to
supervise French administration before the soon-expected defeat of
Britain. Instead, it lasted four years and imposed a tyrannical
regime on the French people. It was unique among the various
collaborating regimes of wartime Europe in that it was established
constitutionally, through the French parliament, and not imposed by
the Nazis. However,
Charles de
Gaulle declared himself by radio from London the head of a
rival government in exile, gathering the
Free French Forces around him, finding
support in some French colonies and recognition from Britain and
the USA.
The Vichy regime adopted violent, repressive anti-semitic policies
on its own initiative, without direction from Nazi Germany, as has
been highlighted by the historian Robert Paxton. During the German
occupation 76,000 Jews would be deported, often with the help of
the Vichy French authorities, and murdered in the Nazis'
extermination camps.
After the Attack on
Mers-el-Kébir
in 1940, where the British fleet destroyed a large
part of the French navy, still under command of Vichy France, that killed about 1,100 sailors,
there was nationwide indignation and a feeling of distrust in the
French forces, leading to the events of the Battle of Dakar. Eventually, several
important French ships such as the
Richelieu and the
Surcouf joined the Free French
Forces. On the Eastern Front the USSR was lacking pilots and
several French pilots joined the Soviet Union and fought the
Luftwaffe in the
Normandie-Niemen
squadron. Within France proper, very few people organised
themselves against the German Occupation in the summer of 1940.
However, their numbers grew as Vichy's true nature became more
apparent and the decline of Nazi Germany more obvious. Isolated
opposers eventually formed a real movement:
the Resistants. The most famous figure of
the French resistance was
Jean Moulin.
He was tortured by
Klaus Barbie (the
butcher of Lyon).
Increasing repression culminated in the
complete destruction and extermination of the village of Oradour-sur-Glane
, at the height of the Battle of
Normandy
. There were also Frenchmen that joined the
SS, they were known as the
Charlemagne Division; knowing they would not survive should
Germany be defeated, they were among the last ones to surrender at
Berlin.
Whilst recognising this extensive collaboration, the British
historian Simon KItson has shown that the Vichy regime engaged in
an extensive programme of arresting German intelligence agents in
the unoccupied zone. Around 2000 were arrested and some were
subsequently executed. Vichy's purpose in this respect was to
preserve its sovereignty and to centralise collaboration.
In November 1942 Vichy France was finally occupied by German
forces, because the war in North Africa was coming to an end; the
Germans foresaw a threat in southern Europe by the allied
forces.
On 6 June 1944 the allies
landed on Normandy
while on 15 August they
landed on
Provence (including the 260,000 men of the French army B).
General Leclerc
freed Paris and Strasbourg and
later, along with the battleship Richelieu, represented France at
Tokyo during the
Japanese surrender. The
Vichy regime fled to Germany. The 1sr French army recruited FFI
fighters to continue the war until the final defeat of Germany.This
army numbered 300,000 men by September 1944 and 370,000 by spring
in 1945 (the 2nd DB wasn't in it).
France was liberated by allied forces in 1944. The day Germany
surrendered French forces were involved in the
Sétif massacre in Algeria.
Cold War
After a short period of provisional government initially led by
General
Charles de Gaulle, a new
constitution (13 October 1946) established the
Fourth Republic under a parliamentary
form of government controlled by a series of coalitions. During the
following 16 years the French Colonial Empire would
disintegrate.
Israel was established in 1948, and France was one of the fiercest
supporters of the Jewish state, supplying it with extensive
weaponry it used during the
1948
Arab-Israeli War.
The French Republic needed an alliance with
Israel to secure the Suez
Canal
from potential threats in a context of
decolonisation.
In
Indochina the French government was facing the Viet Minh communist rebels and lost its
Indochinese colonies during the First Indochina War in 1954 after the
Battle of
Dien Bien Phu
. Vietnam
was divided in two states while Cambodia
and Laos
were made
independent. France left Indochina only to be replaced there
by the United States, which would soon be engaged in the long
Vietnam War.
In 1956 another crisis struck French colonies, this time in Egypt.
The Suez Canal, having been built by the French government,
belonged to the French Republic and was operated by the
Compagnie universelle du canal maritime de
Suez. Great Britain had bought the Egyptian share from
Isma'il Pasha and was the second largest owner
of the canal before the crisis. The Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalised the canal
despite French and British opposition; he estimated a European
answer was most unlikely to happen. Great Britain and France
attacked Egypt and built an alliance with Israel against Nasser.
Israel attacked from the east, Britain from Cyprus and France from
Algeria. Egypt, the most powerful Arab state of the time, was
defeated in a mere few days.
The Suez crisis caused an outcry of indignation in the entire Arab
world and Saudi Arabia set an embargo on oil on France and Britain.
The US President
Dwight D.
Eisenhower forced a ceasefire
when he threatened to sell all American shares of British Pounds
and to crash the British economy. The British forces were retired
from the conflict and Israel, having seized interests in the Sinai
region, withdrew soon leaving France alone in Egypt. Under stronger
political pressures the French government ultimately evacuated its
troops from Suez. This was a major political defeat for France and
the American threats during the war were received with indignation
by the French popular opinion.
This led directly, and was used as a point,
to the French withdrawal from the integrated military command of
NATO
in 1966. Another consequence of this was the
French loss of geopolitical interests in the region; this meant an
alliance with Israel was no longer of any use for French
diplomacy.
General de Gaulle was elected president in 1958 and made the French
Force de Frappe, the nuclear
power, a priority of the French Defence. France then adopted the
dissuasion du faible au fort
doctrine which meant a Soviet attack on France would only bring
total destruction to both sides.
The May
1958 seizure of power in Algiers
by French army units and French settlers opposed to
concessions in the face of Arab nationalist insurrection led to the
fall of the French government and a presidential invitation to de
Gaulle to form an emergency government to forestall the threat of
civil war. The new constitution of the
French Fifth Republic, introduced on 5
October 1958, gave greater powers to the presidency.
Algeria
became independent in 1962.
In
May 1968 students revolted,
with a variety of demands including educational, labor and
governmental reforms, sexual and artistic freedom, and the end of
the Vietnam War. The student protest in unruly movements quickly
joined with labor, and mass strikes erupted. De Gaulle responded by
calling a
legislative
election for 23 June, in which his
UDR party increased
their vote, and the protests faded away during the summer.
Post Cold War

Signing the Treaty of Nice
After the fall of the USSR and the end of the
Cold War potential menaces to mainland France
appeared considerably reduced. France began reducing its nuclear
capacities and conscription was abolished in 2001. In 1990 France,
led by
François Mitterrand,
joined the short lived
Gulf War against
Iraq, the French participation to this war would be called the
Opération Daguet.
However, despite the end of the cold war and the fact future
conflicts would be fought away from home, there were still menaces
against mainland France in the form of terrorism. In 1994
Air France Flight 8969 was hijacked
by Islamic terrorists with the suspected intent to crash the plane
over Paris. The hijacking was a failure for the terrorist group,
known as the
GIA after an
intervention from the
GIGN in Marseille, where
the plane was grounded. More terrorist attacks would happen and
these culminated into the
1995
Paris Metro bombing. Important leaders of the GIA in France
fell afterward:
Khaled Kelkal was
killed in Lyon by the
EPIGN and
Rachid Ramda was arrested in London although it
took ten years for the French justice to have him extradited.
Jacques Chirac assumed office as
president on 17 May 1995, after a campaign focused on the need to
combat France's stubbornly high unemployment rate. While France
continues to revere its rich history and independence, French
leaders increasingly tie the future of France to the continued
development of the European Union. In 1992 France ratified the
Maastricht Treaty establishing the
European Union. In 1999, the
Euro was introduced to replace the French franc. Beyond
membership in the
European Union,
France is also involved in many joint European projects such as
Airbus, the
Galileo positioning system
and the
Eurocorps.
The
French have stood among the strongest supporters of NATO
and
EU policy in the Balkans to prevent genocide in
Yugoslavia. French troops joined
the
1999
NATO bombing of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. France has
also been actively involved against international terrorism. In
2002
Alliance Base, an international
Counterterrorist
Intelligence Center, was secretly established in Paris.
The same
year France contributed to the toppling of the
Taliban regime in Afghanistan
, but it strongly rejected the 2003 invasion of Iraq, even
threatening to veto in central coners in the US proposed
resolution.
Jacques Chirac was reelected in 2002, mainly because his socialist
rival
Lionel Jospin was defeated by
the extreme right wing candidate
Jean-Marie Le Pen. France was struck by a
long period of
civil
unrest in 2005 after the death of two teenagers. At the end of
his second term Jacques Chirac chose not to run again at the age of
74.
The cabinet minister and rival
Nicolas
Sarkozy was elected and took office on 16 May 2007. The problem
of high unemployment has yet to be resolved.
In 2008, France was
one of the first states to recognise Kosovo
as an independent nation.
See also
Further reading
General Texts
- André Maurois, A History of France
Revolutionary Readings
- Simon Schama, Citizens
- William Doyle, Oxford History of the French
Revolution
- Donald Sutherland, France, 1789-1815
- Alan Forrest, The French Revolution
- Colin Lucas, ed., The Political Culture of the French
Revolution
- David Andress, French Society in Revolution,
1789-1799
- Georges Lefebvre, The French Revolution
- Norman Hampson, Social History of the French
Revolution
- Alexis de Tocqueville, The Old Regime and the
Revolution
- Peter Jones, The Peasantry in the French
Revolution
Napoleonsee
Bibliography of Napoleon
20th Century France
- Robert Gildea, France Since 1945
- Tyler Stovall, France since the Second World War.
- Jeremy Popkin, A History of Modern France
- Julian Jackson, France: The Dark Years, 1940-44
- Robert Paxton, Vichy France: Old Guard and New
Order
- Gordon Wright, France in Modern Times
- Susan Zuccotti, The Holocaust, The French and the
Jews
- Marc Bloch, Strange Defeat
- Robert Gildea, Marianne in Chains
- Michele Cone, Artists under Vichy
- Henry Rousso, The Vichy Syndrome
External links
Notes
- David Carpenter The Struggle for Mastery. The Penguin
history of Britain 1066–1284 page 91: "In the first place,
after 1072 William was largely an absentee. Of the 170 months
remaining of his reign he spent around 130 in France, returning to
England only on four occasions. This was no passing phase. Absentee
kings continued to spend at best half their time in England until
the loss of Normandy in 1204... But this absenteeism solidified
rather than sapped royal government since it engendered structures
both to maintain peace and extract money on the king's absence,
money which was above all needed across the channel".
- Richerus Liber IV: 12. (987, Jun. 1.) Promotio Hugonis in
regnum. Hac sententia promulgata et ab omnibus laudata, dux omnium
consensu in regnum promovetur, et per metropolitanum aliosque
episcopos Noviomi coronatus, Gallis, Brittannis, Dahis, Aquitanis,
Gothis, Hispanis, Wasconibus, rex Kalendis Jun. The text is
available here in the paragraph 12, from the Latin
Library.
- Capetian France 937–1328 page 64: Then, in 1151, Henry
Plantagenet paid homage for the duchy to Louis VII in Paris, homage
he repeated as king of England in 1156.
- Capetian France page 265.
- Capetian France page 264.
- Count Miklós Zrínyi,the Poet-Warlord
- [1]
- Andress, David. The Terror. Pg. 118
- Andress, David. The Terror. Pg. 131
- Patrick, Alison. “Political Divisions in the French National
Convention 1792-93” Pg. 436
- Palmer, R.R. Twelve Who Ruled. Pg. 26
- Palmer, R.R. Twelve Who Ruled. Pg. 25
- Censer, Jack and Lynn Hunt. Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity.
Pg. 64
- Andress, David. The Terror. Pg. 381
- Censer, Jack and Lynn Hunt. Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity.
Pg. 64,74
- Gough, Hugh. The Terror in the French Revolution. Pg. 31
- Censer, Jack and Lynn Hunt. Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity.
Pg. 64-66
- Higonnet, Patrice. Goodness Beyond Virtue. Pg. 37
- Hanson, Paul R. The Jacobin Republic Under Fire. Pg. 40-41
- Joel Blatt (ed), The French Defeat of 1940 (Oxford, 1998)
- Robert O. Paxton, Vichy France, Old Guard and New
Order, New York, 1972
- H. R. Kedward, In Search of the Maquis (Oxford,
1993)
- Simon Kitson, Vichy et la Chasse aux Espions Nazis,
Paris, Autrement, 2005; Simon Kitson, The Hunt for Nazi
Spies, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2007