Author(s): Price, Roger
Reader(s): Meadows, Mark
Label: Naxos AudioBooks
Genre: Non-Fiction
Catalogue No: NA0377
Barcode: 9781781982730
Release Date: 02/2019

PRICE, R.: Concise History of France (A) (Unabridged)

Tracklist

Price, Roger - Author
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
1A Concise History of France07:42
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
2The maintenance of these administrative…07:49
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
3Furthermore, as one moves inland…08:17
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
4Their location and activities and those of…06:06
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
5Part 1: Medieval and Early Modern France04:15
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
6Chapter 1: Population and Resources…07:29
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
7The great period of land clearance…07:55
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
8The recurrence of subsistence crises…11:01
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
9The reasons for population growth were…12:57
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
10Chapter 2: Society and Politics in Medieval…08:46
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
11Exploitation by the lord was restrained primarily…08:17
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
12The growth of population and of economic activity…09:12
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
13During the fourteenth century it would acquire…08:46
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
14Although defeated by Richard (died 1199)…10:16
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
15For some 130 years, from around 1335…11:52
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
16Chapter 3: Society and Politics in Early Modern…08:31
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
17In establishing the administrative state the kings…12:03
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
18The crisis deepened. The collapse of revenue…08:03
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
19The Fronde - a confused mixture of conflicts…11:11
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
20The constant waging of war would satisfy…11:07
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
21In this situation internal administration…10:06
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
22Certainly, the French nobility did not comprise…09:18
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
23If the nobility frequently represented a goal…09:34
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
24Seigneurialism raised complex economic…09:26
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
25By the end of 1769 the budget deficit had…10:42
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
26Enlightenment ideals were not without their…06:49
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
27Part 2: The Dual Revolution: Modern and…03:34
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
28Chapter 4: Revolution and Empire09:40
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
29Ministerial stability and consistent policies…11:06
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
30Although urban workers were capable of…12:52
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
31This clash was precipitated by the obvious…13:04
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
32The Debate on a New Constitution11:11
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
33Throughout the provinces, as in Paris…10:59
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
34To a substantial degree, the policy decisions…12:03
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
35Radicalisation of the Revolution08:19
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
36The members of this assembly were all new…08:35
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
37As the military crisis deepened in the spring…11:09
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
38To impose food procurement and political…07:55
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
39In the west, widespread violence occurred…07:37
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
40The Conservative Republic08:41
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
41The Consulate and Empire08:39
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
42On 6 May 1802, in gratitude for Bonaparte's…07:19
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
43The Peninsular War (1808-14) proved to be…10:27
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
44Conclusion05:01
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
45Chapter 5: The Nineteenth Century: Continuity…02:22
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
46Economy and Society11:35
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
47The widest possible range of activities…09:46
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
48The enlargement of markets and the growing…09:46
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
49Society and Politics09:34
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
50The Restoration09:00
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
51Concern about the regime's intentions was…12:21
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
52The July Monarchy07:05
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
53The political peace of the years that followed…08:39
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
54The Second Republic07:58
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
55Faced with a plethora of candidates, many voters…07:46
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
56Where might this lead? An apocalyptic perspective…09:21
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
57The Second Empire09:00
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
58In December 1861 Napoleon further responded…10:56
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
59Whatever the limits to opposition, the 1869…09:37
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
60In the provinces the news of defeat and revolution…10:14
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
61Faced with this intransigence, the monarchist…11:05
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
62Moderate republicans were committed to a form…12:47
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
63How real was this social threat that so exercised…09:08
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
64Chapter 6: A Time of Crisis: 1914-194511:01
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
65Joffre's successor, General Robert Nivelle…08:12
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
66The occupation of the north, shortages of…09:16
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
67The Inter-war Years09:35
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
68In the end, France would receive the substantial…11:14
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
69As the left tore itself apart, electoral support…10:41
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
70Certainly, in terms of unemployment, France…11:41
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
71Amongst the middle classes, and especially…13:31
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
72Initially, the election results were disappointing…15:23
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
73The Second World War08:34
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
74Weygand, a traditionalist Catholic…11:42
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
75Pétain's government was, furthermore…11:45
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
76In the early post-armistice period in particular…11:51
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
77In this, the French administration and its police…12:12
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
78Although Churchill had at first supported…12:09
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
79Gradually, passions calmed. Even Xavier Vallat…08:00
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
80Chapter 7: Reconstruction and renewal…04:20
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
81Economy08:45
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
82Only the introduction in 1948 of the Marshall Plan…07:48
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
83In a situation of rapidly rising prices…10:00
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
84Society08:12
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
85Through the Plan, by means of direct intervention…08:41
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
86Improvements in healthcare, seen most notably…08:33
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
87Did economic growth and social reform reduce…11:04
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
88Political Life: The Fourth Republic08:08
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
89The MRP had been founded in November 1944…12:21
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
90The recovery of the right was nevertheless evident.11:41
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
91In the search for a military solution Mollet would…08:43
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
92The Fifth Republic08:01
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
93The political system that emerged after 1958…11:18
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
94There were limits to the French commitment…08:50
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
95Above all, the election result revealed…09:28
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
96Chapter 8: A Society Under Stress02:22
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
97Economy and Society10:12
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
98The pressure on major companies to increase…08:00
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
99Public indebtedness and the exposure of banks…08:34
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
100Social Problems09:32
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
101In recognition of changing social mores, in 1999…09:17
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
102At least mobility and access to employment…11:22
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
103A report by the Council on Integration in 2004…11:17
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
104The universities themselves, mainly…09:27
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
105Political Life09:05
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
106The general sense of disquiet and of insecurity…11:21
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
107New voting patterns were beginning to emerge…10:13
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
108Concerned by the impact of accusations…12:11
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
109In sharp contrast, in the following decades…10:23
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
110With their eyes set on the presidential election…11:51
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
111Looking for inspiration to the achievements…12:06
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
112Once in power, Chirac immediately adopted…11:10
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
113On 3 May 2000 the National Assembly, in which…11:25
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
114Indeed, the split in the party, in 1998…12:15
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
115The European Commission tacitly accepted…12:03
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
116The mediocre and grossly overcrowded…10:21
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
117Although they had lost three previous…10:43
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
118By focusing on issues such as housing…09:03
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
119Conclusion: An Interim Report on the Socialists…08:41
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
120Whilst accepting the urgent need for tighter…08:53
Meadows, Mark (Reader)
121The potential for profit is enormous.07:29
Meadows, Mark (Reader)

Total Playing Time: 19:25:37