Chartres and the Bourbon Monarchy is a sweeping, deeply human portrait of a French provincial city living through two centuries of transformation, crisis, and resilience. Moving far beyond the familiar halls of Versailles, this book plunges readers into the streets, markets, churches, workshops, and council chambers of Chartres, revealing how ordinary people and local elites shaped-and were shaped by-the rise and fall of Bourbon France.
Across twenty richly detailed chapters, the book uncovers the hidden machinery of early modern life: guilds guarding their privileges, magistrates negotiating with royal officials, bishops battling heresy, merchants navigating grain shortages, and artisans fighting for dignity in a world of rigid hierarchies. Epidemics, famines, and wars test the city's endurance, while festivals, music, and popular devotion illuminate its vibrant cultural soul. From the chaos of the Fronde to the intellectual ferment of the Enlightenment, Chartres becomes a microcosm of a kingdom struggling to balance tradition and change.
Drawing on vivid biographical stories, archival detail, and the latest historical scholarship, this is not just the history of a city-it is the story of how power, faith, economy, and community intertwined in the daily lives of thousands. Readers will meet bakers who risked punishment to feed the hungry, women who built commercial empires from their workshops, priests caught between conscience and royal policy, and magistrates who walked a tightrope between loyalty and local autonomy.
By the time the Revolution arrives in 1789, Chartres stands transformed yet unmistakably itself, carrying centuries of memory into a new and uncertain age.
Both panoramic and intimate, Chartres and the Bourbon Monarchy will appeal to lovers of French history, readers of microhistory, and anyone fascinated by the drama of ordinary life lived in extraordinary times.
Related Subjects
History