This book is a sweeping, immersive journey into one of the most turbulent and least understood episodes of French history. While Paris burned with pamphlets and princely ambitions, the city of Chartres-gateway to the Beauce and lifeline of the kingdom's grain supply-fought its own quieter, grittier battle for survival. Through famine, epidemic, political intrigue, and the constant threat of war, Chartres became a microcosm of a nation in crisis.
Drawing on rich archival detail and vivid storytelling, this book brings to life the merchants who negotiated with soldiers at their gates, the women who kept households alive when bread vanished from the markets, the clergy who struggled to hold a fractured community together, and the rural peasants whose harvests fed-or starved-the city. Figures like Bishop Ferdinand de Neufville de Villeroy, the fiery Capuchin preacher Antoine de La Rivi re, and the resilient tanner's wife Jeanne Leclerc step out of the shadows of history with striking humanity.
Far from the grand theaters of Parisian politics, Chartres reveals the Fronde as it was lived: a daily struggle marked by fear, resilience, rumor, faith, and the stubborn will to endure. It is a story of ordinary people navigating extraordinary times, of a city negotiating its survival between princes and ministers, and of the long shadows the crisis cast over the rise of Louis XIV's absolutism.
Both intimate and panoramic, the book reframes a national upheaval through the eyes of a single city-offering a fresh, compelling perspective for readers of history, historical fiction, and anyone fascinated by how communities survive when the world around them falls apart.
Related Subjects
History