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France
(redirected from République française)

   Also found in: Acronyms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
France (frăns, Fr. fräNs), officially French Republic, republic (2005 est. pop. 60,656,000), 211,207 sq mi (547,026 sq km), W Europe. France is bordered by the English Channel (N), the Atlantic Ocean and the Bay of Biscay (W), Spain and Andorra (SW), the Mediterranean Sea (S), Switzerland and Italy (SE), and Germany, Luxembourg, and Belgium (NE). The natural land frontiers are the Pyrenees, along the border with Spain; the Jura Mts. and the Alps, along the border with Switzerland and Italy; and the Rhine River, which is part of the border with Germany. France's capital and largest city is Paris Paris (pâr`ĭs, Fr. pärē`), city (1999 pop. 2,115,757; metropolitan area est. pop.
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.

Land

Although France's old historic provinces were abolished by the Revolution, they remain the country's basic geographic, cultural, and economic divisions. These provinces mirror France's natural geographic regions and, despite modern administrative centralization, retain their striking diversity. The heart of France N of the Loire River is the province of Île-de-France, which occupies the greater part of the Paris basin, a fertile depression drained by the Seine and Marne rivers. The basin is surrounded by the provinces of Champagne Champagne (shäNpä`nyə)
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 and Lorraine in the east; Artois Artois (ärtwä`), region and former province, in Pas-de-Calais dept.
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, Picardy, French Flanders (see Nord Nord (nôr), department (1990 pop. 2,533,000), N France, bordering on the North Sea and Belgium. Lille is the capital.
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 dept.), and Normandy Normandy (nôr`məndē), Fr.
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 in the northeast and north; Brittany, Maine Maine (mĕn), region and former province, NW France, S of Normandy and E of Brittany.
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, and Anjou Anjou (äNzh
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 in the west; and Touraine Touraine (t
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, Orléanais Orléanais (ôrlāänā`), region and former province, N central France, on both sides of the Loire River.
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, Nivernais Nivernais (nēvĕrnā`), region and former province, central France. It roughly coincides with Nièvre dept.
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, and Burgundy in the south. Further south are Berry Berry (bĕrē`), former province, central France. Bourges, the capital, and Châteauroux are the chief towns.
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 and Bourbonnais Bourbonnais (b
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. Further east, between the Vosges Mts. and the Rhine, is Alsace; S of Alsace, along the Jura, is Franche-Comté.

South-central France is occupied by the rugged mountains of the Massif Central, one of the country's major natural features. It comprises the provinces of Marche Marche (märsh), region and former province, central France, on the NW margin of the Massif Central . It is coextensive with Creuse dept.
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, Limousin, Auvergne, and Lyonnais Lyonnais (lyônā`), region and former province, E central France, now divided into the Rhône and Loire depts.
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. To the E of the Rhône River, which divides the Massif Central from the Alps, are Savoy Savoy (səvoi`), Fr. Savoie, Alpine region of E France.
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, Dauphiné Dauphiné (dōfēnā`), region and former province, SE France, bordering on Italy.
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, and Provence Provence (prôväNs`), region and former province, SE France. It now encompasses Var, Vaucluse, and Bouches-du-Rhône depts.
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. The French Alps have some of the highest peaks in Europe, including Mont Blanc. The Rhône valley widens into a plain near its delta on the Mediterranean; part of the coast of Provence forms the celebrated French Riviera Riviera (rĭvēâr`ə)
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. Languedoc Languedoc (läNgdôk`), region and former province, S France, bounded by the foot of the Pyrenees, the upper Garonne River, the
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 extends from the Cevennes Mts. to the Mediterranean coast W of the Rhône. Corsica lies off the Mediterranean coast. The southwestern part of France comprises the small Pyrenean provinces of Roussillon Roussillon (r
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, Foix Foix (fwä), town (1990 pop. 10,466), capital of Ariège dept., S France, on the Ariège River at the foot of the Pyrenees.
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, Béarn Béarn (bāärn`), former province, SW France, in the Pyrenees.
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, and French Navarre Navarre (nəvär`), Span.
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 and the vast provinces of Gascony Gascony (găs`kənē), Fr. Gascogne, region of SW France.
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 and Guienne Guienne, Fr. Guyenne (both: gēĕn`, gwē–), region of SW France.
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. The last two constitute the great Aquitanian plain, drained by the Garonne and Dordogne rivers, which flow into the Bay of Biscay. The central section of the west coast, between the Gironde estuary and the Loire, is occupied by the provinces of Saintonge Saintonge (săNtôNzh`), region of W France, on the Bay of Biscay. It is now part of the Charente-Maritime dept.
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, Angoumois Angoumois (äNg
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, Aunis Aunis (ōnēs`), small region and former province, W France, on the Atlantic coast.
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, and Poitou Poitou (pwät
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.

Since 1972 France has been administratively divided into 22 regions, many of which correspond to the nation's historical provinces. These regions are: Alsace Alsace-Lorraine, held in common by all the German states. Many Alsatians emigrated to France rather than submit to a policy of Germanization. Clamor for the return of Alsace-Lorraine became the chief rallying force for French nationalism and was a major cause of the armaments race
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, Aquitane, Auvergne Auvergne (ōvĕr`nyə), region and former province, S central France.
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, Basse-Normandie, Bourgogne (Burgundy Burgundy (bûr`gəndē), Fr.
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), Bretagne (Brittany Brittany (brĭt`ənē), Breton Breiz, Fr. Bretagne, region and former province, NW France.
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), Centre, Champagne-Ardenne, Corse (Corsica Corsica (kôr`sĭkə), Fr. Corse, island (1990 pop.
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), Franche-Comté Franche-Comté (fräNsh-kôNtā`) or Free County of Burgundy, region and former province, E France.
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, Haute-Normandie, Île-de-France Île-de-France (ēl-də-fräNs)
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, Languedoc-Roussillon, Limousin Limousin (lēm
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, Lorraine Lorraine (lôrĕn`), Ger.
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, Midi-Pyrenees, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, Pays de la Loire, Picardie (Picardy Picardy (pĭk`ərdē), Fr. Picardie, region and former province, N France, on the English Channel.
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), Poitou-Charentes, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, and Rhone-Alpes.

France also has a number of overseas departments, territories, and countries which, legally, are part of the French Republic. The overseas departments are Martinique Martinique (märtĭnēk`), overseas department and administrative region of France (2005 est. pop.
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, Guadeloupe Guadeloupe (gwädəl
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, Réunion Réunion (rāünyôN`), island and overseas department of France (2005 est. pop. 777,000), c.
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, and French Guiana French Guiana (gēăn`ə, –än`–), Fr.
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. The overseas countries and territories are New Caledonia New Caledonia, Fr. Nouvelle Calédonie, internally self-governing territory of France (2005 est. pop. 216,000), land area 7,241 sq mi (18,760 sq km), South Pacific, c.700 mi (1,130 km) E of Australia.
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, French Polynesia French Polynesia, officially Territory of French Polynesia, internally self-governing overseas country (2002 pop. 245,516) of France, consisting of 118 islands in the South Pacific. The capital is Papeete , on Tahiti .
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, Wallis and Futuna Islands Wallis and Futuna Islands (wŏl`ĭs, ft
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, and the French Southern and Antarctic Territories. Mayotte Mayotte (mīŏt`), island (2005 est. pop.
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 is a departmental collectivity, and St. Pierre and Miquelon Saint Pierre and Miquelon (săN pyĕr, mēkəlôN`), French territorial collectivity (2005 est. pop.
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 is a territorial collectivity.

People

In the late 1990s there were 40 French cities that had more than 100,000 inhabitants, but only Paris exceeded one million. About 75% of the population live in urban areas. Until the end of World War II the population increase in France was perhaps the lowest in Europe, but in postwar decades the rate has increased. The mingling of peoples over the centuries as well as immigration in the 20th cent. has given France great ethnic diversity. A large influx of predominantly North African immigrants has had a great effect on the cities, especially Paris and Marseille.

French is the nation's language. There are also a number of regional dialects, which are largely declining in usage. Alsatian, a German dialect, is spoken in Alsace and in parts of Lorraine. A small number speak Flemish, a Dutch dialect, in French Flanders. In Celtic Brittany, Breton is still spoken, as is Basque in the Bayonne Bayonne (bäyôn`), town (1990 pop. 41,846), Pyrénées-Atlantiques dept.
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 region, Provençal in Provence, Catalan at the eastern end of the Pyrenees, and Corsican on the island of Corsica.

Roman Catholicism is by far the largest religion in France, nominally professed by about 80% of the population, although only an estimate 5% are churchgoers. With growing immigration from Asia, Turkey, and North Africa, France also has a large Muslim population, estimated at 3 to 5 million. There are smaller numbers of Protestants and Jews. Separation of church and state was made final by law in 1905. The educational level in France is high. Among the universities the largest are those of Paris, Lyons, Toulouse, Aix-Marseilles, Bordeaux, Lille, Montpellier, Strasbourg, Rennes, Grenoble, and Nancy.

Economy

France is one of the world's major economic powers. Agriculture plays a larger role than in the economies of most other industrial countries. A large proportion of the value of total agricultural output derives from livestock (especially cattle, hogs, poultry, and sheep). The mountain areas and NW France are the livestock regions. The country's leading crops are wheat, sugar beets, corn, barley, and potatoes, with the most intensive cultivation N of the Loire; the soil in the Central Massif is less fertile. Fruit growing is important in the south. France is among the foremost producers of wine in the world. The best-known vineyards are in Burgundy, Champagne, the Rhône and Loire valleys, and the Bordeaux Bordeaux (bôrdō`), city (1990 pop. 213,274), capital of Gironde dept., SW France, on the Garonne River.
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 region. The centers of the wine trade are Bordeaux, Reims Reims or Rheims (răNs, rēmz), city (1990 pop. 185,164), Marne dept., NE France, in Champagne.
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, Épernay Épernay (āpĕrnā`), town (1990 pop. 27,738), Marne dept., NE France, on the Marne River.
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, Dijon Dijon (dēzhôN`), city (1990 pop. 151,636), capital of Côte-d'Or dept., E France, the old capital of Burgundy .
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, and Cognac Cognac (kônyäk`), city (1990 pop. 19,932), Charente dept., W France, in Angoumois, on the Charente River.
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.

France's leading industries produce machinery, chemicals, automobiles, metals, aircraft, electronics equipment, and foods (especially cheese). Advanced technology industries are growing as well. Tourism is an important industry, and Paris is famous for its luxury goods. In addition to the Paris area, important industrial cities are, in the northeast, Metz Metz (Eng. and Ger. mĕts, Fr. mĕs), city (1990 pop. 123,920), capital of Moselle dept., NE France, on the Moselle River.
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, Strasbourg Strasbourg (sträzbr`), Ger. Strassburg, city (1990 pop.
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, Roubaix Roubaix (rbā`), city (1990 pop. 98,179), Nord dept.
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, and Lille Lille (lēl), city (1990 pop. 178,301), capital of Nord dept., N France, near the Belgian border.
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; in the southeast, Lyons Lyons, Fr. Lyon (both: lyôN`), city (1990 pop. 422,444), capital of Rhône dept.
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, Saint-Étienne Saint-Étienne (săNtātyĕn`), city (1990 pop. 201,569), capital of Loire dept., SE France, in the Massif Central .
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, Clermont-Ferrand Clermont-Ferrand (klĕrmôN`-fĕräN`), city (1990 pop. 140,167), capital of Puy-de-Dôme dept.
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, and Grenoble Grenoble (grənô`blə), city (1990 pop. 153,973), capital of Isère dept.
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; in the south, Marseilles Marseilles (märsā`), Fr. Marseille, city (1990 pop. 807,726), capital of Bouches-du-Rhône dept.
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, Toulouse Toulouse (tl
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, Nice Nice (nēs), city (1990 pop. 345,674), capital of Alpes-Maritimes dept., SE France, on the Mediterranean Sea.
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, and Nîmes Nîmes (nēm), city (1990 pop. 133,607), capital of Gard dept., S France, in Cévennes.
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; and in the west, Bordeaux and Nantes Nantes (näNt), city (1990 pop. 252,029), capital of Loire-Atlantique dept., W France, on the Loire River.
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. Other important cities are Orléans Orléans, city (1990 pop. 107,965), capital of Loiret dept., N central France, on the Loire River. A commercial and transportation center, it has food-processing, tobacco, machine-building, electrical, pharmaceutical, chemical, and textile industries.
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, Tours Tours (tr), city (1990 pop. 133,403), capital of Indre-et-Loire dept.
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, Troyes Troyes (trwä), city (1990 pop. 60,755), capital of Aube dept., NE France, on the Seine River. It is an industrial town.
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, and Arles Arles (ärl), city (1990 pop. 52,543), Bouches-du-Rhône dept., S central France, in Provence , on the Rhône River delta.
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.

More than half of France's trade is with other European Union members. Japan, the United States, and China are also important trading partners. Leading exports are machinery and transportation equipment, chemicals, foodstuffs, agricultural products, iron and steel products, textiles, and clothing. Leading imports are crude oil, machinery and equipment, agricultural products, chemicals, and iron and steel products. Nuclear energy furnishes 75% of all electricity produced in France. The chief ports are Rouen Rouen (räN`), city (1990 pop. 105,470), capital of Seine-Maritime dept.
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, Le Havre Havre, Le (lə ä`vrə), city (1990 pop. 195,932), Seine-Maritime dept.
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, Cherbourg Cherbourg (shĕrbr`), city (1990 pop. 28,773), Manche dept.
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, Brest Brest (brĕst), city (1990 pop. 153,099), Finistère dept., NW France, on an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean.
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, Saint-Nazaire Saint-Nazaire (săN-näzĕr`), city (1990 pop. 66,087), Loire-Atlantique dept.
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, Nantes, Bordeaux, Toulon Toulon (tlôN`), city (1990 pop. 170,167), Var dept.
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, Dunkirk Dunkirk (dŭn`kûrk), Fr. Dunkerque, town (1990 pop. 71,071), Nord dept., N France, on the North Sea.
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, and Marseilles.

France has an extensive railway system, the Société Nationale des Chemins de Fer Français (SNCF). The first of a number of high-speed rail lines (TGVs) was completed in 1983, linking Paris and Lyons. Subsequent lines connected Paris to several other French cities, as well as Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, and, via the Channel Tunnel Channel Tunnel, popularly called the "Chunnel," a three-tunnel railroad connection running under the English Channel, connecting Folkestone, England, and Calais, France. The tunnels are 31 mi (50 km) long. There are two rail tunnels, each 25 ft (7.
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, Great Britain.

The government previously had majority ownership in many commercial banks, some key industries, and various utilities, including the telephone system. There has been recent movement toward privatization, with the government reducing its holdings in many companies, although it still controls energy production, public transportation, and defense industries.

Government

Since the Revolution of 1789, France has had an extremely uniform and centralized administration, although constitutional changes in 2003 now permit greater autonomy to the nation's regions and departments. The country is governed under the 1958 constitution, which established the Fifth French Republic and reflected the views of Charles de Gaulle de Gaulle, Charles (shärl də gōl)
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. It provides for a strong president, directly elected for a five-year term (changed from a seven-year term in 2000). A premier and cabinet, appointed by the president, are responsible to the national assembly, but they are subordinate to the president. Parliament consists of the national assembly and the senate. Deputies to the assembly are elected for five-year terms from single-member districts. Senators are elected for nine-year terms from each department by an electoral college composed of the deputies, district council members, and municipal council members from the department.

Parliament is solely responsible for legislation regarding civil, fiscal, and penal law, electoral law, civil liberties, the budget, and amnesty and labor laws. The president has power of appointment of the prime minister, the executive ministers, high civil servants, and judges. The president presides over the council of ministers, is the commander in chief of the armed forces, and has power to dissolve the national assembly. Major parties include the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), the Socialist Party (PS), the National Front (FN), the Union for French Democracy (UDF), the Communist party (PCF), and the Green party.

France's 22 regions (see above under Land) each have a directly elected regional council, primarily responsible for stimulating economic and social activity. The regions are further divided into 96 departments (not including the four overseas departments), which are governed by a locally elected general council, with one councilor per canton, elected for a six-year term. As a result of constitutional amendments in 2003, regions and departments may seek greater autonomy than was possible previously. Further subdivisions are districts, cantons, and communes. The districts (arrondisements) and cantons have little power. The communes, however, are more powerful because they are responsible for municipal services and are represented in the national government by the mayor.

History

Ancient Gaul to Feudalism

Some of the earliest anthropological and archaeological remains in Europe have been found in France, yet little is known of France before the Roman conquest (1st cent. B.C.). The country was known to the Romans as Gaul Gaul (gôl), Lat. Gallia, ancient designation for the land S and W of the Rhine, W of the Alps, and N of the Pyrenees.
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. It was inhabited largely by Celts 1 One who speaks a Celtic language or who derives ancestry from an area where a Celtic language was spoken; i.e., one from Ireland, the Scottish Hebrides and Highlands, the Isle of Man, Wales, Cornwall, or Brittany.
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, or Gauls, who had mingled with still older populations, and by Basques Basques (băsks), people of N Spain and SW France. There are about 2 million Basques in the three Basque provs.
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 in what became the region of Gascony. Some of the Gallic tribes undoubtedly were Germanic. Settlements on the Mediterranean coast, notably Marseilles, were established by Greek and Phoenician traders (c.600 B.C.), and Provence was colonized by Rome in the 2d cent. B.C. The conquest of Gaul by Julius Caesar (58–51 B.C.; see Gallic Wars Gallic Wars (găl`ĭk), campaigns in Gaul led by Julius Caesar in his two terms as proconsul of Cisalpine Gaul, Transalpine Gaul, and
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) became final with the defeat of Vercingetorix Vercingetorix (vûr'sĭnjĕt`ərĭks), d. 46 B.C., leader of the Gauls, a chieftain of the Arverni.
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. Early in the course of the following five centuries of Roman rule Gaul accepted Latin speech and Roman law, developed a distinct Gallo-Roman civilization, and produced many large and prosperous cities. Lugdunum (Lyons) was the Roman capital.

Christianity, introduced in the 1st cent. A.D., spread rapidly. From the 3d cent., however, the internal decline of the Roman Empire invited barbarian incursions. Among the Germanic tribes that descended upon fertile Gaul, the Visigoths Visigoths (West Goths), division of the Goths, one of the most important groups of Germans . Having settled in the region W of the Black Sea in the 3d cent. A.D., the Goths soon split into two divisions, the Ostrogoths and the Visigoths.
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, Franks Franks, group of Germanic tribes. By the 3d cent. A.D., they were settled along the lower and middle Rhine. The two major divisions were the Salian Franks in the north and the Ripuarian Franks in the south.
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, and Burgundii were the most important. Rome and its governors in Gaul sought, by alliances, to play the barbarians off against each other. Thus Aetius defeated (A.D. 451) the Huns under Attila with the help of the Franks. But in 486 (10 years after the traditional date for the fall of Rome) the Franks, under Clovis I Clovis I (klō`vĭs), c.466–511, Frankish king (481–511), son of Childeric I and founder of the Merovingian monarchy.
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, routed Syagrius, last Roman governor of Gaul. Clovis, who had made himself ruler of all the Franks, then defeated the Visigoths and, after accepting Christianity (496), conquered the Alemanni. He extinguished the Arian heresy (see Arianism Arianism (âr`ēənĭz'əm), Christian heresy founded by Arius in the 4th cent.
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) and founded the dynasty of the Merovingians Merovingians, dynasty of Frankish kings, descended, according to tradition, from Merovech, chief of the Salian Franks , whose son was Childeric I and whose grandson was Clovis I , the founder of the Frankish monarchy.
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—but he failed to provide for the unity of Gaul when, as was customary, he divided his lands among his sons at his death.

Throughout the 6th and 7th cent., Gaul was torn by fratricidal strife between the Merovingian kings of Neustria Neustria (n
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 and of Austrasia Austrasia (ôstrā`zhə), northeastern portion of the Merovingian kingdom of the Franks in the 6th, 7th, and 8th cent.
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, the two realms that ultimately emerged from Clovis's division and were united only for brief periods under a sole ruler. Especially after Dagobert I Dagobert I (dăg`ōbûrt), c.612–c.639, Frankish king, son and successor of King Clotaire II.
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 (d. 639), Merovingian rule sank into indolence, cruelty, and dissipation. Gaul was depopulated, the cities were left in ruins, commerce was destroyed, and the arts and sciences were ignored. In the 8th cent. the only remnant of Roman civilization, the church, was threatened by extinction when the Saracens invaded Gaul.

In the meantime a more rigorous dynasty, the Carolingians Carolingians (kărəlĭn`jēənz), dynasty of Frankish rulers, founded in the 7th cent.
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, had come to rule Austrasia as mayors of the palace in the name of the decadent Merovingian kings, and had united (687) Austrasia with Neustria. In 732, the Carolingian Charles Martel Charles Martel (märtĕl`) [O.Fr.
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 decisively defeated the Saracens between Poitiers and Tours. His son, Pepin the Short Pepin the Short (Pepin III), c.714–768, first Carolingian king of the Franks (751–68), son of Charles Martel and father of Charlemagne . Succeeding his father as mayor of the palace (741), he ruled Neustria, Burgundy, and Provence, while his brother
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, dethroned the last Merovingian in 751 and proclaimed himself king with the sanction of the pope. Pepin's son was Charlemagne Charlemagne (Charles the Great or Charles I) (shär`ləmān) [O.Fr.
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.

Crowned emperor of the West in 800, Charlemagne expanded his lands by conquest. He gave his subjects an efficient administration, created an admirable legal system, and labored for the rebirth of learning, piety, and the arts. But his son, Emperor Louis I Louis I or Louis the Pious, Fr. Louis le Pieux or Louis le Débonnaire, 778–840, emperor of the West (814–40), son and successor of Charlemagne.
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, could not maintain the empire he inherited. At Louis's death (840), his three sons were fighting each other. In 843 the brothers, Charles II Charles II or Charles the Bald, 823–77, emperor of the West (875–77) and king of the West Franks (843–77); son of Emperor Louis I by a second marriage.
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 (Charles the Bald), king of the West Franks, Louis the German Louis the German, c.804–876, king of the East Franks (817–76). When his father, Emperor of the West Louis I , partitioned the empire in 817, Louis received Bavaria and adjacent territories.
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, and Emperor Lothair I Lothair I (lōthâr`), 795–855, emperor of the West (840–55), son and successor of Louis I .
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, redivided their territories (see Verdun, Treaty of Verdun, Treaty of, the partition of Charlemagne's empire among three sons of Louis I , emperor of the West. It was concluded in 843 at Verdun on the Meuse or, possibly, Verdun-sur-le-Doubs, Soâne-et-Loire dept., E France.
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). Charles was recognized as the ruler of the lands that are now France.

The Carolingians had only superficially transcended the economic, social, and political fragmentation of the land. The weakness of central authority was a major reason for the development of feudalism feudalism (fy
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 and the manorial system manorial system (mənôr`ēəl, măn–) or seignorial system
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. Raids by Norsemen Norsemen, name given to the Scandinavian Vikings who raided and settled on the coasts of the European continent in the 9th and 10th cent. They are also referred to as Northmen or Normans.
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, beginning in the late 8th cent., contributed to the decline of royal authority; in 885–86, the Norsemen even besieged Paris. The authority of the kings was increasingly usurped by feudal lords. Among the most powerful of these were the dukes of Aquitaine Aquitaine (ăk`wĭtān, äkētĕn`), Lat. Aquitania, former duchy and kingdom in SW France.
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 and of Burgundy and the counts of Flanders Flanders (flăn`dərz), former county in the Low Countries, extending along the North Sea and W of the Scheldt (Escaut) River.
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, of Toulouse, of Blois Blois (blwä), town (1990 pop. 51,549), capital of Loir-et-Cher dept., central France, in Orléanais, on the Loire River.
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, and of Anjou. In 911 the Norse leader Rollo Rollo (rŏl`ō) or Hrolf
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 was recognized as duke of Normandy.

The Birth of France

When the Carolingian dynasty died out in France, the nobles chose (987) Hugh Capet Hugh Capet (kā`pĭt, kăp`ĭt), c.938–996, king of France (987–96), first of the Capetians .
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 as king. It is from this date that the history of France as a separate kingdom is generally reckoned (see table entitled Rulers of France since 987 Rulers of France since 987

(including dates of reign)


The Capetians
Hugh Capet, 987–96
Robert II (the Pious), son of Hugh Capet, 996–1031
Henry I, son of Robert II, 1031–60
..... Click the link for more information.  for a listing of the kings of France and subsequent French leaders). The early Capetians Capetians (kəpē`shənz), royal house of France that ruled continuously from 987 to 1328; it takes its name from Hugh Capet .
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 were dukes of Francia, a small territory around Paris, and were without power in the rest of France. By unremitting effort they gradually extended their domain, razed the castles of robber barons, and held their own against the great feudatories. Louis VI Louis VI (Louis the Fat), 1081–1137, king of France (1108–37). He succeeded his father, Philip I, with whom he was associated in government from c.1100.
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 (reigned 1108–37) brought this process into full force, and it was continued by Louis VII Louis VII (Louis the Young), c.1120–1180, king of France (1137–80), son and successor of King Louis VI. Before his accession he married Eleanor of Aquitaine .
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 (1137–80).

In the 11th cent. the towns had begun regaining population and wealth. Drawing together for their common defense (see commune commune (kôm`y
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), the townspeople won increasingly advantageous charters from the king and from their feudal lords. Commerce revived, and the great fairs of Champagne made France a meeting place for European merchants. The Cluniac order Cluniac order (kl
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 and the revival of theological learning at Paris (which was to make the Sorbonne Sorbonne (sôrbôn`), first endowed college in the Univ.
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 the fountainhead of scholasticism scholasticism (skōlăs`tĭsĭzəm), philosophy and theology of Western Christendom in the Middle Ages.
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) gave France tremendous prestige in Christendom. This rebirth reached its height in the 13th cent. and was aided by the leading role that France played in the Crusades Crusades (kr
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. The crusaders established the French ideal of chivalry—personified in Louis IX Louis IX or Saint Louis, 1214–70, king of France (1226–70), son and successor of Louis VIII. His mother, Blanche of Castile , was regent during his minority (1226–34), and her regency probably lasted even after Louis reached
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 (St. Louis)—in most of Europe. French courtly poetry and manners became European models.

In England, French manners and culture also predominated among the nobles because of the Norman Conquest (1066). The fact that the Norman English kings were also French nobles, holding or claiming vast fiefs in France, brought the two nations into centuries of conflict. When Henry II Henry II, 1133–89, king of England (1154–89), son of Matilda , queen of England, and Geoffrey IV , count of Anjou. He was the founder of the Angevin , or Plantagenet, line in England and one of the ablest and most remarkable of the English kings.
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, king of England and duke of Normandy, married (1152) Eleanor of Aquitaine Eleanor of Aquitaine (ăkwĭtān`, ăk`wĭtān)
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, the divorced wife of Louis VII of France, Eleanor brought as her dowry extensive areas in France. Louis's successor, Philip II Philip II or Philip Augustus, 1165–1223, king of France (1180–1223), son of Louis VII. During his reign the royal domains were more than doubled, and the royal power was consolidated at the expense of the feudal lords.
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 (Philip Augustus; 1180–1223), clashed repeatedly with Henry's sons, Richard I and John. Defeating John in 1204 and again, resoundingly, at Bouvines Bouvines (bvēn`), village, Nord dept., N France, in Flanders.
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 (1214), Philip soundly established the military prestige of France.

During Philip's reign a greater France emerged. The crusade against the Albigenses Albigenses (ălbĭjĕn`sēz) [Lat.,=people of Albi, one of their centers], religious sect of S France in the Middle Ages.
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 (begun 1208) netted the crown the huge fiefs of the counts of Toulouse in S France, and the royal domain (directly subject to the king) now formed the larger part of the kingdom. Philip made the royal authority felt throughout the land. Paris was rebuilt. Louis IX (1226–70) organized an efficient and equitable civil and judicial system. Under Philip IV Philip IV (Philip the Fair), 1268–1314, king of France (1285–1314), son and successor of Philip III. The policies of his reign greatly strengthened the French monarchy and increased the royal revenues.
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 (1285–1314), the royal administration was improved even more. Philip failed to incorporate Flanders into his holdings, as the Flemish crushed the French at Courtrai (1302). To meet his revenue needs Philip taxed the clergy, summoning the first national States-General States-General or Estates-General, diet or national assembly in which the chief estates (see estate ) of a nation—usually clergy, nobles, and towns (or commons)—were represented as separate bodies.
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 (1302) to support his policy. He also destroyed the wealthy Knights Templars Knights Templars (tĕm`plərz)
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. Papal objections to these moves led to the Babylonian Captivity (1309–77) of the popes (see papacy papacy (pā`pəsē), office of the pope, head of the Roman Catholic Church.
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).

Philip's son, Louis X Louis X, Fr. Louis le Hutin (lwē lə ütâN`)
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, ruled briefly (1314–16); he was succeeded by two brothers, Philip V Philip V (Philip the Tall), c.1294–1322, king of France (1317–22), son of King Philip IV. He became regent in 1316 on the death of his brother Louis X, who was survived by his pregnant wife and infant daughter.
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 (1317–22) and Charles IV Charles IV (Charles the Fair), 1294–1328, king of France (1322–28), youngest son of Philip IV, brother and successor of Philip V. Charles continued his brother's work of strengthening the royal power.
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 (1322–28). Within a few years after the death of Charles IV, who was also without a male heir, progress toward national unification was halted, and for more than a century France was rent by warfare and internal upheaval.

The Making of a Nation

In 1328, Philip VI Philip VI, 1293–1350, king of France (1328–50), son of Charles of Valois and grandson of King Philip III. He succeeded his cousin Charles IV, invoking the Salic law to set aside both Charles's daughter and King Edward III of England, the son of Charles's
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 (1328–50), of the house of Valois Valois (välwä`), royal house of France that ruled from 1328 to 1589.
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, a younger branch of the Capetians, succeeded to the throne. The succession was contested by Philip's remote cousin, Edward III Edward III, 1312–77, king of England (1327–77), son of Edward II and Isabella .

Early Life



He was made earl of Chester in 1320 and duke of Aquitaine in 1325 and accompanied his mother to France in 1325.
..... Click the link for more information.  of England (grandson of Philip IV), who in 1337 proclaimed himself king of France. Thus began the dynastic struggle known as the Hundred Years War Hundred Years War, 1337–1453, conflict between England and France.

Causes



Its basic cause was a dynastic quarrel that originated when the conquest of England by William of Normandy created a state lying on both sides of the English Channel.
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 (1337–1453), actually a series of wars and truces. It was complicated by many secondary issues, notably civil troubles in Flanders and the War of the Breton Succession Breton Succession, War of the, 1341–65, an important episode of the Hundred Years War . Duke John III of Brittany died in 1341 without heirs. The succession was contested by his half brother, John de Montfort, who was backed by Edward III of England, and by
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.

The French defeats at Crécy Crécy (krāsē`), officially Crécy-en-Ponthieu
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 (1346) and Poitiers Poitiers (pwätyā`), city (1990 pop. 82,507), capital of Vienne dept., W central France, on the Clain River.
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 (1356), the epidemic of the Black Death, the Parisian insurrection under Étienne Marcel Marcel, Étienne (ātyĕn` märsĕl`), d. 1358, French bourgeois leader, provost of the merchants of Paris.
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 (1357–58), the Jacquerie Jacquerie (zhäk'ərē`) [Fr.
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 (peasant revolt) of 1358, and the pillaging bands of écorcheurs plunged France into anarchy and forced John II John II (John the Good), 1319–64, king of France (1350–64), son and successor of King Philip VI. An inept ruler, he began his reign by executing the constable of France (whose office he gave to his favorite, Charles de La Cerda) and by appointing
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 (1350–64) to accept the humiliating Treaty of Brétigny Brétigny, Treaty of (brātēnyē`)
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 (1360). Under Charles V Charles V (Charles the Wise), 1338–80, king of France (1364–80). Son of King John II , Charles became the first French heir apparent to bear the title of dauphin after the addition of the region of Dauphiné to the royal domain in 1349.
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 (1364–80), however, Bertrand Du Guesclin Du Guesclin, Bertrand (bĕrträN` dü gĕklăN`), c.
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 recovered (1369–73) all lost territories except Calais and the Bordeaux region. Charles VI Charles VI (Charles the Mad or Charles the Well Beloved), 1368–1422, king of France (1380–1422), son and successor of King Charles V. During his minority he was under the tutelage of his uncles (particularly Philip the Bold , duke of Burgundy), whose
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 (1380–1422) became insane in 1392, although he had lucid intervals. Rivalry for power at court led to the terrible strife between Armagnacs and Burgundians Armagnacs and Burgundians, opposing factions that fought to control France in the early 15th cent. The rivalry for power between Louis d' Orléans , brother of the recurrently insane King Charles VI, and his cousin John the Fearless , duke of Burgundy, led to
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. In 1415, Henry V Henry V, 1387–1422, king of England (1413–22), son and successor of Henry IV .

Early Life



Henry was probably brought up under the care of his uncle, Henry Beaufort .
..... Click the link for more information.  of England revived the English claim, renewed the war, and crushed the French—unaided by the Burgundians—at Agincourt Agincourt (äzhăNkr`), modern Fr.
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. In 1420, Charles VI made Henry V his heir, disinheriting his son, the dauphin, later Charles VII Charles VII (Charles the Well Served), 1403–61, king of France (1422–61), son and successor of Charles VI. His reign saw the end of the Hundred Years War .
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 (see Troyes, Treaty of). The dauphin nevertheless assumed the royal title in 1422, but his authority extended over only a small area.

The English now held most of France, including Paris. Powerful Burgundy, under Philip the Good Philip the Good, 1396–1467, duke of Burgundy (1419–67); son of Duke John the Fearless. After his father was murdered (1419) at a meeting with the dauphin (later King Charles VII of France), Philip formed an alliance with King Henry V of England.
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, was allied with England. In 1428 the English besieged the key city of Orléans. At this hour appeared Joan of Arc Joan of Arc, Fr. Jeanne D'Arc (zhän därk), 1412?–31, French saint and national heroine, called the Maid of Orléans; daughter of a farmer of Domrémy on the border of Champagne and Lorraine.
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, who helped relieve Orléans, rallied the dauphin's followers, and in 1429 stood by the dauphin's side as he was crowned at Reims. In 1435, Burgundy, although exacting exorbitant concessions, allied itself with France (see Arras, Treaty of Arras, Treaty of.

1 Treaty of 1435, between King Charles VII of France and Duke Philip the Good of Burgundy. Through it, France and Burgundy became reconciled. Philip deserted his English allies and recognized Charles as king of France.
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). In 1453 the English lost their last hold on French soil outside Calais Calais (kälā`), city (1990 pop. 78,836), Pas-de-Calais dept., N France, in Picardy, on the Straits of Dover.
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.

It was left for Louis XI Louis XI, 1423–83, king of France (1461–83), son and successor of Charles VII.

Early Life



As dauphin Louis was almost constantly in revolt against his father.
..... Click the link for more information.  (1461–83) to destroy the power of the last great feudal lords and to incorporate into the royal domain almost all of present France. He was aided by the downfall (1477) of Charles the Bold Charles the Bold, 1433–77, last reigning duke of Burgundy (1467–77), son and successor of Philip the Good . As the count of Charolais before his accession, he opposed the growing power of King Louis XI of France by joining (1465) the League of Public Weal.
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 of Burgundy and by the extinction of the Angevin Angevin (ăn`jəvĭn) [Fr.,=of Anjou], name of two medieval dynasties originating in France.
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 dynasty. Brittany was united with France shortly afterward (see Anne of Brittany Anne of Brittany, 1477–1514, queen of France as consort of Charles VIII from 1491 to 1498 and consort of Louis XII from 1499 until her death. The daughter of Duke Francis II of Brittany, she was heiress to his duchy.
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), and the larger part of the fiefs held by the Bourbon Bourbon (b
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 family was confiscated in 1527.

Under the reigns (1483–1560) of Charles VIII Charles VIII, 1470–98, king of France (1483–98), son and successor of Louis XI. He first reigned under the regency of his sister Anne de Beaujeu .
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, Louis XII Louis XII, 1462–1515, king of France (1498–1515), son of Charles, duc d' Orléans . He succeeded his father as duke. While still duke, he rebelled against the regency of Anne de Beaujeu and was imprisoned (1488), but was released (1491) by his
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, Francis I Francis I, 1494–1547, king of France (1515–47), known as Francis of Angoulême before he succeeded his cousin and father-in-law, King Louis XII.
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, Henry II Henry II, 1519–59, king of France (1547–59), son of King Francis I. His robust physique contrasted with his weak and pliant disposition. Throughout his reign he was governed by Anne de Montmorency , by his mistress Diane de Poitiers , and by
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, and Francis II Francis II, 1544–60, king of France (1559–60), son of King Henry II and Catherine de' Medici. He married (1558) Mary Queen of Scots (Mary Stuart), and during his brief reign the government was in the hands of her uncles, François and Charles de
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, France proved its amazing recuperative powers despite the heavy drain imposed on its resources by the Italian Wars Italian Wars, 1494–1559, series of regional wars brought on by the efforts of the great European powers to control the small independent states of Italy.
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 (1494–1559). The superficially brilliant reign of Francis I (1515–47) was taken up with almost constant warfare against the Hapsburg Charles V; however, this period also saw the spread of the Italian Renaissance into France (see French art French art, the artistic production of the region that constitutes the historic nation of France. See also French architecture .

Early History


..... Click the link for more information. ; French literature French literature, writings in medieval French dialects and standard modern French. Writings in Provençal and Breton are considered separately, as are works in French produced abroad (as at Canadian literature, French ).
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). The first phase of the struggle between France and the house of Hapsburg ended with the triumph of Hapsburg Spain in the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis Cateau-Cambrésis, Treaty of (kätō`-käNbrāzē`)
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 (1559).

The Reformation and its Aftermath

Beginning in the reign of Francis I, the Reformation gained many adherents in France (see Huguenots Huguenots (hy`gənŏts), French Protestants, followers of John Calvin .
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). In 1560 religious conflict flared up in the first of the ferocious civil wars (see Religion, Wars of Religion, Wars of, 1562–98, series of civil wars in France, also known as the Huguenot Wars.

The immediate issue was the French Protestants' struggle for freedom of worship and the right of establishment (see Huguenots ).
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) that tore France asunder during the reigns (1560–89) of the last Valois kings, Charles IX Charles IX, 1550–74, king of France. He succeeded (1560) his brother Francis II under the regency of his mother, Catherine de' Medici . She retained her influence throughout his reign.
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 and Henry III Henry III, 1551–89, king of France (1574–89); son of King Henry II and Catherine de' Medici. He succeeded his brother, Charles IX. As a leader of the royal army in the Wars of Religion (see Religion, Wars of ) against the French Protestants, or Huguenots,
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. The Catholics, led by the ambitious Guise Louis de Lorraine, Cardinal de Guise, 1555–88, was killed at the same time as Henri. After their deaths the leadership of the League devolved upon their brother, Charles, duc de Mayenne .
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 family, eventually formed the Catholic League League or Holy League, in French history, organization of Roman Catholics, aimed at the suppression of Protestantism and Protestant political influence in France.
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 and obtained Spanish support against the Protestant Henry of Navarre, the legal heir of Henry III. Navarre was supported by some moderate Catholics as well as by the Protestants. He defeated the League but had to accept Catholicism before being allowed to enter (1594) Paris. Ruling as Henry IV Henry IV, 1553–1610, king of France (1589–1610) and, as Henry III, of Navarre (1572–1610), son of Antoine de Bourbon and Jeanne d'Albret ; first of the Bourbon kings of France.
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, he became the first Bourbon king of France. With his great minister, Sully Sully, Maximilien de Béthune, duc de (mäksēmēlyăN` də bātün` dük də sülē`)
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, he made France prosperous once again and encouraged French explorers in Canada.

Religious freedom and political security for Protestants were promulgated in the Edict of Nantes (1598; see Nantes, Edict of), but after Henry's assassination (1610) by a Catholic fanatic the rights of the Huguenots were steadily reduced. Under his successor, Louis XIII Louis XIII, 1601–43, king of France (1610–43). He succeeded his father, Henry IV , under the regency of his mother, Marie de' Medici . He married Anne of Austria in 1615.
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 (1610–43), and in the minority of Louis XIV, two great statesmen successively shaped the destiny of the kingdom—Cardinal Richelieu Richelieu, Armand Jean du Plessis, duc de (Cardinal Richelieu)
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 and Cardinal Mazarin Mazarin, Jules (zhül mäzärăN`), 1602–61, French statesman, cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, b. Italy.
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. They led France to victory in the Thirty Years War Thirty Years War, 1618–48, general European war fought mainly in Germany.

General Character of the War



There were many territorial, dynastic, and religious issues that figured in the outbreak and conduct of the war.
..... Click the link for more information.  (1618–48), which France entered openly in 1635, joining the Protestant allies against the Hapsburg powers, Austria and Spain. Austria was defeated in 1648 (see Westphalia, Peace of Westphalia, Peace of, 1648, general settlement ending the Thirty Years War . It marked the end of the Holy Roman Empire as an effective institution and inaugurated the modern European state system.
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), Spain in 1659 (see Pyrenees, Peace of the Pyrenees, Peace of the, 1659, treaty ending the warfare between France and Spain that, continuing after the Peace of Westphalia, had been complicated by French intervention in the revolt of the Catalans (1640–52) and by Spanish intervention in the Fronde .
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). At home, Richelieu destroyed the political power of the Huguenots, and Mazarin overcame the nobles in the wars of the Fronde Fronde (frôNd), 1648–53, series of outbreaks during the minority of King Louis XIV, caused by the efforts of the Parlement of
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.

Louis XIV Louis XIV, 1638–1715, king of France (1643–1715), son and successor of King Louis XIII.

Early Reign



After his father's death his mother, Anne of Austria , was regent for Louis, but the real power was wielded by Anne's adviser, Cardinal
..... Click the link for more information.  (1643–1715), aided by the genius of Jean Baptiste Colbert Colbert, Jean Baptiste (zhäN bätēst` kôlbĕr`), 1619–83, French statesman.
..... Click the link for more information.
 (d. 1683) and François Louvois Louvois, François Michel Le Tellier, marquis de
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, completed Richelieu's and Mazarin's work of centralization. Raising the position of the king to a dignity and prestige hitherto unknown in France, Louis XIV made France the first power in Europe and his court at Versailles Versailles (vərsī`, Fr. vĕrsī`), city (1990 pop. 91,029), capital of Yvelines dept., N central France.
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 the cynosure of Europe. But his many wars undermined French finances, and his persecution of the Huguenots (the Edict of Nantes was revoked in 1685) caused serious harm to the economy as thousands of merchants and skilled workers left France. His successes in the War of Devolution Devolution, War of, 1667–68, undertaken by Louis XIV for the conquest of the Spanish Netherlands. On her marriage to Louis, Marie Thérèse, daughter of Philip IV of Spain, had renounced her rights of inheritance in return for a large dowry.
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 (1667–68) against Spain and the Dutch War (see Dutch Wars Dutch Wars, series of conflicts between the English and Dutch during the mid to late 17th cent. The wars had their roots in the Anglo-Dutch commercial rivalry, although the last of the three wars was a wider conflict in which French interests played a primary role.
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) of 1672–78 inspired all Europe with fear of French hegemony and resulted in the diplomatic isolation of France. The War of the Grand Alliance Grand Alliance, War of the, 1688–97, war between France and a coalition of European powers, known as the League of Augsburg (and, after 1689, as the Grand Alliance).
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 (1688–97) against Louis XIV began to turn the tide; the War of the Spanish Succession Spanish Succession, War of the, 1701–14, last of the general European wars caused by the efforts of King Louis XIV to extend French power. The conflict in America corresponding to the period of the War of the Spanish Succession was known as Queen Anne's War
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 (1701–14), although it did not end with a clear victory over France, marked the end of French expansion in Europe. The reign of Louis XIV saw the height of French power in America. France, at the end of Louis's reign, was exhausted from its attempt at primacy; yet its latent strength and wealth were so great that it recovered prosperity within a few years.

The Ancien Régime and Attempts at Reform

Louis XV Louis XV, 1710–74, king of France (1715–74), great-grandson and successor of King Louis XIV, son of Louis , titular duke of Burgundy, and Marie Adelaide of Savoy.
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 (1715–74) inherited a unified France, but a France still burdened by the remnants of feudalism. The "absolute" power of the king was hedged in by a stupendous multitude of dusty charters and special privileges—often granted to remove the recipients from national politics—held by families, guilds, monopolies, communes, and provinces, and by the clergy and nobles. Taxes, although onerous, were raised inefficiently and inequitably, partly by the farmers general (see farming farming, in the history of taxation , collection of taxes through private contractors. Usually, the tax farmer paid a lump sum to the public treasury; the difference between that sum and the sum actually collected represented his profit or loss.
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, in taxation), partly by the state. Commerce, based on mercantilism mercantilism (mûr`kəntĭlĭzəm), economic system of the major trading nations during the 16th, 17th, and 18th cent.
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, was hampered by restrictive regulations, monopolies, and internal tariff barriers. Rural overpopulation outstripped the stagnant agricultural productivity. Colbert had reorganized the administration by curtailing the power of the provincial governors and by reestablishing the administrative units called intendancies, originated by Richelieu. The intendants were trusted civil servants who carried out the policies of the central government, but their capacity to break down local privilege was limited. In several provinces, notably Brittany, the local assemblies of the three estates retained the power to thwart reforms.

A more significant stronghold of aristocratic privilege and vested interests was the parlement parlement (pär`ləmənt, Fr.
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; the parlements skillfully related their special interests to the still popular ideal of local liberty. The ever-expanding bourgeoisie as well as the large body of landowning farmers, however, were finding the remnants of feudal dues, services, and other customs increasingly intolerable. Economic reform became the rallying cry of the physiocrats physiocrats (fĭz`ēəkrăts'), school of French thinkers in the 18th cent. who evolved the first complete system of economics.
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 and their disciples such as Turgot Turgot, Anne Robert Jacques (än rōbĕr` zhäk türgō`)
..... Click the link for more information.
. Many philosophers of the Enlightenment Enlightenment, term applied to the mainstream of thought of 18th-century Europe and America.

Background and Basic Tenets



The scientific and intellectual developments of the 17th cent.
..... Click the link for more information. , notably Voltaire Voltaire, François Marie Arouet de (fräNswä` märē` ärwā` də vôltĕr`)
..... Click the link for more information.
, looked hopefully to the monarchy for administrative rationalization, but the crown's sporadic attempts at reform, particularly of finances, were hindered by the parlements. Operating under a system of outworn privilege, the wealthiest country in Europe was ruled by a government perennially on the verge of bankruptcy.

The honest administration (1726–43) of Cardinal Fleury Fleury, André Hercule de (äNdrā` ĕrkül` də flörē`)
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 had barely extricated France from the disastrous failure of the Mississippi Scheme Mississippi Scheme, plan formulated by John Law for the colonization and commercial exploitation of the Mississippi valley and other French colonial areas. In 1717 the French merchant Antoine Crozat transferred his monopoly of commercial privileges in Louisiana to
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 (1720), when Louis XV plunged into the War of the Austrian Succession 2)) was signed. Prussia gained Silesia and thus emerged as a major European power; the Hapsburgs thenceforth looked to the east for resources to develop their state.

Bibliography



See biography by E. Crankshaw, Maria Theresa (1970); C. A.
..... Click the link for more information.  (1740–48) and the Seven Years War Seven Years War, 1756–63, worldwide war fought in Europe, North America, and India between France, Austria, Russia, Saxony, Sweden, and (after 1762) Spain on the one side and Prussia, Great Britain, and Hanover on the other.
..... Click the link for more information.
 (1756–63). Not only was the treasury drained, but France lost its empire in India and North America. Turgot's reforms, instituted early in the reign of Louis XVI Louis XVI, 1754–93, king of France (1774–92), third son of the dauphin (Louis) and Marie Josèphe of Saxony, grandson and successor of King Louis XV. In 1770 he married the Austrian archduchess Marie Antoinette .
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 (1774–92), were cut short in 1776, when he was dismissed. Seeking to avenge its defeat by Britain in the Seven Years War, France supported the American Revolution (1775–83). Financially, however, the war was a disaster for France.

The Revolution and Napoleon I

In 1788, after neither Calonne Calonne, Charles Alexandre de (shärl älĕksäN`drə də kälōn`)
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 nor Loménie de Brienne Loménie de Brienne, Étienne Charles (ātyĕn` shärl lōmānē` də brēĕn`)
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 could get the necessary financial measures enacted, Necker Necker, Jacques (zhäk nĕkĕr`), 1732–1804, French financier and statesman, b. Geneva, Switzerland.
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 was called back to office to attempt to repair the irreparable, and the States-General were convoked for the first time since 1614. Thus began the upheaval that shook Europe from 1789 to 1815 (see French Revolution French Revolution, political upheaval of world importance in France that began in 1789.

Origins of the Revolution



Historians disagree in evaluating the factors that brought about the Revolution.
..... Click the link for more information. ; French Revolutionary Wars; Directory Directory, group of five men who held the executive power in France according to the constitution of the year III (1795) of the French Revolution . They were chosen by the new legislature, by the Council of Five Hundred and the Council of Ancients; each year one
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; Consulate Consulate, 1799–1804, in French history, form of government established after the coup of 18 Brumaire (Nov. 9–10, 1799), which ended the Directory .
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; Napoleon I Napoleon I (nəpō`lēən, Fr. näpôlāōN`), 1769–1821, emperor of the French, b.
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). The States-General were transformed into the National Assembly (1789); a constitutional monarchy was created (1791); war with much of Europe began, accompanied by violence and the growth of radical factions in France (1792); the king and queen were beheaded (1793); Robespierre Robespierre, Maximilien Marie Isidore (mäksēmēlyăN` märē` ēzēdôr` rôbĕspyĕr`)
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 presided over the Reign of Terror Reign of Terror, 1793–94, period of the French Revolution characterized by a wave of executions of presumed enemies of the state. Directed by the Committee of Public Safety, the Revolutionary government's Terror was essentially a war dictatorship, instituted to
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 (1793–94) until his own execution.

A reaction ushered in the Directory (1795–99), terminated by Napoleon Bonaparte's coup. Napoleon made himself emperor (1804) and led his armies as far as Moscow. After his defeat at Waterloo (1815) virtually nothing remained for France from the Napoleonic conquests except the basis for a powerful legend. But Napoleonic administration and law (see Code Napoléon Code Napoléon (kôd näpôlāôN`) or Code Civil
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) left a permanent impact on France. From the ancien régime there reemerged the church (1801 Concordat with the Vatican) and an aristocracy less affluent and shorn of its feudal privileges but still influential.

Royalism, Reform, and the Birth of Modern France

The French Revolution and Napoleon established a uniform, modern administrative system, gave land tenure to the peasants, and left to the bourgeoisie a political heritage that they quickly reclaimed. The Congress of Vienna (1814–15; see Vienna, Congress of Vienna, Congress of, Sept., 1814–June, 1815, one of the most important international conferences in European history, called to remake Europe after the downfall of Napoleon I.
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) restored the borders of 1790 and recognized Louis XVIII Louis XVIII, 1755–1824, king of France (1814–24), brother of King Louis XVI . Known as the comte de Provence, he fled (1791) to Koblenz from the French Revolution and intrigued to bring about foreign intervention against the revolutionaries.
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 as France's legitimate sovereign. The king granted a moderately liberal charter but took France into the reactionary Holy Alliance Holy Alliance, 1815, agreement among the emperors of Russia and Austria and the king of Prussia, signed on Sept. 26. It was quite distinct from the Quadruple Alliance (Quintuple, after the admission of France) of Great Britain, Russia, Austria, and Prussia, arrived
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. His successor, Charles X Charles X, 1757–1836, king of France (1824–30); brother of King Louis XVI and of King Louis XVIII, whom he succeeded. As comte d'Artois he headed the reactionary faction at the court of Louis XVI.
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 (1824–30), was the champion of the ultraroyalists.

Charles's efforts to restore absolutism led to the July Revolution July Revolution, revolt in France in July, 1830, against the government of King Charles X . The attempt of the ultraroyalists under Charles to return to the ancien régime provoked the opposition of the middle classes, who wanted more voice in the government.
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 of 1830, which enthroned Louis Philippe Louis Philippe (lwē fēlēp`)
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. The July Monarchy was a frank plutocracy run by the upper bourgeoisie. Under the "citizen king," France conquered Algeria (1830–38). The regime became increasingly autocratic, disregarding the plight of the new urban proletariat. Brought low by the unpopularity of the ministry of Guizot Guizot, François (fräNswä` gēzō`), 1787–1874, French statesman and historian.
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 and by economic depression (1846–47), it fell in the February Revolution February Revolution, 1848, French revolution that overthrew the monarchy of Louis Philippe and established the Second Republic. General dissatisfaction resulted partly from the king's increasingly reactionary policy, carried out after 1840 by François Guizot ,
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 of 1848. The revolution was at first distinctly radical, but the bourgeoisie triumphed in the June Days June Days, in French history, name usually given to the insurrection of workers in June, 1848. The working classes had played an important role in the February Revolution of 1848, but their hopes for economic and social reform were disappointed.
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.

In Dec., 1848, Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew of Napoleon I, was elected president of the Second Republic. In 1852, by a coup, he extended his term and then proclaimed himself emperor as Napoleon III Napoleon III (Louis Napoleon Bonaparte), 1808–73, emperor of the French (1852–70), son of Louis Bonaparte (see under Bonaparte , family), king of Holland.
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. He emulated his uncle's autocratic regime at home and carried on a confused foreign policy with unrewarding wars (in Russia, Italy, and Mexico). The Second Empire was, however, a period of colonial expansion (in Senegal and Indochina) and of material prosperity. In 1869, Napoleon instituted a more liberal regime with a parliamentary government. But the empire ended disastrously in the Franco-Prussian War Franco-Prussian War or Franco-German War, 1870–71, conflict between France and Prussia that signaled the rise of German military power and imperialism.
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 (1870–71), in which Alsace and Lorraine were lost to Germany until 1918.

The Third Republic (1870–1940) was proclaimed after Napoleon III was captured by the Prussians. After the bloody suppression of the Commune of Paris Commune of Paris, insurrectionary governments in Paris formed during (1792) the French Revolution and at the end (1871) of the Franco-Prussian War . In the French Revolution, the Revolutionary commune, representing urban workers, tradespeople, and radical bourgeois,
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 (1871) by the right-wing provisional government under Adolphe Thiers Thiers, Adolphe (ädôlf` tyĕr), 1797–1877, French statesman, journalist, and historian.
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, Marshal MacMahon MacMahon, Marie Edmé Patrice de (märē` ĕdmā` pätrēs` də mäkmäōN`)
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, a royalist sympathizer, was elected president (1873). But for the intransigence of Henri, comte de Chambord (the legitimist pretender), France might again have become a monarchy. A republican constitution was finally adopted in 1875. As the various parties combined, separated, and recombined into political blocs, new cabinets followed in quick succession.

The 1880s witnessed the expansion of railroads and public education; the latter revived the age-old quarrel in France between church and state. In 1905, after other issues had been added to the dispute, church and state were separated by law. After the rapid rise and fall (1888–89) of General Boulanger Boulanger, Georges Ernest (zhôrzh ĕrnĕst` b
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, the stability of France was once more shaken by the Dreyfus Affair Dreyfus Affair (drā`fəs, drī–), the controversy that occurred with the treason conviction (1894) of Capt.
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 (begun 1894), which discredited monarchists and reactionaries and brought anticlerical, moderate leftists to power. Socialism, led by Guesde Guesde, Jules (zhül gĕd), 1845–1922, French socialist, whose original name was Basile.
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 and Jaurès Jaurès, Jean (zhäN zhōrĕs`), 1859–1914, French Socialist leader and historian.
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, was now a major political force but was weakened by internal dissensions. In foreign policy the years before 1914 were marked by continued colonial expansion in Africa (Morocco, Tunisia, West Africa, Madagascar) and Indochina, bringing conflict with Great Britain (see Fashoda Incident Fashoda Incident (fəshō`də), 1898, diplomatic dispute between France and Great Britain. Toward the end of the 19th cent.
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) and with Germany (see Morocco Morocco (mərŏk`ō), officially Kingdom of Morocco, kingdom (2005 est. pop. 32,726,000), 171,834 sq mi (445,050 sq km), NW Africa.
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). Eventually, France, England, and Russia allied themselves to balance the German-Austrian-Italian combination (see Triple Alliance and Triple Entente Triple Alliance and Triple Entente (äntänt`)
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).

The World Wars

In World War I, France bore the brunt of the ground fighting in the west. Clemenceau Clemenceau, Georges (zhôrzh klāmäNsō`)
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 was France's outstanding leader. At the Paris Peace Conference (see Versailles, Treaty of) France obtained heavy German reparations and the right to occupy the left bank of the Rhine for 15 years. When reparations payments were defaulted, France occupied the Ruhr Ruhr (rr), region, c.
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 (1923–25).

Outstanding among French political figures of the 1920s were Poincaré Poincaré, Raymond (rāmôN` pwăNkärā`)
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, Herriot Herriot, Édouard (ādwär` ĕryō`), 1872–1957, French statesman and man of letters.
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, and Briand Briand, Aristide (ärēstēd` brēäN`), 1862–1932, French statesman.
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. By the middle of the decade relations with Germany had improved (see Locarno Pact Locarno Pact, 1925, concluded at a conference held at Locarno, Switzerland, by representatives of Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, and Poland.
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). The depression of the 1930s was aggravated by the immobile economic policies of the government, and political complacency was rocked by the Stavisky Affair Stavisky Affair (stävēskē`), financial and political scandal that shook France in 1934.
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 (1934). The Popular Front, a coalition led by Léon Blum Blum, Léon (lāôN` bl
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, of Socialists, Radical Socialists, and Communists, won the elections of 1936; Popular Front governments (1936–38) enacted important social and labor reforms before being overturned by conservative opposition.

After Blum's fall, Édouard Daladier Daladier, Édouard (ād
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 assented to the appeasement policy toward Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Spain favored by Britain and made France a party to the Munich Pact Munich Pact, 1938. In the summer of 1938, Chancellor Hitler of Germany began openly to support the demands of Germans living in the Sudetenland (see Sudetes ) of Czechoslovakia for an improved status.
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 (1938). After the outbreak (1939) of World War II he was replaced by Paul Reynaud Reynaud, Paul (pōl rānō`), 1878–1966, French statesman and lawyer. He held several cabinet posts, and after Nov.
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. In May–June, 1940, France was ignominiously defeated by Germany. Marshal Pétain Pétain, Henri Philippe (äNrē` fēlēp` pātăN`)
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 became head of the Vichy government (see under Vichy Vichy government was the regime set up there by Marshal Henri Pétain in July, 1940, subsequent to the Franco-German armistice of June 22. Its effective control extended only to unoccupied France and its colonies.
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) of unoccupied France (other Vichy leaders were Laval Laval, Pierre (pyĕr läväl`), 1883–1945, French politician.
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 and Darlan Darlan, Jean François (zhäN fräNswä` därläN`), 1881–1942, French admiral.
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), which became a German tool, while Gen. Charles de Gaulle proclaimed, from London, the continued resistance of the "Free French." The Allied invasion (Nov., 1942) of North Africa resulted (1943) in the establishment of a provisional Free French government at Algiers and in the complete German occupation of metropolitan France. De Gaulle's government moved to Paris after the city was liberated (Aug., 1944).

By the end of 1944 the Allies, with heroic aid from the French resistance, had expelled the Germans from France. German occupation had been costly and oppressive. Thousands had been executed and hundreds of thousands made slave laborers in Germany. The liberation campaign itself caused much destruction. Although reduced in power and prestige, France became one of the five great powers in the United Nations and shared in the occupation of Germany. De Gaulle became provisional president.

The Fourth Republic and Postwar France

The Fourth Republic was officially proclaimed in 1946; the new constitution reorganized the empire as the French Union French Union, 1946–58, political entity established by the French constitution of 1946. It comprised metropolitan France (the 90 departments of continental France and Corsica); French overseas departments, territories, settlements, and United Nations
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 and was otherwise quite similar to that of the Third Republic. In the immediate postwar years the Communists, notably Maurice Thorez Thorez, Maurice (mōrēs` tôrĕz`), 1900–1964, French Communist leader.
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, a major figure in the PCF and a fixture in government throughout the Fourth Republic and into the Fifth, the moderate Mouvement Républicain Populaire, founded by Georges Bidault Bidault, Georges (zhôrzh bēdō`), 1899–1983, French political leader.
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, and the Socialists were the strongest of the many political parties; the pattern of short-lived coalitions reappeared. Banks and major industries were nationalized. American aid (see Marshall Plan Marshall Plan or European Recovery Program, project instituted at the Paris Economic Conference (July, 1947) to foster economic recovery in certain European countries after World War II. The Marshall Plan took form when U.S.
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) helped rebuild the shattered economy. To further economic recovery and begin the political integration of Europe, France participated in creating the institutions of what has become the European Union European Community (EC), an economic and political confederation of European nations, and other organizations (with the same member nations) that are responsible for a common foreign and security policy and for cooperation on justice and home affairs.
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, most notably the European Economic Community (Common Market).

French military resources were committed to the West by joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Partnership for Peace, formed in 1994. Twenty-three countries now belong to the partnership, which engages in joint military exercises with NATO. NATO is not required to defend Partnership for Peace nations from attack.
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 (NATO). France sent thousands of soldiers to Indochina Indochina, Fr. Indochine, former federation of states, SE Asia. It comprised the French colony of Cochin China and the French protectorates of Tonkin , Annam , Laos , and Cambodia (Cochin China, Tonkin, and Annam were later united to form Vietnam ).
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 in an attempt to defeat the nationalist-Communist movement led by the Vietnamese Ho Chi Minh Ho Chi Minh (hô chē mĭn)
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. The effort collapsed with the French defeat at Dienbienphu Dienbienphu or Dien Bien Phu (dyĕn`byĕn`f
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 (May, 1954). Pierre Mendès-France Mendès-France, Pierre (pyĕr măNdĕs`-fräNs), 1907–82, French statesman.
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 came to power, determined to end French involvement. French withdrawal from Indochina was agreed upon at the Geneva Conference. Subsequently Morocco and Tunisia also achieved independence. But the war for independence in Algeria Algeria (ăljēr`ēə), Arab. Al Djazair, Fr.
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 destroyed the Fourth Republic. When a right-wing French military coup in Algeria (1958) threatened to spread to metropolitan France, de Gaulle was invited back to power.

Gaullist France

De Gaulle established the Fifth Republic and became its first president in Dec., 1958. The French Union was transformed into the French Community French Community, established in 1958 by the constitution of the Fifth French Republic to replace the French Union . Its members consisted of the French Republic, which included metropolitan France (continental France, Corsica, Algeria and the Sahara), the overseas
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, and most of France's African holdings became independent by 1960. Algerian independence was negotiated despite a terrorist campaign by the Secret Army Organization (OAS) of extremist French soldiers. De Gaulle aimed at restoring France's prestige in world affairs. France became a nuclear power (1960). France blocked Britain's entrance into the European Economic Community and for a time (1965) boycotted the Market's meetings. Diplomatic recognition was extended (1964) to Communist China. In 1966, de Gaulle withdrew French forces from the integrated command of NATO and forced all U.S. and NATO forces to leave France, although he proclaimed adherence in the event of an "unprovoked attack."

In the spring of 1968 widespread student demonstrations against France's obsolete educational system were joined by striking workers and farmers. De Gaulle dissolved the national assembly and, blaming the Communists for the disorders, won a great electoral victory (June, 1968). The Gaullist party won the first absolute majority in the assembly in French history. But de Gaulle resigned in Apr., 1969, after his proposals for regional reorganization and for revision of the senate were defeated in a referendum.

The Contemporary Era

Georges Pompidou Pompidou, Georges Jean Raymond (zhôrzh pôNpēd`), 1911–74.
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, a Gaullist, was elected president in June, 1969. He preserved de Gaulle's independent foreign policy but made innovations domestically, especially in devaluing the franc. In 1971, he reversed French policy and declared support for Britain's entrance into the European Community. Pompidou died suddenly in 1974 and was succeeded as president by Valéry Giscard d'Estaing Giscard d'Estaing, Valéry (välārē` zhēskär` dĕstăN`)
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, his finance minister, who defeated Socialist leader François Mitterrand Mitterrand, François Maurice (fräNswä` mōrēs` mētəräN`)
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 in a close presidential runoff election. Discontent with inflation and unemployment, dissension within the right wing between Giscard and RPR leader Jacques Chirac Chirac, Jacques René (zhäk rənā` shēräk`)
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, and austerity measures imposed by Giscard combined to aid the Socialist party, and Mitterrand won the 1981 presidential election.

Mitterrand quickly dissolved the national assembly, and it became predominantly Socialist after new elections. To placate the Communist party, with which the Socialists had been allied since 1977, four Communist ministers were added to the cabinet. Many large industries (steel, nuclear energy, armaments), private banks, and insurance companies were nationalized, and minimum wage and social security benefits were increased. However, by 1982 the economic situation had worsened, in part because of decreased exports and pressure on the franc; the government devalued the franc, imposed a wage and price freeze, and granted tax concessions to business. In 1984 Mitterrand re-formed the government, excluding the Communists.

In 1986 a right-wing coalition won a majority in Parliament, and Jacques Chirac was appointed prime minister. He began a policy of privatizing state-owned companies. In the 1988 presidential election a right-wing candidate, Jean-Marie Le Pen Le Pen, Jean-Marie (zhŏn'-märē` lə pĕn, pŏN), 1928–, French politician.
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, ran on an extreme anti-immigration platform and won a significant portion of first-round votes. Mitterrand, however, was reelected in the second round, defeating Chirac.

In 1991 France agreed to sign the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Mitterrand turned increasingly to foreign affairs and pursued a more moderate economic program. Nonetheless, in the 1993 elections, with the Socialists devastated by rising unemployment and corruption scandals, conservative parties captured nearly 85% of the seats in the national assembly, and Édouard Balladur Balladur, Édouard (ādwär` bälädür`), 1929–, French political leader, b. Turkey.
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, a Gaullist, became premier. The new government slashed interest rates and followed other policies aimed at stemming France's continuing recession. In 1995, Chirac was elected president, defeating Balladur and a Socialist candidate; he appointed Alain Juppé Juppé, Alain (älăN` zhüpā`), 1945–, French politician, b. Les Landes.
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 as prime minister.

France was beset by a host of problems in 1995, including severe floods and terror bombings; the government faced international criticism for its nuclear testing in the South Pacific, which it resumed after a three-year moratorium; and the country was paralyzed late in the year by a long transportation workers strike. The strike action was one of many that followed the announcement by Premier Juppé of a comprehensive plan to overhaul the massive social security system and to raise taxes—actions aimed at helping to reduce the budget deficit and enable France to qualify for European monetary union, which was achieved in 1999 (see European Monetary System European Central Bank (ECB) and a common currency. The ECB, which was established in 1998, is responsible for setting a single monetary policy and interest rate for the adopting nations, in conjunction with their national central banks.
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). Chirac ended nuclear testing in 1996 and announced plans for scaling back French military deployment and phasing in an all-volunteer force.

Following parliamentary elections in 1997, Socialist Lionel Jospin Jospin, Lionel Robert (zhôspăN`), 1937–, French politician, premier of France (1997–2002).
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 became prime minister. In late 2000, Chirac was accused of involvement in a 1980s kickback scheme that provided funds for political parties when he was mayor of Paris, but he denied any knowledge of the scheme. The charges created political difficulties for Chirac but did not greatly affect his popularity. The Socialist parliament in 2001 approved a bill giving Corsica limited autonomy. The move was originally intended to end separatist violence there, but the year actually saw an increase in attacks, and the law was subsequently ruled in large part to be unconstitutional.

In the 2002 presidential and parliamentary elections Chirac won a resounding victory. Jospin, who ran against Chirac for the presidency, failed to make it into the runoff, where Chirac's opponent was the right-wing nationalist Jean-Marie Le Pen. Jospin resigned as premier, and Chirac went on the win the presidency. The Socialists suffered a further setback in the national assembly elections, when the center-right alliance, the Union for the Presidential Majority (UMP; subsequently the Union for a Popular Movement), won three fifths of the seats. Jean-Pierre Raffarin Raffarin, Jean-Pierre (zhäN-pyĕr räfärăN`), 1948–, French politician.
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 was appointed premier by Chirac.

In 2002–3, as the Bush administration pushed for the abandonment of UN weapons inspections in Iraq and for the UN approval of the use of force to oust Iraqi president Saddam Hussein and disarm Iraq, President Chirac became one of the strongest international opponents of war. France threatened to veto any resolution that explicitly authorized the use of force, which led to acrimonious relations with the United States and Great Britain. France's strong stand, which was also supported by Germany, also led to divisions in the European Union and NATO, whose member governments disagreed on whether to use force against Iraq.

A referendum in July, 2003, calling for approval of a new Corsican assembly with limited autonomy (made possible by amendments to the constitution) failed to pass; the government had supported the measure in hopes of undercutting Corsican separatists. The following month an estimated 11,000 people, largely elderly, died as a result of a persistent heatwave in which temperatures in parts of the country rose to above 104°F; (40°C;).

Local and regional elections in Mar., 2004, resulted in a clear victory for the Socialists. The vote was seen as rejection of the government's moves to make changes in the French social welfare system, with its generous welfare, health-care, and pension benefits. The government subsequently also suffered losses in the September elections for the senate. In May, 2005, voters rejected the proposed new constitution for the European Union, resulting in a further embarrassment for the government, and Premier Raffarin resigned. Dominique de Villepin Villepin, Dominique de (Dominique Marie François René Galouzeau de Villepin)
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, who had been interior minister, succeeded Raffarin as premier.

In Oct., 2005, following strident comments by Interior Minister Sarkozy Sarkozy, Nicolas (Nicolas Paul Stéphane Sarkozy de Nagy-Bocsa) (nēkōlä` särkōzē`)
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 on urban violence linked to immigrants, and the accidental deaths of two black youths who were trying to hide from the police, nighttime riots by persons of African and Arab descent occurred in suburbs of Paris, spread to other Parisian suburbs, and in November spread to many other places in France. The government declared a state of emergency, which lasted for the rest of 2005, but provocative comments by some officials continued to feed immigrant resentment. The riots, which highlighted the alienation and poverty of the French of non-European descent, did not end until after mid-November.

A new national crisis arose in early 2006 when Villepin pushed through changes to French labor law that would make it easier to fire workers under age 26 during their first two years with a company. A series of demonstrations and strikes against the law occurred in Mar.–Apr., 2006. Although the law was enacted, in a setback for Villepin, he subsequently announced that it would be replaced by new legislation designed to reduce youth unemployment. Charges that Villepin had targeted (2004) Sarkozy for investigation by the secret service in an attempt to smear his party rival brought calls for Villepin to resign, but Chirac continued to support the premier.

Bibliography

A classic geographic study is J. Brunhes, Géographie humaine de la France (2 vol., 1920–26), and E. E. Evans, France (1966), is also useful. J. Michelet Michelet, Jules (zhül mēshəlā`), 1798–1874, French writer, the greatest historian of the romantic school.
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 is still regarded by many as the greatest of French historians. Among more recent general histories of France, those edited by E. Lavisse Lavisse, Ernest (ĕrnĕst` lävēs`), 1842–1922, French historian. He was for many years a professor at the Sorbonne.
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 and by G. Hanotaux Hanotaux, Gabriel (gäbrēĕl` änôtō`), 1853–1944, French historian and statesman.
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 are outstanding. A monumental multivolume work is F. Funck-Brentano, ed., National History of France (tr., 10 vol., 1916–36). The many authors of classic historical works on France include, for the medieval period, M. L. Bloch Bloch, Marc (blôk), 1886–1944, French historian and an authority on medieval feudalism. He taught at the Univ.
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, C. V. Langlois, F. Lot, A. Luchaire Luchaire, Achille (äshēl` lüshĕr`), 1846–1908, French historian.
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, and Fustel de Coulanges Fustel de Coulanges, Numa Denis (nümä` dənē` füstĕl` də k
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; for the 17th cent., Voltaire; for the French Revolution and Napoleon I, H. Taine Taine, Hippolyte Adolphe (tān, Fr. ēpôlēt` ädôlf` tĕn), 1828–93, French critic and historian.
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, A. Aulard Aulard, Alphonse (älfôNs` ōlär`), 1849–1928, French historian.
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, G. Lefebvre Lefebvre, Georges (zhôrzh ləfĕ`vrə), 1874–1959, French historian, an authority on the French Revolutionary period.
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, A. Mathiez Mathiez, Albert (älbĕr` mätyā`), 1874–1932, French historian, an authority on the French Revolution.
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, and F. Masson Masson, Frédéric, 1847–1923, French historian, an authority on Napoleon I and his family. His work is uncritically laudatory with regard to Napoleon himself; his admiration, however, did not deter his severe indictment of Napoleon's relatives in
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; for the history of the working class and of commerce, É. Levasseur Levasseur, Émile (Pierre Émile Levasseur) (pyĕr āmēl` lüväsör`), 1828–1911, French economist.
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; for cultural history, A. Rambaud Rambaud, Alfred Nicolas (älfrĕd` nēkôlä` räNbō`), 1842–1905, French historian and politician.
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.

See also A. Cobban, A History of Modern France (3d ed. 3 vol., 1966–67); D. M. Pickles, The Fifth French Republic (3d ed. 1966) and France (2d ed. 1971); J. M. Hughes, To the Maginot Line (1971); M. Marrus and R. Paxton, Vichy France and the Jews (1981); J. P. Bury, France, 1814–1940 (5th ed. 1985); H. R. Kedward and R. Austin, ed., Vichy France and the Resistance: Ideology and Culture (1985); P. Pinchemel, France: A Geographical, Social, and Economic Survey (1987); J. Ardagh, France Today (1988); M. Larkin, France since the Popular Front (1988); W. J. Adams, Restructuring the French Economy (1989); P. Benedict, ed., Cities and Social Change in Early Modern France (1989); C. Flockton and E. Kofman, France (1989); R. Aldrich and J. Connell, ed., France in World Politics (1989); E. Weber, The Hollow Years: France in the 1930s (1996); F. Giles, The Locust Years: The Story of the French Republic, 1946–1958 (1996); P. Burrin, France under the Germans (1997); D. Roche, France in the Enlightenment (1999); J. Jackson, France: The Dark Years, 1940–1944 (2001); J. Jackson, The Fall of France (2003); C. Jones, The Great Nation (2003).


France

 officially French Republic

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Country, northwestern Europe. It includes the island of Corsica. Area: 210,026 sq mi (543,965 sq km). Population (2005 est.): 60,733,000. Capital: Paris. The people are mainly French. Language: French (official). Religions: Christianity (predominantly Roman Catholic; also Protestant); also Islam, Judaism. Currency: euro. France has extensive plains, rivers, and a number of mountain ranges, including the Pyrenees and the Alps. The climate is generally moderate. More than half of the land is suitable for agriculture, and forests, largely unexploited, cover about one-fourth of the area. France has a developed mixed economy with a preponderance of small firms. Its chief of state is the president, and the head of government is the prime minister. The legislature consists of two houses. France is one of the major economic powers of the world and was a founding member of the European Community (see European Union). Culturally, France has enjoyed a significant role in the world from the early Middle Ages. Archaeological excavations in France indicate continuous settlement from Paleolithic times. By the 5th century BC the Gauls migrated south from the Rhine River valley to the Mediterranean coast of modern France, and in 600 BC Ionian Greeks established several settlements, including one at Marseille. Julius Caesar completed the Roman conquest of Gaul in 50 BC. During the 6th century AD the Salian Franks ruled; by the 8th century power had passed to the Carolingians, so named for the influential reign of Charlemagne. The Hundred Years' War (1337–1453) resulted in the return to France of land that had been held by England; by the end of the 15th century, France approximated its modern boundaries. The 16th century was marked by the Wars of Religion between Protestants (Huguenots) and Roman Catholics. Henry IV's Edict of Nantes (1598) granted substantial religious toleration, but this was revoked in 1685 by Louis XIV, who helped to raise monarchical absolutism to new heights. In 1789 the French Revolution proclaimed the rights of the individual and destroyed the ancien régime. Under the rule of Napoleon (1799–1814/15), France fought to expand its dominion. It then became a monarchy again until the founding of the Second Republic (1848–52), after which Napoleon III ruled as emperor before the creation of the Third Republic in 1871. World War I (1914–18) ravaged the northern part of France. After Nazi Germany's invasion of France during World War II, the collaborationist Vichy regime governed. Liberated by Allied and Free French forces in 1944, France restored parliamentary democracy under the Fourth Republic. A costly war in Indochina (see Indochina wars) and rising nationalism in French colonies during the 1950s overwhelmed the Fourth Republic. The Fifth Republic officially began in January 1959 under Charles de Gaulle, who presided over the dissolution of most of France's overseas colonies (see Algerian War; French Equatorial Africa; French West Africa). In 1981 France elected its first socialist president, François Mitterrand. At various times from 1986 through the beginning of the 21st century, France balanced a form of divided government known as “cohabitation,” with a president and prime minister of different political parties.


France1
Anatole , real name Anatole Fran?ois Thibault. 1844--1924, French novelist, short-story writer, and critic. His works include Le Crime de Sylvestre Bonnard (1881), L'?le des Pingouins (1908), and La R?volte des anges (1914): Nobel prize for literature 1921

France2
a republic in W Europe, between the English Channel, the Mediterranean, and the Atlantic: the largest country wholly in Europe; became a republic in 1793 after the French Revolution and an empire in 1804 under Napoleon; reverted to a monarchy (1815--48), followed by the Second Republic (1848--52), the Second Empire (1852--70), the Third Republic (1870--1940), and the Fourth and Fifth Republics (1946 and 1958); a member of the European Union. It is generally flat or undulating in the north and west and mountainous in the south and east. Official language: French. Religion: Roman Catholic majority. Currency: euro. Capital: Paris. Pop.: 60 434 000 (2004 est.). Area: (including Corsica) 551 600 sq. km (212 973 sq. miles)


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