Of the great incidents of History, none has attracted more attention or proved more difficult of interpretation than the French Revolution. The ultimate significance of other striking events and their place in the development of mankind can be readily estimated. It is clear enough that the barbarian invasions marked the death of the classical world, already mortally wounded by the rise of Christianity. It is clear enough that the Renaissance emancipated the human intellect from the trammels of a bastard mediaevalism, that the Reformation consolidated the victory of the "new learning" by including theology among the subjects of human debate. But the French Revolution seems to defy complete analysis.
A History of the French Revolution Volume I
H. Morse Stephens
bookPictures of the First French Revolution
Alphonse De Lamartine
bookThe French Revolution and the Rise of Napoleon
Theodore Flathe
bookEnglishmen in the French Revolution
John Goldworth Alger
bookStories of the French Revolution
Walter Montgomery
bookThe French Revolution
Thomas Carlyle
bookThe Case for Nationalism : How It Made Us Powerful, United, and Free
Rich Lowry
audiobookGateway to the French Revolution : Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution, Friedrich von Gentz's Revolutions Compared, and Joseph de Maistre's On God and Society
Edmund Burke
bookNew York, New York, New York : Four Decades of Success, Excess, and Transformation
Thomas Dyja
audiobookCapitalism, Socialism, and Democracy
Joseph A. Schumpeter
audiobookThe Shortest History of Democracy
John Keane
audiobookbookA New World Begins: The History of the French Revolution
Jeremy D. Popkin
audiobook