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French peasants

French peasants were the largest socio-economic group in France until the mid-20th century. The word peasant, while having no universally accepted meaning, is used here to describe subsistence farming throughout the Middle Ages, often smallholders or those paying rent to landlords, and rural workers in general. As industrialization developed, some peasants became wealthier than others and drove investment in agriculture. Rising inequality and financial management in France during the late 18th century eventually motivated peasants to revolt and destroy the feudal system. Today peasants could no longer be said to exist as an economic or social group in France. although many attempts have been made to honor and preserve this traditional way of life.

Philip Calderon "French Peasants Finding Their Stolen Child"; 1859

1500 to 1780s edit

By the middle of the 16th century, France's demographic growth, its increased demand for consumer goods, and its rapid influx of gold and silver from Africa and the Americas led to inflation (grain became five times as expensive from 1520 to 1600), and wage stagnation. Although many richer land-owning peasants and enterprising merchants had been able to grow rich during the boom, the standard of living fell greatly for poor rural peasants, who were forced to deal with bad harvests at the same time. This led to reduced purchasing power and a decline in manufacturing. The monetary crisis led France to abandon (in 1577) the livre as its money of account, in favor of the écu in circulation, and banning most foreign currencies.

Meanwhile, France's military ventures in Italy and (later) disastrous civil wars demanded huge sums of cash, which were raised with through the taille and other taxes. The taille, which was levied mainly on the peasantry, increased from 2.5 million livres in 1515 to 6 million after 1551, and by 1589 the taille had reached a record 21 million livres. Financial crises hit the royal household repeatedly, and so in 1523, Francis I established a government bond system in Paris, the "rentes sure l'Hôtel de Ville".

In the 17th century rich peasants who had ties to the market economy provided much of the capital investment necessary for agricultural growth, and frequently moved from village to village (or town). Geographic mobility, directly tied to the market and the need for investment capital, was the main path to social mobility. The "stable" core of French society, town guildspeople and village laborers, included cases of staggering social and geographic continuity, but even this core required regular renewal. Accepting the existence of these two societies, the constant tension between them, and extensive geographic and social mobility tied to a market economy holds the key to a clearer understanding of the evolution of the social structure, economy, and even political system of early modern France. Collins (1991) argues that the Annales School paradigm underestimated the role of the market economy; failed to explain the nature of capital investment in the rural economy, and grossly exaggerated social stability.[1]

1789–1945 edit

 
"A Peasant Woman Cooking by a Fireplace"; by Vincent van Gogh; 1885
 
"A Peasant Woman and Child Harvesting the Fields"; Camille Pissarro; 1882

France faced a series of major economic crises after 1770. Because of very expensive wars, and inadequate financial system, the government was virtually bankrupt. From the point of view of the peasants, rapid population growth, harvest failures, physiocratic calls for modernization of agriculture, and rising seigneurial dues motivated peasants to destroy feudalism in France. They played a major role in starting the French Revolution in 1789. However most quickly retired from active political involvement.[2][3] Karl Marx argued that the “allotment farmer” lacked political unity due to the sheer local nature of their lives.[4] Napoleon I was widely popular. The Second Republic was widely resented for imposing high taxes, most notorious among them the 45 centime tax.[5]

19th century modernization of peasants edit

France was a rural nation as late as 1940, but a major change took place after railways started arriving in the 1850s–60s. In his seminal book Peasants into Frenchmen (1976), historian Eugen Weber traced the modernization of French villages and argued that rural France went from backward and isolated to modern and possessing a sense of French nationhood during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[6] He emphasized the roles of railroads, republican schools, and universal military conscription. He based his findings on school records, migration patterns, military service documents and economic trends. Weber argued that until 1900 or so a sense of French nationhood was weak in the provinces. Weber then looked at how the policies of the Third Republic created a sense of French nationality in rural areas. The book was widely praised, but was criticized by some, such as Ted W. Margadant, who argued that a sense of Frenchness already existed in the provinces before 1870.[7]

Protectionism edit

French national policy was protectionist with regard to agricultural products, to protect the very large agricultural population, especially through the Méline tariff of 1892. France maintained two forms of agriculture: a modern, mechanized, capitalistic system in the Northeast, and in the rest of the country a reliance on subsistence agriculture on very small farms with low income levels.[8]

Since 1945 edit

Modernization of the traditional/subsistence farming sector began in the 1940s, and resulted in a rapid depopulation of rural France, although protectionist measures remained national policy.[9] With government support, younger, more active farmers bought out their neighbors, enlarged their properties, and used the latest in mechanization, new seeds, fertilizers, and new techniques. The result was a revolution in agricultural output, as well as a sharply reduced number of active farmers from 7.4 million in 1946 to only 2 million in 1975. It also resulted in millions of empty old farm houses. They were promptly purchased and upgraded by Frenchmen who wanted a rural retreat away from the frenzy of their primary work in the cities. Many did this out of nostalgia about family memories of rural living that drew the city dwellers back to the countryside. By 1978, France was the world leader in per capita ownership of second homes and L’Express reported an "irresistible infatuation of the French for the least Norman thatched house, Cévenol sheep barn or the most modest Provençal farmhouse."[10]

Numerous organizations since the 1930s have emerged to preserve and enhance the position of the small farm in France, with a wide range of ideological approaches from far left to far right. They all seek to honor the tradition and fund the surviving farmers, and mobilize their political support.[11]

The media became deeply involved, especially the postwar French film industry. Film depicted the exodus from countryside to city as a threat to France's historic role as a traditional, agrarian society. Documentaries celebrated the enormous power of modern machinery and electrification, while fictional dramas portrayed the joy of city dwellers who returned to the wholesome atmosphere of the country.[12]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ James B. Collins, "Geographic and Social Mobility in Early-Modern France." Journal of Social History 1991 24(3): 563–577. ISSN 0022-4529 Fulltext: Ebsco. For the Annales interpretation see Pierre Goubert, The French Peasantry in the Seventeenth Century (1986) excerpt and text search
  2. ^ Peter Jones, "The peasants' revolt? " History Today (1989) 39#5 pp 15–19.
  3. ^ John Markoff, "Peasants help destroy an old regime and defy a new one: some lessons from (and for) the study of social movements." American Journal of Sociology 102.4 (1997): 1113–1142.
  4. ^ Marx, Karl (1913). The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. Translated by De Leon, Daniel (3rd ed.). Charles H. Kerr & Company. p. 145.
  5. ^ De Luna, Frederick A. (1969). The French Republic Under Cavaignac, 1848. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 389.
  6. ^ Joseph A. Amato, "Eugen Weber's France" Journal of Social History, Volume 25, 1992 pp 879–882.
  7. ^ Ted W. Margadant, "French Rural Society in the Nineteenth Century: A Review Essay," Agricultural History, (1979) 53#3 pp 644–651
  8. ^ Eugene Golob, The Meline tariff: French Agriculture and Nationalist Economic Policy (Columbia University Press, 1944)
  9. ^ John Ardagh, France in the 1980s (1982) pp 206–57.
  10. ^ Sarah Farmer, "The Other House," French Politics, Culture & Society (2016) 34#1 pp 104–121, quote p 104.
  11. ^ John T. S. Keeler, "The Defense Of Small Farmers In France: Alternative Strategies for the 'Victims of Modernization'," Peasant Studies (1979) 8#4 pp 1–18
  12. ^ Pierre Sorlin, "‘Stop the rural exodus’: images of the country in French films of the 1950s." Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television 18.2 (1998): 183–197.

Further reading edit

Before 1789 edit

  • Beech, George T. Rural Society in Medieval France (1964)
  • Bloch, Marc. Feudal society (Société féodale) (1961) classic from Annales School
  • Braudel, Fernand. Civilization and capitalism, 15th–18th century (Civilisation matérielle, économie et capitalisme) (3 vol 1992)
  • Farmer, Sharon A. Surviving poverty in medieval Paris: gender, ideology, and the daily lives of the poor (Cornell UP, 2002)
  • Goubert, Pierre. The French peasantry in the seventeenth century (1986)
  • Kettering, Sharon. French Society: 1589–1715 (2014).
  • Hoffman, Philip T. Growth in a traditional society: the French countryside, 1450–1815 (Princeton UP, 1996)
  • Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel. The peasants of Languedoc (Paysans de Languedoc) (University of Illinois Press, 1974) influential product of Annales School
  • Ridolfi, Leonardo. "The French economy in the longue durée: a study on real wages, working days and economic performance from Louis IX to the Revolution (1250–1789)." European Review of Economic History 21#4 (2017): 437–438.
  • Sée, Henri Eugène. Economic and social conditions in France during the eighteenth century (1927) pp 14–59 online

Since 1789 edit

  • Ardagh, John. France in the 1980s (1982) pp 206–57. older edition
  • Berger, Suzanne. Peasants against politics: rural organization in Brittany, 1911–1967 (Harvard UP, 1972).
  • Devlin, Judith. The superstitious mind: French peasants and the supernatural in the nineteenth century (Yale UP, 1987).
  • Edelstein, Melvin. "Integrating the French peasants into the nation-state: The transformation of electoral participation (1789–1870)." History of European Ideas (1992) 15.1–3: 319–326.
  • Golob, Eugene. The Meline tariff: French Agriculture and Nationalist Economic Policy (Columbia University Press, 1944) online
  • McPhee, Peter. "The French Revolution, peasants, and capitalism." American Historical Review 94.5 (1989): 1265–1280. online
  • Margadant, Ted W. French peasants in revolt: The insurrection of 1851 (Princeton UP, 1979).
  • Markoff, John. Abolition of Feudalism: Peasants, Lords, and Legislators in the French Revolution (Penn State Press, 2010).
  • Markoff, John. "Peasants help destroy an old regime and defy a new one: some lessons from (and for) the study of social movements." American Journal of Sociology 102.4 (1997): 1113–1142.
  • Pinchemel, Philippe. France: A Geographical, Social and Economic Survey (1987)
  • Schwartz, Robert M. "Rail transport, agrarian crisis, and the restructuring of agriculture: France and Great Britain confront globalization, 1860–1900." Social Science History 34.2 (2010): 229–255.
  • Sutherland, D. M. G. "Peasants, Lords, and Leviathan: Winners and Losers from the Abolition of French Feudalism, 1780–1820," Journal of Economic History (2002) 62#1 pp. 1–24 in JSTOR
  • Weber, Eugen. "The Second Republic, Politics, and the Peasant", French Historical Studies 11#4 (1980), pp. 521–550 (in JSTOR).
  • Weber, Eugen. Peasants into Frenchmen: the modernization of rural France, 1870–1914 (Stanford UP, 1976).
    • Cabo, Miguel, and Fernando Molina. "The Long and Winding Road of Nationalization: Eugen Weber's Peasants into Frenchmen in Modern European History (1976—2006)." European History Quarterly 39.2 (2009): 264–286.
  • Wright, Gordon. Rural revolution in France. The peasantry in the twentieth century (1964). online free toborrow
  • Zeldin, Theodore. France 1848–1945 (Vol I, 1973). pp 131–97

Historiography edit

  • Lévi‐Strauss, Laurent, and Henri Mendras. "Rural studies in France." Journal of Peasant Studies 1.3 (1974): 363–378. covers the scholarship in French.

french, peasants, were, largest, socio, economic, group, france, until, 20th, century, word, peasant, while, having, universally, accepted, meaning, used, here, describe, subsistence, farming, throughout, middle, ages, often, smallholders, those, paying, rent,. French peasants were the largest socio economic group in France until the mid 20th century The word peasant while having no universally accepted meaning is used here to describe subsistence farming throughout the Middle Ages often smallholders or those paying rent to landlords and rural workers in general As industrialization developed some peasants became wealthier than others and drove investment in agriculture Rising inequality and financial management in France during the late 18th century eventually motivated peasants to revolt and destroy the feudal system Today peasants could no longer be said to exist as an economic or social group in France although many attempts have been made to honor and preserve this traditional way of life Philip Calderon French Peasants Finding Their Stolen Child 1859 Contents 1 1500 to 1780s 2 1789 1945 2 1 19th century modernization of peasants 2 2 Protectionism 3 Since 1945 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Further reading 6 1 Before 1789 6 2 Since 1789 6 3 Historiography1500 to 1780s editBy the middle of the 16th century France s demographic growth its increased demand for consumer goods and its rapid influx of gold and silver from Africa and the Americas led to inflation grain became five times as expensive from 1520 to 1600 and wage stagnation Although many richer land owning peasants and enterprising merchants had been able to grow rich during the boom the standard of living fell greatly for poor rural peasants who were forced to deal with bad harvests at the same time This led to reduced purchasing power and a decline in manufacturing The monetary crisis led France to abandon in 1577 the livre as its money of account in favor of the ecu in circulation and banning most foreign currencies Meanwhile France s military ventures in Italy and later disastrous civil wars demanded huge sums of cash which were raised with through the taille and other taxes The taille which was levied mainly on the peasantry increased from 2 5 million livres in 1515 to 6 million after 1551 and by 1589 the taille had reached a record 21 million livres Financial crises hit the royal household repeatedly and so in 1523 Francis I established a government bond system in Paris the rentes sure l Hotel de Ville In the 17th century rich peasants who had ties to the market economy provided much of the capital investment necessary for agricultural growth and frequently moved from village to village or town Geographic mobility directly tied to the market and the need for investment capital was the main path to social mobility The stable core of French society town guildspeople and village laborers included cases of staggering social and geographic continuity but even this core required regular renewal Accepting the existence of these two societies the constant tension between them and extensive geographic and social mobility tied to a market economy holds the key to a clearer understanding of the evolution of the social structure economy and even political system of early modern France Collins 1991 argues that the Annales School paradigm underestimated the role of the market economy failed to explain the nature of capital investment in the rural economy and grossly exaggerated social stability 1 1789 1945 edit nbsp A Peasant Woman Cooking by a Fireplace by Vincent van Gogh 1885 nbsp A Peasant Woman and Child Harvesting the Fields Camille Pissarro 1882France faced a series of major economic crises after 1770 Because of very expensive wars and inadequate financial system the government was virtually bankrupt From the point of view of the peasants rapid population growth harvest failures physiocratic calls for modernization of agriculture and rising seigneurial dues motivated peasants to destroy feudalism in France They played a major role in starting the French Revolution in 1789 However most quickly retired from active political involvement 2 3 Karl Marx argued that the allotment farmer lacked political unity due to the sheer local nature of their lives 4 Napoleon I was widely popular The Second Republic was widely resented for imposing high taxes most notorious among them the 45 centime tax 5 19th century modernization of peasants edit France was a rural nation as late as 1940 but a major change took place after railways started arriving in the 1850s 60s In his seminal book Peasants into Frenchmen 1976 historian Eugen Weber traced the modernization of French villages and argued that rural France went from backward and isolated to modern and possessing a sense of French nationhood during the late 19th and early 20th centuries 6 He emphasized the roles of railroads republican schools and universal military conscription He based his findings on school records migration patterns military service documents and economic trends Weber argued that until 1900 or so a sense of French nationhood was weak in the provinces Weber then looked at how the policies of the Third Republic created a sense of French nationality in rural areas The book was widely praised but was criticized by some such as Ted W Margadant who argued that a sense of Frenchness already existed in the provinces before 1870 7 Protectionism edit French national policy was protectionist with regard to agricultural products to protect the very large agricultural population especially through the Meline tariff of 1892 France maintained two forms of agriculture a modern mechanized capitalistic system in the Northeast and in the rest of the country a reliance on subsistence agriculture on very small farms with low income levels 8 Since 1945 editModernization of the traditional subsistence farming sector began in the 1940s and resulted in a rapid depopulation of rural France although protectionist measures remained national policy 9 With government support younger more active farmers bought out their neighbors enlarged their properties and used the latest in mechanization new seeds fertilizers and new techniques The result was a revolution in agricultural output as well as a sharply reduced number of active farmers from 7 4 million in 1946 to only 2 million in 1975 It also resulted in millions of empty old farm houses They were promptly purchased and upgraded by Frenchmen who wanted a rural retreat away from the frenzy of their primary work in the cities Many did this out of nostalgia about family memories of rural living that drew the city dwellers back to the countryside By 1978 France was the world leader in per capita ownership of second homes and L Express reported an irresistible infatuation of the French for the least Norman thatched house Cevenol sheep barn or the most modest Provencal farmhouse 10 Numerous organizations since the 1930s have emerged to preserve and enhance the position of the small farm in France with a wide range of ideological approaches from far left to far right They all seek to honor the tradition and fund the surviving farmers and mobilize their political support 11 The media became deeply involved especially the postwar French film industry Film depicted the exodus from countryside to city as a threat to France s historic role as a traditional agrarian society Documentaries celebrated the enormous power of modern machinery and electrification while fictional dramas portrayed the joy of city dwellers who returned to the wholesome atmosphere of the country 12 See also editEconomic history of France History of France Peasant Peasants War 1798 revolt in 1798 against the French occupiers of the Southern Netherlands Siege of Malta 1798 1800 which began as a peasant uprising against French rule in 1798Notes edit James B Collins Geographic and Social Mobility in Early Modern France Journal of Social History 1991 24 3 563 577 ISSN 0022 4529 Fulltext Ebsco For the Annales interpretation see Pierre Goubert The French Peasantry in the Seventeenth Century 1986 excerpt and text search Peter Jones The peasants revolt History Today 1989 39 5 pp 15 19 John Markoff Peasants help destroy an old regime and defy a new one some lessons from and for the study of social movements American Journal of Sociology 102 4 1997 1113 1142 Marx Karl 1913 The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte Translated by De Leon Daniel 3rd ed Charles H Kerr amp Company p 145 De Luna Frederick A 1969 The French Republic Under Cavaignac 1848 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 389 Joseph A Amato Eugen Weber s France Journal of Social History Volume 25 1992 pp 879 882 Ted W Margadant French Rural Society in the Nineteenth Century A Review Essay Agricultural History 1979 53 3 pp 644 651 Eugene Golob The Meline tariff French Agriculture and Nationalist Economic Policy Columbia University Press 1944 John Ardagh France in the 1980s 1982 pp 206 57 Sarah Farmer The Other House French Politics Culture amp Society 2016 34 1 pp 104 121 quote p 104 John T S Keeler The Defense Of Small Farmers In France Alternative Strategies for the Victims of Modernization Peasant Studies 1979 8 4 pp 1 18 Pierre Sorlin Stop the rural exodus images of the country in French films of the 1950s Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 18 2 1998 183 197 Further reading editBefore 1789 edit Beech George T Rural Society in Medieval France 1964 Bloch Marc Feudal society Societe feodale 1961 classic from Annales School Braudel Fernand Civilization and capitalism 15th 18th century Civilisation materielle economie et capitalisme 3 vol 1992 Farmer Sharon A Surviving poverty in medieval Paris gender ideology and the daily lives of the poor Cornell UP 2002 Goubert Pierre The French peasantry in the seventeenth century 1986 Kettering Sharon French Society 1589 1715 2014 Hoffman Philip T Growth in a traditional society the French countryside 1450 1815 Princeton UP 1996 Le Roy Ladurie Emmanuel The peasants of Languedoc Paysans de Languedoc University of Illinois Press 1974 influential product of Annales School Ridolfi Leonardo The French economy in the longue duree a study on real wages working days and economic performance from Louis IX to the Revolution 1250 1789 European Review of Economic History 21 4 2017 437 438 See Henri Eugene Economic and social conditions in France during the eighteenth century 1927 pp 14 59 onlineSince 1789 edit Ardagh John France in the 1980s 1982 pp 206 57 older edition Berger Suzanne Peasants against politics rural organization in Brittany 1911 1967 Harvard UP 1972 Devlin Judith The superstitious mind French peasants and the supernatural in the nineteenth century Yale UP 1987 Edelstein Melvin Integrating the French peasants into the nation state The transformation of electoral participation 1789 1870 History of European Ideas 1992 15 1 3 319 326 Golob Eugene The Meline tariff French Agriculture and Nationalist Economic Policy Columbia University Press 1944 online McPhee Peter The French Revolution peasants and capitalism American Historical Review 94 5 1989 1265 1280 online Margadant Ted W French peasants in revolt The insurrection of 1851 Princeton UP 1979 Markoff John Abolition of Feudalism Peasants Lords and Legislators in the French Revolution Penn State Press 2010 Markoff John Peasants help destroy an old regime and defy a new one some lessons from and for the study of social movements American Journal of Sociology 102 4 1997 1113 1142 Pinchemel Philippe France A Geographical Social and Economic Survey 1987 Schwartz Robert M Rail transport agrarian crisis and the restructuring of agriculture France and Great Britain confront globalization 1860 1900 Social Science History 34 2 2010 229 255 Sutherland D M G Peasants Lords and Leviathan Winners and Losers from the Abolition of French Feudalism 1780 1820 Journal of Economic History 2002 62 1 pp 1 24 in JSTOR Weber Eugen The Second Republic Politics and the Peasant French Historical Studies 11 4 1980 pp 521 550 in JSTOR Weber Eugen Peasants into Frenchmen the modernization of rural France 1870 1914 Stanford UP 1976 Cabo Miguel and Fernando Molina The Long and Winding Road of Nationalization Eugen Weber s Peasants into Frenchmen in Modern European History 1976 2006 European History Quarterly 39 2 2009 264 286 Wright Gordon Rural revolution in France The peasantry in the twentieth century 1964 online free toborrow Zeldin Theodore France 1848 1945 Vol I 1973 pp 131 97Historiography edit Levi Strauss Laurent and Henri Mendras Rural studies in France Journal of Peasant Studies 1 3 1974 363 378 covers the scholarship in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French peasants amp oldid 1187043187, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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