Albert Sorel
Albert Sorel
The French diplomatic historian Albert Sorel (1842-1906) was distinguished for his major work, Europe and the French Revolution, which influenced profoundly the interpretation of the French Revolution.
Albert Sorel was born to a wealthy industrial family of Honfleur. Although his father wanted him to join the family business, he showed from a very early age an interest in literature and history, and by the age of 18 he was publishing numerous poems in local journals. By 1863 Sorel published a series of articles in which he argued that a general history of France could not be written without previous histories of the villages and cities of the country, allowing the picture of the whole to be built up by a mosaic of parts. These interests were to appear later in his most famous work.
After finishing his studies, Sorel received his father's permission to seek work in Paris. With the assistance of François Guizot, he was attached to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1866. While at the Ministry, between 1866 and 1871, Sorel proved himself an astute diplomat. At the same time, he composed poetry and music and published two novels. During and after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 he served as chief assistant to France's primary negotiator and assured himself of a brilliant future as a diplomat.
Sorel's career was not to be as a diplomat, however. Because he felt that his German wife, whom he married shortly after the war, would be put in a difficult position because of strong anti-German feelings in France, he retired from political life, took a position as a professor at the newly established École des Sciences Politiques, and devoted the rest of his life to one work, Europe and the French Revolution.
After a series of detailed preparatory studies, Sorel published his masterwork in eight volumes between 1885 and 1904. His object was to study the struggle between the Old Regime (ancien régime ) of Europe and the Revolution. The Revolution was neither a perversion of the past nor a totally new creation. Alexis de Tocqueville had discovered that much of the internal policy of the Revolution had been a continuation of that of the Old Regime, and Sorel argued that the foreign policy of the Revolution was a natural outgrowth of that of the European Old Regime.
As the "Enlightened Despots" had ruthlessly partitioned Poland under the guise of establishing natural frontiers, so the Revolution's foreign policy was based on might rather than right, and the noble ideas of rational reform were lost in the struggle for alleged natural frontiers. In the later volumes, Sorel even argued that Napoleon's expansionist policies were a continuation of practices common in a morally bankrupt Europe.
Sorel's work, particularly the early volumes, placed the Revolution in a general European context and contributed to an understanding of the most general and most fundamental forces affecting the entire course of 19th-century European history.
Sorel died one of the most respected and most influential of modern historians, his work forcing men to study the quality of the most basic structures of a society rather than simply placing blame or credit on individuals or groups.
Further Reading
There are brief accounts of Sorel in G.P. Gooch, History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century (1913; 2d ed. rev. 1952), and James Westfall Thompson, A History of Historical Writing (2 vols., 1942). For Sorel's place in French historiography see Paul Farmer, France Reviews Its Revolutionary Origins (1944). Stanley Mellon, The Political Uses of History (1958), is a provocative study of the role of French historiography itself. □
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John Stow (1525-1605) and the Making of the English Past.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Shakespeare Studies; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; John Stow (1525-1605) and the Making of the English...Gillespie London: The British Library, 2004 John Stow, antiquary, chronicler, topographer...s Tudor London Observed: The World of John Stow (1998) and the collection Imagining Early...
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John Stow and the Making of the English Past (1525-1605).(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Gadd and Alexandra Gillespie, eds. John Stow and the Making of the English Past...60. ISBN: 0-7123-4864-6. John Stow emerges from the pages of this handsome...scholars to ask new questions about both John Stow and the making of the English past...
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Akron, Stow get water deal: City to become suburb's exclusive water provider; municipalities to share revenue from development.
Newspaper article from: Akron Beacon Journal (Akron, OH); 12/12/2006; 700+ words
; Byline: John Higgins Dec. 12--Akron will become Stow's exclusive water provider...on new businesses in Stow's northwest quadrant...get with three previous Stow mayors. After Fritschel...big city," he said. John Higgins can be reached...
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Citizen history: Stow's 'Survey of London.' (author John Stow)
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; ...the standard critical assessment of John Stow's Survey of London (1598) remained...and daring" of its citizens, whom Stow "chose to exalt in a history that...posterity." According to Wright, Stow "believed to the last in the grandeur...
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English history abridged: John Stow's shorter chronicles and popular history*.
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So much history to Stow away; Tudor England Observed - The World of John Stow. By Barrett L Beer (Sutton Publishing, pounds 20). Reviewed by Richard Edmonds.(National)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 5/1/1999; ; 700+ words
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Imagining Early Modern London: Perceptions and Portrayals of the City from Stow to Strype, 1598-1720. (Reviews of Books).(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Albion; 3/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Patrick Collinson's essay on John Stow's nostalgic antiquarianism...generations, so later revisions of Stow's Survey by Anthony Munday and John Strype sought to introduce a Protestant gloss on Stow's perception of London's...
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Stow beaten at Bicester
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Stow City Center plan to be finalized in April: Proposal incorporates outdoor amphitheater.
Newspaper article from: Akron Beacon Journal (Akron, OH); 3/27/2006; 700+ words
; ...is no center for the city of Stow," said Janet D'Antonio...possibility of a central area in which Stow residents can walk, shop and...downtown-type area," she said. John Toomey, the architect hired...proposed plan, titled "A Place in Stow," would include three new footpaths...
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838th Trans Bn conducts ICODES Stow Rodeo.(Transportation Battalion's Integrated Computerized Deployment System)
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; ...Netherlands and create a stow plan for one large medium...vessel. The ICODES Stow Rodeo instructors and judges were John Manahane and Gary Rucks...plans to make the ICODES Stow Rodeo an annual event.--Lt. Col. John Hanson, 838th Transportation...
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Stow, (Julian) Randolph
Book article from: Contemporary Novelists
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Stow, John
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
Stow, John (1525–1605). Self-taught...which he revised and extended in 1603. Stow, a third-generation Londoner, began his...manuscript collection. Before his Survey , Stow produced the Annales of England (revised...
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John Stow
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
John Stow 1525?-1605, English chronicler and antiquarian...account of the city in Elizabethan times. John Strype issued a new edition in 1720 (repr. 1971). Stow is one of the most trustworthy of 16th-century...
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Robin Hood
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...Abbot Bower (d. 1449), Major , and Stow . The first detailed history, Lytell Geste...Poly-Olbion , song 26. According to Stow, there were about the year 1190 many robbers...among whom were Robin Hood and Little John, who lived in the woods, robbing the...
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The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
...to Millionaire: 1897-1945 John Donald MacArthur was born in...rising to national prominence. John dropped out of school in the...Eventually he was caught trying to stow away on a troop ship headed for...s insurance company. Unlike John, Catherine was detail-oriented...
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