Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2014
Summary
The entity we know as France is the product of a centuries-long evolution, during which a complex of regional societies was welded together by political action, by the desire for territorial aggrandisement of a succession of monarchs, ministers and soldiers. There was nothing inevitable about the outcome. It was far from being a linear development, and we must try to avoid a teleological approach to explaining its course. The central feature was the emergence of a relatively strong state in the Ile-de-France and the expansion of its authority. Our task is to explain how and why this occurred.
The invitation to write a book covering such an extensive chronological period raises prospects both attractive and daunting. It represents an opportunity to set the normally more restricted concerns of the professional historian within a broad historical context, but also creates major problems of perspective and of approach. Questions will always be asked concerning ‘the extent to which it is possible to reconstruct the past from the remains it has left behind’ (R. J. Evans). The evidence historians have to deal with is made up of fragments, often chance survivals, which need to be contextualised in an effort to reconstruct their meaning. Every history is selective, but none more so than a work covering so many centuries. The problem is what to select, how best to make sense of the chaos of events, of the succession of generations that is at the heart of history, and how to define historical time and the shifting boundaries between continuity and change. A descriptive, chronologically organised political history would be possible, but would run the risk of turning into a meaningless catalogue of great men and their acts.
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- A Concise History of France , pp. 1 - 12Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014