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Ruth Scurr (ed.) Carlyle’s The French Revolution (London and New York: Continuum, 2010) and Ruth Scurr, Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution (London: Vintage, 2006) The boy kneels ...
Running simultaneously with the quick-fire changes in policy and trust – the book continually reminds the reader how frenetically fast the Revolution was – we have Robespierre’s constant ...
ROBESPIERRE, one of the great typical ... formulations of biography ; it is right to be grateful for such a book as Mr. Belloc’s Robespierre. 1 Mr. Belloc has not adduced many new facts ...
Ever since the "prime public functionary" - previously known as Louis XVI - lost his head on the Place de la Révolution in Paris, Maximilien de Robespierre has been seen as the evil, green-eyed ...
If that is an admission, it is an ambiguous one, and the book ends, not with a summing up, but with an odd reflection on Robespierre's final scream, as the executioner ripped off the bandage ...
All eyes were on Paris. Depending on who was looking, Maximilien Robespierre was either a hero or a villain. Robespierre, once an obscure lawyer from northern France, had in four short years ...
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