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Conclusion: the legacy of the republican calendar

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Matthew Shaw
Affiliation:
British Library London
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Summary

This book has sought to uncover the history of revolutionary time not just in the pages of almanacs, diaries and official pronouncements, but in the ways that the years following the dramatic events of 1789 shaped the experience of everyday life. Accounts of the reshaping of everyday life have usually been stories of conflict or negotiation, often framed by intensely local contexts, but given political and ideological colouring. In contrast to the great journées of 1789, such as the storming of the Bastille or the abolition of feudalism, they may also appear at first glance to be matters of relative insignificance: the date of a meeting; the smudged pages of an almanac; the periodicity of the filing of official reports. Unlike the tearing up of the ancien régime on the night of 4 August and the days that followed, the reworking of everyday life leaves less obvious traces. None the less, the ordinary and the quotidian had their own inescapable importance and many of the Revolutionaries and their opponents understood the potential, and even the necessity, of planting the Revolution's flag on this terrain. It was in such details that the great claims for human progress of the Enlightenment and the Revolution could be mapped on an intimate scale and might make the leap between abstract schemes and the reality of a new, regenerated nation. The care that Romme took over the Annuaire du cultivateur, his patterning of the decade, month and year with the instruments, creatures and plants of agriculture and animal husbandry, suggests that he saw the cultivation of the land as the basis for a just and productive society.

Type
Chapter
Information
Time and the French Revolution
The Republican Calendar, 1789-Year XIV
, pp. 145 - 154
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2011

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