A Bite-Sized History of France: Delicious, Gastronomic Tales of Revolution, War, and Enlightenment by Stephane Henaut
Author:Stephane Henaut
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: History
ISBN: 9781620972526
Publisher: The New Press
Published: 2018-07-09T22:00:00+00:00
Camille Desmoulins incites the crowd to revolution at the Café du Foy on July 12, 1789, with the legendary appeal, “Aux armes, citoyens!” (“To arms, citizens!”). A statue of Desmoulins leaping upon his café chair was raised in the spot on the centenary of the revolution but removed and melted down by the Vichy regime in 1942. From the French Revolution Digital Archive, a collaboration of the Stanford University Libraries and the Bibliothèque Nationale de France. Unattributed. Camillus Desmoulins predigt Aufruhr in dem Palais Royal: den 12 Jul. 1789, produced in Germany between 1794 and 1820.
We tend to think of the French Revolution as a unitary event, but it was really a series of political uproars that extended over many years. In this earliest phase, those advocating the transformation of France into a constitutional monarchy won out, while the more radical voices clamoring for a republic were forced to wait a few more years. In August 1789, the National Assembly formally abolished all feudal rights and structures, which were seen as the underlying basis for social inequalities, and announced the Declaration of the Rights of Man, an astounding manifestation of liberal Enlightenment ideals.
The cafés continued to house political intrigue in the following years, even as some of their most ardent patrons went to the guillotine: Desmoulins and Danton were consigned to death in April 1794 by Robespierre, who followed himself a few months later. The French politician Narcisse-Achille de Salvandy noted that even as the cafés became more moderate in the postrevolutionary era, “one does not govern against the cafés. The revolution took place because they were for the revolution; Napoleon reigned because they were for glory.” Small wonder he defined them as “one of the branches of legislative power in the free nations.”4
The revolution also generated a sea change in the capital’s restaurants. With the fall of the Bastille and the ugly public mood surrounding it, many wealthy nobles decided (probably correctly) that emigration might be a safe course of action. As they fled, they left behind their household staff, including their chefs, many of whom were talented and ingenious cooks. A number of these unemployed chefs decided to open their own restaurants, in which anybody with sufficient funds could dine in style.
Restaurants had existed before the revolution, but they were a fairly new invention and suffered from competition with the various food guilds that had existed since the Middle Ages. Every type of food business had its guild, and each guild had its privileges. It was not possible, for example, to go to a single purveyor for a wide range of meat. Traiteurs served cooked meat dishes and stews, while rôtisseurs sold roasted meat, and charcutiers served cured pork products like ham, rillettes, and sausages (for raw meat, a trip to the butcher or poulterer was required). Bar owners and wine sellers could sell drinks but they were not allowed to sell food. Prior to the revolution, restaurants—from the French restaurer, “to restore”—were limited to selling restorative bouillons, which were technically distinct from the meaty stews that only traiteurs could serve.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Personalized inhaled bacteriophage therapy for treatment of multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis by unknow(181516)
CONSORT 2025 statement: updated guideline for reporting randomized trials by unknow(89935)
Critical evaluation of the ProfiLER-02 study design and outcomes by Vivek Subbiah & Razelle Kurzrock(89542)
Cardiac gene therapy makes a comeback by Oliver J. Müller & Susanne Hille & Anca Kliesow Remes(89314)
Whisky: Malt Whiskies of Scotland (Collins Little Books) by dominic roskrow(74452)
Unveiling the design rules for tunable emission in graphene quantum dots: A high-throughput TDDFT and machine learning perspective by Şener Özönder & Mustafa Coşkun Özdemir & Caner Ünlü(50905)
A yeast-based oral therapeutic delivers immune checkpoint inhibitors to reduce intestinal tumor burden by unknow(40276)
Covalent hitchhikers guide proteins to the nucleus by Alexander F. Russell & Madeline F. Currie & Champak Chatterjee(40220)
Meet the Authors: Christopher R. Mansfield and Emily R. Derbyshire by Christopher R. Mansfield & Emily R. Derbyshire(40104)
Alkaline-earth metals promote propane dehydrogenation with carbon dioxide through geometric effects: Altering the reaction pathway by unknow(32741)
Induced iron vacancies boosting FeOOH loaded on sustainable Fenton-like collagen fiber membrane for efficient removal of emerging contaminants by unknow(32522)
Efficient electric-field-assisted photochemical conversion of methane to n-propanol exclusively over penetrated TiO2Ti hollow fibers by Guanghui Feng(32460)
Bi2SiO5 nanosheets as piezo-photocatalyst for efficient degradation of 2,4-Dichlorophenol by Hangyu Shi & Yifu Li & Lishan Zhang & Guoguan Liu & Qian Zhang & Xuan Ru & Shan Zhong(32400)
A novel NDIPTA organic heterojunction photocatalyst with built-in electric field for efficient hydrogen production by Jiahui Yang & Baojun Ma & Yongfa Zhu(32372)
Enhanced conversion of methane to liquid-phase oxygenates via hollow ferrite nanotube@horseradish peroxidase based photoenzymatic catalysis by Jun Duan & Shiying Fan & Xinyong Li & Shaomin Liu(32339)
Ordered macroporous superstructure of defective carbon adorned with tiny cobalt sulfide for selective electrocatalytic hydrogenation of cinnamaldehyde by Xiao-Shi Yuan & Sheng-Hua Zhou & San-Mei Wang & Wenbo Wei & Xiaofang Li & Xin-Tao Wu & Qi-Long Zhu(32263)
What's Done in Darkness by Kayla Perrin(27155)
Topological analysis of non-conjugated ethylene oxide cored dendrimers decorated with tetraphenylethylene: Insights from degree-based descriptors using the polynomial approach by A Theertha Nair & D Antony Xavier & Annmaria Baby & S Akhila(26543)
Investigation of mechanical and self-healing properties of hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene functionalized with 2-ureido-4-pyrimidinone by Mohsen Kazazi & Mehran Hayaty & Ali Mousaviazar(26469)