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French History Advance Access originally published online on June 16, 2009
French History 2009 23(3):360-382; doi:10.1093/fh/crp023
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for the Study of French History. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Wine, friends and royalist popular politics: legitimist associations in mid-nineteenth-century France

Bernard Rulof*

* The author is Assistant Professor in European Studies, Department of History, Maastricht University. He may be contacted at: bernard.rulof{at}maastrichtuniversity.nl


   Abstract

Legitimism in nineteenth-century France did not simply take the form of a movement that sought to advance the cause of the Bourbons through associations and social activity. In the middle years of the century, it engaged with the new force of universal suffrage and attempted to harness elections for the creation of new political activities. Democracy could be experimented with for reactionary aims. In this case-study of royalist associations in Montpellier, the activities of legitimist politicians are shown to have evolved, from an important but little-known phase of engagement with democratic politics, to a retreat, later in the Third Republic, into social activism.


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