Patrick Boucheron
Author of Histoire mondiale de la France
About the Author
Patrick Boucheron is Professor of History at the Collge de France.
Series
Works by Patrick Boucheron
Histoire de l'Europe urbaine, tome 1 : De l'Antiquité au XVIIIe siècle. Genèse des villes européennes (2003) — Author — 4 copies
"les villes capitales au moyen âge ; 36ème congrès de la shmes (istanbul, 1er-6 juin)" (2006) — Editor; Contributor — 3 copies
Le pouvoir de batir: Urbanisme et politique edilitaire a Milan (XIVe-XVe siecles) (Collection de l'Ecole francaise de Ro (1998) 3 copies
Les palais dans la ville - Espaces urbains et lieux de la puissance publique dans la Méditerranée médiévale (2004) 2 copies
Valeurs et systèmes de valeurs (moyen âge et temps modernes): Le pouvoir symbolique en occident (1300-1640) (2017) 2 copies
Nos futurs communs 1 copy
Associated Works
La Nature et le roi: Environnement, pouvoir et société à l'âge de Charlemagne (740-820) (A.M. EVO HUMA.G) (French Edition) (2019) — Foreword, some editions — 8 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Boucheron , Patrick
- Birthdate
- 1965-10-28
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Université de Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (Habilitation à diriger des recherches ∙ Thèse "La trace et l’aura. Essais sur l’écriture de l’histoire ∙ la politique monumentale et la création artistique dans les villes d’Italie de la fin du Moyen Âge. Mémoire inédit sur le souvenir de saint Ambroise" ∙ [2009])
Université de Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne (Doctorat ∙ Histoire médiévale ∙ Thèse "Urbanisme ∙ politique des grands travaux et pouvoir princier à Milan à la fin du Moyen Âge" ∙ [1994])
Agrégation d'histoire ( [1998])
Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (Diplôme d'études approfondies ∙ Histoire médiévale ∙ 1989)
Ecole normale supérieure, Saint-Cloud ( [1985])
Lycée Henri IV, Paris (Hypokhâgne ∙ khâgne ∙ [1984, 1985]) (show all 7)
Lycée Marcelin Berthelot, Saint-Maur-des-Fossés (Baccalauréat ∙ 1983) - Occupations
- Professeur (Histoire)
Historien (Moyen Age, Renaissance, Italie)
Médiéviste
Chroniqueur (Radio) - Organizations
- Collège de France (Professeur, chaire "Histoire des pouvoirs en Europe occidentale, XIIIe -XVIe siècle", 2015- )
Ecole normale supérieure de Fontenay-Saint-Cloud (ATER puis Maître de conférence, 1990l1999)
Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (Allocataire, 1990l1993 / Maître de conférences, Professeur, Histoire médiévale, 1999-2015)
Ecole supérieure de guerre (Assistant histoire, 1989l1990)
Histoire urbaine, revue (Membre, 1999- )
Centre national du Livre (Membre commission "Histoire, Sciences humaines", 2007l2011) (show all 11)
Publications de la Sorbonne (Directeur, 2010l2015)
L'Histoire, magazine (Membre du comité de rédaction, 1999- )
Musée des civilisations de l'Europe et de la Méditerranée, Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France (Membre du conseil scientifique)
Editions du Seuil (Directeur de collection "L'Univers historique", 2012- )
Institut d'études politiques de Paris (Conférencier invité, 2010l2012) - Relationships
- Toubert, Pierre (Directeur de Thèse
Bertaud, Jean-Pierre (Directeur Thèse DEA)
Genet, Jean-Philippe (Garant HDR) - Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Paris, France
- Map Location
- France
Members
Reviews
160 short pieces on French history, together they form a doorstopper of more than 1.000 pages. Of course, I've not read them all, I estimate about a 5th of them, spread throughout the book. I'm sure I'm regularly going to return to this book to read other pieces. In global, they offer a nice overview of French history, but - to my surprise - rather traditionally sticking to the classic highlights (Alesia, Clovis, Charles the Great, the War against the British, etc). There sure is a show more revisionistic tendency in this book (going against the tide of the hyper-nationalistic identity-crave), but not really a 'global history'. Still, worth reading. Ratingn 2.5 stars.
A more in depth-review in my History account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3978020656 show less
A more in depth-review in my History account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3978020656 show less
You can read my full review here:
https://thebeerthrillers.com/2021/04/13/book-review-machiavelli-the-art-of-teach....
A quick excerpt from the review:
"....The underlying theme that runs current through the thirty small chapters is that Machiavelli is much aligned and isn’t the “cutthroat monster” we have been pretty much led to believe by historians and history itself, by the way his name is used eponymously and how he is portrayed in fiction and even by scholars themselves. As the show more cover shows, (a grafitti’d Machiavelli, with devil horns), Machiavelli is believed and portrayed as this cutthroat man who believed “the ends always justify the means” and almost a “anything goes” attitude towards princes, and kings, and those in power; as a form of keeping their power, and making sure the government they are in control of continues on.......
....Machiavelli did have a lot to teach about fear, its usage, its power, its conception, its control, its psychological importance, etc. He had as much to teach us about it as he did the Princes and the rulers. And as Boucheron showcases here, he had much more to show us – the common folk, the peasants, the non – rulers – about fear than he did the Cesare Borgias and Medicis of the world. And that is why we still read (and still need to read) Machiavelli in today’s world, and in today’s context.
My LibraryThing rating: ***3/4
My GoodReads rating: ****
Global Average GoodReads Rating: 3.68 (as of 4.7.21)" show less
https://thebeerthrillers.com/2021/04/13/book-review-machiavelli-the-art-of-teach....
A quick excerpt from the review:
"....The underlying theme that runs current through the thirty small chapters is that Machiavelli is much aligned and isn’t the “cutthroat monster” we have been pretty much led to believe by historians and history itself, by the way his name is used eponymously and how he is portrayed in fiction and even by scholars themselves. As the show more cover shows, (a grafitti’d Machiavelli, with devil horns), Machiavelli is believed and portrayed as this cutthroat man who believed “the ends always justify the means” and almost a “anything goes” attitude towards princes, and kings, and those in power; as a form of keeping their power, and making sure the government they are in control of continues on.......
....Machiavelli did have a lot to teach about fear, its usage, its power, its conception, its control, its psychological importance, etc. He had as much to teach us about it as he did the Princes and the rulers. And as Boucheron showcases here, he had much more to show us – the common folk, the peasants, the non – rulers – about fear than he did the Cesare Borgias and Medicis of the world. And that is why we still read (and still need to read) Machiavelli in today’s world, and in today’s context.
My LibraryThing rating: ***3/4
My GoodReads rating: ****
Global Average GoodReads Rating: 3.68 (as of 4.7.21)" show less
Se ha estado anunciando desde hace años como una catástrofe inevitable. ¿Ha sido para alertarnos o para que nos habituemos a ella?
Tras el avance de la ultraderecha en las últimas elecciones europeas y el adelanto de las legislativas en Francia, es posible que ese acontecimiento que tanto temíamos se materialice como la continuación de lo que sabíamos que iba a ocurrir y no supimos ni pudimos evitar. Y comprenderemos, demasiado tarde, que a fuerza de esperar esa catástrofe no nos show more enteramos de que ya había llegado. show less
Tras el avance de la ultraderecha en las últimas elecciones europeas y el adelanto de las legislativas en Francia, es posible que ese acontecimiento que tanto temíamos se materialice como la continuación de lo que sabíamos que iba a ocurrir y no supimos ni pudimos evitar. Y comprenderemos, demasiado tarde, que a fuerza de esperar esa catástrofe no nos show more enteramos de que ya había llegado. show less
Jan 14, 2025Spanish
Ce que peut l’histoire: Leçon inaugurale prononcée le jeudi 17 décembre 2015 (Collège de France t. 259) (French Edition) by Patrick Boucheron
Leçon inaugurale de l'historien Patrick Boucheron au début de sa chaire au prestigieux Collège de France, fin 2015. Bien sûr, cela reste très général, mais Boucheron pose un peu de son propre accent sur l'histoire européenne du XIIIe au XVIe siècle en environ 30 pages. Ils témoignent d'une compréhension très profonde de la spécificité de la culture européenne, caractérisée par l'acte de séparation. Son plaidoyer pour la combinaison de l'érudition et de l'imagination et show more d'une vision globale montre une attitude très saine vis-à-vis de l’étude du passé. show less
Aug 29, 2021French
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- Works
- 48
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 571
- Popularity
- #43,840
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 11
- ISBNs
- 97
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