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History of the City of Chartres in the Seventeenth Century
Coles
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History of the City of Chartres in the Seventeenth Century in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $20.99


By None
History of the City of Chartres in the Seventeenth Century in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $20.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
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History of the City of Chartres in the Seventeenth Century brings to life a French provincial city at the height of the early modern era, revealing a world where faith, work, ritual, and resilience shaped every corner of daily existence. Through vivid storytelling grounded in meticulous research, the book opens a window onto a community negotiating the pressures of royal power, religious reform, economic uncertainty, and the rhythms of the natural world. From the soaring presence of the cathedral to the bustling grain markets of the Beauce, from the intimate rituals of family life to the grand processions that united the city, Chartres emerges as a vibrant crossroads of people, goods, and ideas. Readers meet merchants navigating the volatile grain trade, artisans defending their guild traditions, Jesuit teachers shaping young minds, washerwomen laboring along the Eure, and soldiers passing through on the king's business. Their stories illuminate a society both deeply traditional and quietly transforming. The book explores the city's institutions, its festivals and fears, its conflicts and celebrations, its encounters with war, climate, and disease. It reveals how ordinary men and women understood their world-its dangers, its joys, and its promises of salvation. The result is a richly textured portrait of urban life under the Bourbon monarchy, offering readers a compelling blend of narrative history, cultural insight, and human drama.
History of the City of Chartres in the Seventeenth Century brings to life a French provincial city at the height of the early modern era, revealing a world where faith, work, ritual, and resilience shaped every corner of daily existence. Through vivid storytelling grounded in meticulous research, the book opens a window onto a community negotiating the pressures of royal power, religious reform, economic uncertainty, and the rhythms of the natural world. From the soaring presence of the cathedral to the bustling grain markets of the Beauce, from the intimate rituals of family life to the grand processions that united the city, Chartres emerges as a vibrant crossroads of people, goods, and ideas. Readers meet merchants navigating the volatile grain trade, artisans defending their guild traditions, Jesuit teachers shaping young minds, washerwomen laboring along the Eure, and soldiers passing through on the king's business. Their stories illuminate a society both deeply traditional and quietly transforming. The book explores the city's institutions, its festivals and fears, its conflicts and celebrations, its encounters with war, climate, and disease. It reveals how ordinary men and women understood their world-its dangers, its joys, and its promises of salvation. The result is a richly textured portrait of urban life under the Bourbon monarchy, offering readers a compelling blend of narrative history, cultural insight, and human drama.

















