Albert Sorel

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The French diplomatic historian Albert Sorel (1842-1906) was distinguished for his major work, "Europe and the French Revolution", which influenced profoundly the interpretation of the French Revolution.

Albert Sorel was born to a wealthy industrial family of Honfleur. Although his father wanted him to join the family business, he showed from a very early age an interest in literature and history, and by the age of 18 he was publishing numerous poems in local journals. By 1863 Sorel published a series of articles in which he argued that a general history of France could not be written without previous histories of the villages and cities of the country, allowing the picture of the whole to be built up by a mosaic of parts. These interests were to appear later in his most famous work.

After finishing his studies, Sorel received his father's permission to seek work in Paris. With the assistance of François Guizot, he was attached to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1866. While at the Ministry, between 1866 and 1871, Sorel proved himself an astute diplomat. At the same time, he composed poetry and music and published two novels. During and after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 he served as chief assistant to France's primary negotiator and assured himself of a brilliant future as a diplomat.

Sorel's career was not to be as a diplomat, however. Because he felt that his German wife, whom he married shortly after the war, would be put in a difficult position because of strong anti-German feelings in France, he retired from political life, took a position as a professor at the newly established École des Sciences Politiques, and devoted the rest of his life to one work, Europe and the French Revolution.

After a series of detailed preparatory studies, Sorel published his masterwork in eight volumes between 1885 and 1904. His object was to study the struggle between the Old Regime (ancien régime) of Europe and the Revolution. The Revolution was neither a perversion of the past nor a totally new creation. Alexis de Tocqueville had discovered that much of the internal policy of the Revolution had been a continuation of that of the Old Regime, and Sorel argued that the foreign policy of the Revolution was a natural outgrowth of that of the European Old Regime.

As the "Enlightened Despots" had ruthlessly partitioned Poland under the guise of establishing natural frontiers, so the Revolution's foreign policy was based on might rather than right, and the noble ideas of rational reform were lost in the struggle for alleged natural frontiers. In the later volumes, Sorel even argued that Napoleon's expansionist policies were a continuation of practices common in a morally bankrupt Europe.

Sorel's work, particularly the early volumes, placed the Revolution in a general European context and contributed to an understanding of the most general and most fundamental forces affecting the entire course of 19th-century European history.

Sorel died one of the most respected and most influential of modern historians, his work forcing men to study the quality of the most basic structures of a society rather than simply placing blame or credit on individuals or groups.

Further Reading

There are brief accounts of Sorel in G.P. Gooch, History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century (1913; 2d ed. rev. 1952), and James Westfall Thompson, A History of Historical Writing (2 vols., 1942). For Sorel's place in French historiography see Paul Farmer, France Reviews Its Revolutionary Origins (1944). Stanley Mellon, The Political Uses of History (1958), is a provocative study of the role of French historiography itself.

Sorel, Albert (älbĕr' sôrĕl'), 1842-1906, French historian. After a diplomatic career that gave him unique access to the archives of the foreign ministry, Sorel concentrated on diplomatic history. His monumental Europe et la Révolution française (8 vol., 1895-1904) surveyed the influence of the French Revolution in Europe. Applying to diplomatic history the Tocqueville thesis of essential continuity between the ancien régime and Revolutionary France, Sorel asserted that after the revolutionists began to claim France's "natural frontiers," continuous struggle with Europe, and especially England, was inevitable. The introductory section of this work has been translated as Europe under the Old Regime (1947).
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Albert Sorel (13 August 1842 - 29 June 1906), was a French historian. He was born at Honfleur and remained throughout his life a lover of his native Normandy. His father, a rich manufacturer, wanted him to take over the business but his literary vocation prevailed. He went to live in Paris, where he studied law and, after a prolonged stay in Germany, entered the Foreign Office (1866). He had strongly-developed literary and artistic tastes, was an enthusiastic musician (even composing a little), and wrote both poetry and novels (La Grande Falaise, 1785–1793, Le Docteur Egra in 1873); but he was not a socialite.

Contents

Academic Life

Anxious to understand present as well as past events, he was above all a student. In 1870 he was chosen as secretary by M. de Chaudordy, who had been sent to Tours as a delegate in charge of the diplomatic side of the problem of national defence. He proved a most valuable collaborator, full of finesse, good temper, and excellent judgment, and at the same time hard-working and discreet. After the war, when Emile Boutmy founded the Ecole libre des sciences politiques (which later became the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris or, as it is more widely known, Sciences Po). Sorel was appointed to teach diplomatic history (1872), a duty which he performed with striking success. Some of his courses were converted into books: Le traité de Paris du 20 novembre 1815 (1873); Histoire diplomatique de la guerre franco-allemande (1875); and the Précis du droit des gens which he published (1877) in collaboration with his colleague Theodore Funck-Brentano.

Writings

In 1875 Sorel left the Foreign Office and became general secretary to the newly-created office of the Présidence du sénat. Here again, in a position where he could observe and review affairs, he performed valuable service, especially under the presidency of the duc d'Audiffred Pasquier, who was glad to have Sorel's advice in the most serious crises of internal politics. His duties left him, however, sufficient leisure to enable him to accomplish the great work of his life, L'Europe et la revolution française.[1] His object was to repeat the work already done by Heinrich von Sybel but from a less restricted point of view and with a clearer and calmer understanding of the chessboard of Europe. He spent almost thirty years in the preparation and composition of the eight volumes of this diplomatic history of the French Revolution (vol. i., 1885; vol. viii., 1904).

He was not merely a conscientious scholar; the analysis of the documents, mostly unpublished, on French diplomacy during the first years of the Revolution, which he published in the Revue historique (vol. v.-vii., x.-xiii.), shows with what scrupulous care he read the innumerable despatches which passed under his notice. He was also, and above all things, an artist. He drew men from the point of view of a psychologist as much as of a historian, observing them in their surroundings and being interested in showing how greatly they are slaves to the fatality of history. It was this fatality which led the rashest of the Conventionals to resume the tradition of the ancien régime, and caused the revolutionary propaganda to end in a system of alliances and annexations which carried on the work of Louis XIV. This view is certainly suggestive, but incomplete; it is largely true when applied to the men of the French Revolution, inexperienced or mediocre as they were, and incompetent to develop the enormous enterprises of Napoleon I.

Literary works

In the earlier volumes the reader is struck by the grandeur and relentless logic of the drama which the author unfolds. In the later volumes the reader may begin to have reservations, but the work is so complete and so powerfully constructed that it commands its audiences admiration. Side by side with this great general work, Sorel undertook various detailed studies more or less directly bearing on his subject. In La Question d'Orient au XVIII' siècle, les origines de la triple alliance (1878), he shows how the partition of Poland on the one hand reversed the traditional policy of France in eastern Europe, and on the other hand contributed towards the salvation of republican France in 1793. In the Grands écrivains series he was responsible for Montesquieu (1887) and Mme de Staël (1891). The portrait which he draws of Montesquieu is all the more vivid for the intellectual affinities which existed between him and the author of the Lettres persanes (Persian Letters) and the Esprit des lois (The Spirit of the Laws).

Later, in Bonaparte et Hoche en 1797, he produced a critical comparison which is one of his most finished works (1896). In the Recueil des instructions données aux ambassadeurs he prepared vol. i. dealing with Austria (1884). Most of the articles which he contributed to various reviews and to the Temps newspaper have been collected into volumes: Essais d'histoire et de critique (1883), Lectures historiques (1894), Nouveaux essais d'histoire et de critique (1898), Etudes de littérature et d'histoire (1901). These writings contain a great deal of information and ideas not only about political men of the last two centuries but also about certain literary men and artists of Normandy. Honours came to him in abundance as an eminent writer and not as a public official. He was elected a member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques (December 18, 1889) on the death of Fustel de Coulanges, and of the Académie française (1894) on the death of Hippolyte Taine.

Criticisms

Sorel's work, especially on the downfall of Napoleon, has come under much criticism recently by revisionist historians. His view that Napoleon was legitimately fighting for the long-established French aim of 'natural frontiers' and that Napoleon merely inherited a foreign 'situation' (and therefore did not create his own foreign policy), has been contended. Indeed recent historians, such as Matthew MacLachlan and Michael Broers, have stressed that Napoleon was a non-conformist General and that his actions abroad did not conform with any traditional French foreign policies.

Later years

His speeches on his two illustrious predecessors show how keenly sensible he was of beauty and how unbiased was his judgment, even in the case of those whom he most esteemed and loved. He had just obtained the great Prix Osiris of a hundred thousand francs, conferred for the first time by the Institut de France, when he was stricken with his last illness and died at Paris.

References

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