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Georges Lefebvre

 
Biography: Georges Lefebvre

The French historian Georges Lefebvre (1874-1959) was one of the major 20th-century historians of the French Revolution.

Georges Lefebvre was born at Lille on Aug. 6, 1874. His father had little money to spend on his son's education. Young Lefebvre attended the local public school, followed the "special curriculum" in the local lycée - which emphasized modern languages, mathematics, and economics instead of the classical languages - and graduated from the University of Lille. This education, he later wrote, "opened my mind to economic and social realities, and gave me the air of an independent, self-taught individual among my colleagues later on." He began research on his doctoral thesis in 1904, but as a provincial school-teacher, preoccupied by supporting a family and his aged parents, he did not complete it until 1924, when he was 50 years old.

Lefebvre's doctoral thesis, "The Peasants of the Nord Department and the French Revolution," was a detailed statistical study of the effect of the Revolution on the countryside. It was based on a thorough analysis of thousands of tax rolls, notarial records, and the registers of rural municipalities, whose materials he used to trace the effects of the abolition of feudalism and ecclesiastical tithes, the consequences of property transfers, the movement of the bourgeoisie into the countryside, and the destruction of collective rights in the peasant villages. He argued that the Revolution completed the breakdown of peasant solidarity and transformed the village community. It created a class of peasant proprietors attached to the gains of the Revolution and to the principle of private property.

After his thesis appeared, Lefebvre was named professor at Clermont-Ferrand. In 1928 Marc Bloch succeeded in having him brought to Strasbourg, and in 1935 he was named to Paris. He reached retirement age in 1941 but was invited by his colleagues to remain until the Liberation.

Lefebvre was a man of the left and called himself a Marxist. He considered Jules Guesde and Jean Jaurès to have had the greatest influence on his intellectual life. He had seen Jaurès only twice, from a distance, but the latter's Socialist History of the Revolution determined the direction of Lefebvre's research. Lefebvre's Marxism, however, was thoroughly tempered: "Marx clarified the dominant influence of the mode of production, but it was never his intention to exclude other factors, especially man … It is man who makes history."

Lefebvre showed the breadth of his views when he turned from statistical social history to social psychology. In The Great Fear of 1789 (1932) he sought the causes of this movement in the peasant mind: the fear of "brigands," poverty, and unemployment, to which 1789 added a political crisis and fear of an "aristocratic plot." He also wrote several general histories of the Revolution, integrating the social and economic history of the period with the political. The most famous are Napoleon (1935), 1789 (1939), and The French Revolution (1951). He died in Paris on Aug. 28, 1959.

Further Reading

S. William Halperin, ed., Some 20th-Century Historians (1961), includes a chapter on Lefebvre. Also useful is Arthur Marwick, The Nature of History (1970).

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French Literature Companion: Georges Lefebvre
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Lefebvre, Georges (1874-1959). Professor at the Sorbonne, historian of the Revolution, which he interpreted along republican and broadly Marxist lines in works of great erudition, including La Grande Peur de 1789 (1932), Quatre-vingt-neuf (1939), and La Révolution française (1951).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Georges Lefebvre
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Lefebvre, Georges (zhôrzh ləfĕ'vrə), 1874-1959, French historian, an authority on the French Revolutionary period. From 1937 to 1945 he held the chair of French Revolutionary history at the Sorbonne, and he founded the Institut d'histoire de la Révolution française. Lefebvre's most original contributions were the writing of history from below, particularly the French Revolution as viewed from the experiences of the peasantry, and his mastery of quantitative research. Both are evident in Les Paysans du Nord pendant la Révolution française (1924). Although influenced by Marxism, he was predominantly an empiricist and a humanist; he saw in history a complex interaction of social, economic, and political phenomena. His La Révolution française (rev. ed. 1951), considered an authoritative work, has been translated in two volumes as The French Revolution (1962-64) and The French Revolution from 1793 to 1799 (1964). Another work is Napoléon (4th ed. 1953; tr., 2 vol., 1969), a judicious study of the Napoleonic era.
Wikipedia: Georges Lefebvre
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Georges Lefebvre (6 August 187428 August 1959) was a French historian, best known for his work on the French Revolution and peasant life. He coined the term "history from below", which was later popularised by the British Marxist Historians. Among his most significant works was the 1924 book Les Paysans du Nord pendant la Révolution française ("The Peasants of the North During the French Revolution”), which was the result of 20 years of research into the role of the peasantry during the revolutionary period.

Contents

Personal background

Lefebvre was born in Lille. He was the son of a small commercial employee,[1] and his family could not afford to put him through college. Lefebvre attended public school, obtaining his secondary and university training with the help of scholarships. Lefebvre attended the University of Lille, and it was here that he followed the “special curriculum”, which emphasized modern languages, mathematics, and economics instead of the classical languages.[2] It was as a result of his schooling that Georges Lefebvre was able to teach in a series of secondary schools for more than twenty years after his graduation in 1898.[2] After his career in teaching secondary school students, Lefebvre began teaching at the university level.[3]

He became more and more influenced by Marxism about the time of the Second World War. Lefebvre was influenced by the Marxist idea that history should be concerned with economic structures and class relations.

He died in Paris in 1959.

The French Revolution

Lefebvre began writing in 1904, but it was not until 1924, at the age of fifty, that he was finally at the point in his career - no longer preoccupied with supporting his family - that he was able to finish his doctoral thesis: Les Paysans du Nord pendant la Révolution française.[4] This work was a detailed and thorough examination of the effects of the French Revolution on the countryside. Lefebvre’s work on this thesis was “based on a thorough analysis of thousands of tax rolls, notarial records, and the registers of rural municipalities, whose materials he used to trace the effects of the abolition of feudalism and ecclesiastical tithes, the consequences of property transfers, the movement of the bourgeoisie onto the countryside, and the destruction of collective rights in the peasants villages”.[2] It is this document that accounts for Lefebvre’s ever growing interest to engrave and contemplate his own viewpoints on the revolutionary issues that continued to influence modern events.

He often wrote from a viewpoint which he felt the peasant of the time would have held.

One aspect of Georges Lefebvre’s life that other historians are particularly keen on examining is the period of 1924-1959. This period in Lefebvre’s writings is repeatedly chosen because he wrote his most influential and “much more complex interpretation of the Revolution than had hitherto prevailed amongst historians”.[5] Jones elaborates that Lefebvre’s take on the Revolution has three major roles, which he describes as the active pursuit of the French country to partake in the Revolution, that such participation was not influenced by the bourgeoisie, and that the peasants agreed on their anticapitalist way of think, that resulted in their way of thinking in the 1790s.[6] This exact observations and concepts from Lefebvre on the French Revolution; that throughout the passing of time and the many revisionists that have questioned it, has fallen out of favor as a consequence of this evaluations by the revisionists, and the public no longer sees it as influential as it once was.

Georges Lefebvre’s accomplishments

Lefebvre's account of the origins of the French Revolution was written in Quatre-Vingt-Neuf, and published in 1939 to mark the sesquicentennial of the events of 1789, but the Vichy government that took over the following year wanted no left-wing history or sympathetic understanding of the Revolution, as they drew their support from the anti-republican right. The Vichy régime suppressed the book, ordering 8,000 copies to be burned; as a result the work was virtually unknown in its native land until it was reprinted in 1970. Its reputation was already secure in the English-speaking world, however, since the English translation, The Coming of the French Revolution (1939) had established it as a clear, yet subtle, classic. It remains the definitive explanation of the Marxist interpretation of the causes of the Revolution. His seminal work, La Révolution Française (revised edition, 1951) was translated into English as two volumes: The French Revolution From Its Origins To 1793 (1962-4) and The French Revolution from 1793 to 1799 (1964). He also wrote a study of the most famous general and ruler in the history of France in Napoléon (4th edition 1953; translated in 2 volumes, 1969).

A doctoral dissertation by Lawrence Davis, entitled Georges Lefebvre: Historian and Public Intellectual, 1928-1959, as the title suggests, concentrates on the latter part of Lefebvre’s life and on the scholarly publications that made Lefebvre among a noteworthy historian. Davis expands on the concept of mentalité that Lefebvre developed, arguing that this is “a term that represented their collective goal of documenting the material and mental worlds of people of the past, where the social and cultural existed comfortably side by side”.[7] Throughout the work, Davis concentrated on the notion that Lefebvre used this concept of mentalité of the peasantry in relation to the Revolution.

Recognition

In 1935 Georges Lefebvre became the president of the Societé des Études robespierristes and the director of the Annales historiques de la Révolution française.[8] In 1937 Lefebvre was announced the Chair of the History of the French Revolution at the Sorbonne.[9]

By 1914 he had already published a collection of documents, entitled Documents relatifs à l’histoire des subsistances dans le district de Bergues pendant la Révolution (1788-An V). By the time of his death Georges Lefebvre had written more scholarly publications, that what his mind could capture, his works ranged from the humble peasant sentiment, to the volumes and volumes he conjured about Napoleon Bonaparte. Lefebvre continued to engrave all that he could on the French Revolution and all that dealt with it, well into his old age and beyond his retirement from the position of Chair at the Sorbonne in 1945.[10] Georges Lefebvre died in Boulogne-Billancourt on August 28, 1959.

Selected works

  • Quatre-Vingt-Neuf (1939)
  • Napoléon (1935)
  • La Révolution Française (Volume I, 1951)
  • La Révolution Française (Volume II, 1957)

Sources

  • Bienvenu, Richard T. (2008). "Lefebvre, Georges". Encyclopedia Americana.  Grolier Online. 16 Feb. 2008 [1]
  • Davis, Lawrence H. (2001). Georges Lefebvre: Historian and Public Intellectual, 1928-1959. Ann Arbor: Diss. University of Connecticut. 
  • Evanson, Elizabeth M. Foreword. The French Revolution Volume I from its origins to 1793. By Georges Lefebvre. New York: Columbia University Press, 1962. ix-xiv}}
  • Jones, Peter M. (Spring 1990). "Georges Lefebvre and the Peasant Revolution: Fifty Years on". French Historical Studies (Fairfax: JSTOR. George Mason U. Lib.) 16 (3): 645-663. 

Notes

  1. ^ Lefebvre, Georges (1962). The French Revolution Volume I: from its Origins to 1793. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. ix-xiv. 
  2. ^ a b c Bienvenu, Richard T. (2008). "“Lefebvre, Georges”". Encyclopedia Americana. http://ea.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0242060-00. Retrieved on 2008-03-06. 
  3. ^ Evanson, Elizabeth M. (1962). The French Revolution Volume I from its Origins to 1793 (preface). New York: Columbia University Press. pp. ix-xiv. 
  4. ^ Bienvenu, Richard T. (2008). "“Lefebvre, Georges"". Encyclopedia Americana. http://ea.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0242060-00. Retrieved on 2008-03-06. 
  5. ^ Jones, Peter M. “Georges Lefebvre and the Peasant Revolution: Fifty Years on.” French Historical Studies, Vol.16 No.3. (Spring 1990), pp.645-663. JSTOR. George Mason U. Lib., Fairfax. 16 Feb. 2008 <http://www.jstor.org.>
  6. ^ Jones, Peter M. “Georges Lefebvre and the Peasant Revolution: Fifty Years on.” French Historical Studies, Vol.16 No.3. (Spring 1990), pp.645-663. JSTOR. George Mason U. Lib., Fairfax. 16 Feb. 2008 <http://www.jstor.org.>
  7. ^ Davis, Lawrence H. (2001). Georges Lefebvre: Historian and Public Intellectual, 1928-1959 (PhD dissertation). University of Connecticut. 
  8. ^ Evanson, Elizabeth M. Foreword. The French Revolution Volume I from its origins to 1793. By Georges Lefebvre. New York: Columbia University Press, 1962. ix-xiv.
  9. ^ Evanson, Elizabeth M. Foreword. The French Revolution Volume I from its origins to 1793. By Georges Lefebvre. New York: Columbia University Press, 1962. ix-xiv.
  10. ^ Evanson, Elizabeth M. Foreword. The French Revolution Volume I from its origins to 1793. By Georges Lefebvre. New York: Columbia University Press, 1962. ix-xiv.

See also

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