Histoire de France 1305-1364 (Volume 4/19) by Jules Michelet

(7 User reviews)   3631
Michelet, Jules, 1798-1874 Michelet, Jules, 1798-1874
French
Hey, I just finished this wild history book that reads like a political thriller! It's about the 60 years in France where the monarchy nearly collapsed. Think Game of Thrones, but real—a weak king gets captured, his son tries to rule a country falling apart, and peasant revolts explode. The author, Michelet, doesn't just give you dates; he makes you feel the panic in the streets and the scheming in the castles. It's about power vacuums and what happens when the center cannot hold. If you like stories about survival against impossible odds, this slice of the 14th century is shockingly relevant.
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Jules Michelet's fourth volume covers a period of French history that feels less like a steady march and more like a frantic stumble from one crisis to the next. We start with the weak King Louis X and follow the disastrous reign of his successor, Philip VI, right into the opening salvos of the Hundred Years' War with England.

The Story

This isn't a story of glorious conquest. It's the story of a kingdom coming undone. The French kings of this era are plagued by military defeat, most famously at the Battle of Crécy, and by a crumbling economy. The Black Death arrives, wiping out a huge part of the population and throwing society into chaos. The book's climax isn't a battle, but a popular uprising: the Jacquerie, a bloody peasant revolt born from utter desperation and fury at a nobility that failed to protect them.

Why You Should Read It

Michelet writes history with a novelist's heart. He makes you understand the sheer terror of the plague, the confusion of a lost war, and the raw anger of starving people. He's less interested in battle tactics and more in human suffering and resilience. You get a real sense of the French *people*—not just the kings—struggling to survive as their world falls apart. It's gripping because it feels so human.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who think history is boring. Michelet proves it's anything but. This is for anyone who enjoys deep-dive narratives about societal collapse, the fragility of power, and moments when the common people rewrite the rules. Be warned: it's a dense, older style of history writing, but if you stick with it, you're rewarded with a breathtakingly vivid portrait of a nation in its darkest hour.



📜 License Information

Legal analysis indicates this work is in the public domain. Use this text in your own projects freely.

Daniel Young
11 months ago

Citation worthy content.

Elijah Nguyen
1 year ago

I have to admit, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. Thanks for sharing this review.

Paul Allen
1 year ago

Perfect.

Susan White
2 years ago

Very helpful, thanks.

Barbara Robinson
1 year ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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