|

The French Peasantry in the Seventeenth Century by Pierre Goubert

This book contains a wealth of otherwise hard-to-find facts about the often poverty-stricken and mostly unnoticed country folk in the diverse provinces and regions we now know as France. Everything warrants a chapter: food, clothing and housing; birth, marriage and death; farming and poaching practices; relationships between peasants, seigneurs, unwelcome soldiers, haughty priests and the revenue-hungry royal bailiffs; taxes and revolts.

Goubert provides invaluable background information for the novel I’m writing about a family of Huguenot refugees who flee to Jersey after Louis XIV’s Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. But I have some grievances, which prevent me giving it a higher rating:

  • Many of the references to places, people and other books will only be familiar to indigenous students of French history
  • The translation is not very fluent and includes archaic technical terms
  • The prose includes considerable repetition and rather rambling descriptions
  • Hardly any mention is made of the large minority of Huguenots and the persecution they suffered, e.g. through the infamous dragonnades.

Hi. Thanks for visiting.

Please sign up to receive a free recording of my poem Who is this God of many facets? and occasional newsletters.

Similar Posts

Join the Conversation

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *