Academic literature on the topic 'Berry (France) – 16e siècle'
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Journal articles on the topic "Berry (France) – 16e siècle"
Beltran, Alain. "Woronoff Denis, Histoire de l'industrie en France. Du 16e siècle à nos jours." Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire 54, no. 2 (April 1, 1997): 149–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ving.p1997.54n1.0149.
Full textBurg, Gaëlle. "La littérature médiévale en FLE : un corpus à réévaluer." Swiss Journal of Educational Research 44, no. 3 (December 14, 2022): 378–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.24452/sjer.44.3.7.
Full textNEVEU, A. "La raniculture est-elle une alternative à la récolte ? Etat actuel en France." INRAE Productions Animales 17, no. 3 (July 29, 2004): 161–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.20870/productions-animales.2004.17.3.3587.
Full textWeis, Monique. "Le mariage protestant au 16e siècle: desacralisation du lien conjugal et nouvelle “sacralisation” de la famille." Vínculos de Historia. Revista del Departamento de Historia de la Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, no. 8 (June 20, 2019): 134. http://dx.doi.org/10.18239/vdh_2019.08.07.
Full textLebrun, François. "François Laplanche, La Bible en France, entre mythe et critique, 16e -19e siècle, Paris, Albin Michel, « L'évolution de l'humanité », 1994, 318 p." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 50, no. 1 (February 1995): 215–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0395264900060819.
Full textMaillard, Michel. "L'évolution des modèles propositionnels dans la grammaire portugaise de 1536 à 1936." Cahiers du Centre de Linguistique et des Sciences du Langage, no. 25 (April 9, 2022): 201–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.26034/la.cdclsl.2008.1397.
Full textΝΥΣΤΑΖΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ-ΠΕΛΕΚΙΔΟΥ, ΜΑΡΙΑ. "ΤΑ ΠΛΑΣΤΑ ΕΓΓΡΑΦΑ ΣΤΟΥΣ ΜΕΣΟΥΣ ΧΡΟΝΟΥΣ ΣΤΟ ΒΥΖΑΝΤΙΟ ΚΑΙ ΣΤΑ ΒΑΛΚΑΝΙΑ: Κριτήρια πλαστότητας, στόχοι και τεχνικές." Eoa kai Esperia 7 (January 1, 2007): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/eoaesperia.7.
Full textRenard, Samuel. "Bouchet Marion, La céramique de la fin de l’âge du Fer dans le Berry. Approches chronologique, culturelle et territoriale de la société des Bituriges ( ii e - i er siècle av. J.-C.) , Tours, FERACF, 2017, 292 p., 116 fig., 1 CD-Rom (Revue archéologique du Centre de la France, Suppl. 67). ISBN 978-2-913272-53-8. Prix : 30 €." Revue du Nord 423, no. 5 (July 9, 2018): III. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rdn.423.0331c.
Full textFrobert, Ludovic. "N. Zemon Davis, Essai sur le don dans la France du 16e siècle." Astérion, no. 1 (June 1, 2003). http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/asterion.20.
Full textGagné, Natacha. "Anthropologie et histoire." Anthropen, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.17184/eac.anthropen.060.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Berry (France) – 16e siècle"
Perrochon, Cécile. "L'architecture bénédictine en Berry aux XIe et XIIe siècles." Paris 10, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA100085.
Full textBenedictine monachism was firmly established in Berry, and thrived there throughout the XIth and XIIth centuries. In those times, numerous were the religious edifices which depended on saint Benedict's rule. Nowadays, some of them constitute particularly noticeable examples of romanesque art. Between 613 and 1093, thirteen abbeys were founded. They ruled over three hundred and twenty one churches scattered all over Berry. The architectural analysis of the formers throws light on recurring structural as well as functional elements which seem less obvious in the latters. For that matter, considering the non benedictine edifices of the area shows that they bear a close relation to the churches on which this study focuses. We can therefore infer that there are no artistic characteristics specific to that order, whose role was probably limited to spreading the influence of such great monasteries as Cluny or Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire
Boisson, Didier. "Les protestants de l'ancien colloque du Berry de la Révocation de l'édit de Nantes à la fin de l'ancien Régime (1679-1789), ou l'inégale résistance de minorités religieuses." Paris 4, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA040096.
Full textUntil 1685, the protestants in berry were a true minority : most of the communities were quite isolated (Aubusson, Corbigny, Issoudun) but the more important ones settled in the Loire valley (sancerre, chatillon-sur-loire, gien). In the years before the edict of Fontainebleau, the calvinists resisted the persecutions in spite of the catholic clergy's action and the destruction of their temples. In the eighteenth century, they faced more important persecutions in external peacetime in which administrators played a significant part. The catholic clergy wished sincerely to convert the new catholics but they didn't understand the royal policy and expected a firmer action. The revocation is responsible for the dispersion of numerous protestants all over the kingdom : Orleans but Paris above were their only places of refuge. The number of escapes to foreign countries varied from a community to another. The fugitives' properties were seized but the administration couldn't deal properly with them. The protestant communities resisted in Sancerre, Chatillon-sur-Loire and Asnieres-les-Bourges, but everywhere else they disappeared. The protestant service could then only go on thanks to the presence of calvinism among the people like vine growers and craftsmen. The leading citizens got converted, left the spot or attended the public church service belatedly. In the eighteenth century, the profession of those who were part of communities remained quite the same : vine growers in Asnieres, leading citizens and vine growers in Chatillon-sur-Loire but in the community of Sancerre, the elite disappeared. When the edict of 1787 was promulgated, toleration wasn't accepted by everybody and particularly among the clergy
Pauquet, Alain. "La société et les relations sociales en Berry au milieu du XIXe siècle : essai d'une histoire globale de la sociabilité dans le département du Cher de 1830 à 1855." Paris 1, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993PA010709.
Full textIn the middle of the nineteenth century, the society in cher (the northern part of Berry) was still intensely rural, agrarian and inequal (domination of large estates). Population was increasing fastly, thanks to a high birth rate and a declining mortality. The industrial and agricultural revolution had started since about eighteen hundred and thirty five, but it was slowed down by the crisis of the middle of the century. Democratic ideas spread out under the second republic and, in the year eighteen forty nine, a majority of electors voted for the "reds". The analysis of marriage certificates of eighteen hundred and forty five has allowed a better knowledge of this society. A statistical study has been done for each social class and each profession, about social mobility, migrations, the choice of spouses (according to their age, homogamy or endogamy) as well as sociability of friendship and kinship (proved by the witnesses at the wedding). Computer graphics made with the analysis of contingency tables have been realised for each kind of social relationship. As far as friendship relationship are concerned, the computer graphic is like a sociometric test, at a large scale, which reveals the system of social links, better than the analysis of marriages themselves. The diversity of social gatherings appears in the sociological study of public places, private meetings, festivals and strikes as well. This research about sociability (which includes geographical variations) also describes the structures of families (using a typology), associations (especially about clubs) and the other side of sociability (criminality and all kinds of violence). As a conclusion, the writer, who insists on the social brake of the first years of the reign of louis-philippe, suggests the project of an "historical sociometry"
Malandain, Gilles. "L'affaire Louvel, ou l'introuvable complot : événement, enquête judiciaire et expression politique dans la France de la Restauration." Paris 12, 2005. https://athena.u-pec.fr/primo-explore/search?query=any,exact,990003941880204611&vid=upec.
Full textThis thesis proposes to pay attention to a tremendous but forgotten event, the assassination of the duc de Berry, Louis XVIII's nephew, on 13th of February 1820. Louvel's crime was widely understood as the result of a plot against the monarchy, and led therefore to a major political crisis and royalist reaction. The murderer's trial before the Cour des pairs was also preceded by a broad inquiry, involving most officials, ike magistrates or prefects, trying to pierce the social and political darkness of postrevolutionary France. They found not plot but proceded original archive materials on memories and rumours stirred up by the event in various social classes. The study first focuses on the ways the event was experienced, used and read among the political opinion. Then judicial proceedings and police investigation are analyzed in detail. The case of Louvel and more generally the way these judicial sources help understanding popular uses of politics between 1789 and 1848 are finally discussed
Fontvieille, Damien. "La galaxie Bochetel : un clan de pouvoir au service de la couronne de France de Louis XII à Louis XIII." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020SORUL144.
Full textThis thesis study a familial group which composes a clan of power whose extension is very large. Guillaume Bochetel, secretary of State between 1547 and his death in 1558, is the architect of this clan. Through the alliances forged for his children he has reunited around him several families of “robins” who move up the social ladder thanks the service of the king, such as the L’Aubespine, the Bourdin or the Morvillier who in turn have brought their own allies, such as the Neufville or the Brulart. The study covers a period between the 15th century, when several families start serving the princes of the Val de Loire and the beginning of the 17th century when the clan is progressively fading away leaving Villeroy as the political heir, secretary of State between Charles IX and Louis XIII. The purpose is to underline a particular group of power marked by a strong solidarity and the importance of blood links, whose members hold the highest offices under the Valois. They possess the majority of the secretaries of State between 1547 and 1588 and are regularly sent as diplomates in Europe. The functioning of this clan with its rivalries, the roles given to each member and its different figures is outlined. The clan, through his allies in Berry, allows to study the dialog between the French court and the provinces. The men and women of this clan share a particular social identity, between the “haute robe” and the nobility. This clan offers also a mirror of the transformations of the French monarchy in the modern era, between a domestic state and the progressive birth of an experimented administration
Morgat, Alain. "Tenir son rang : Apanages et douaires royaux en France au seizième siècle (1498-1620)." Paris 4, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA040198.
Full textLe roi de France accorde depuis le Moyen Age aux membres de sa famille des domaines afin que ceux-ci aient les moyens financiers de tenir un rang digne de leur origine. Cette pratique perdure au XVIe siècle, au cours duquel une vingtaine d'apanages et de douaires sont constitués en faveur de princes, de princesses et de reines douairières de France. Les femmes ont en effet encore le droit de recevoir des donations domaniales, en dépit d'un certain durcissement de la législation à cette époque. Les ressources de leurs domaines et l'aide financière du roi permettent aux princes d'entretenir une maison conforme à leur rang, grâce à la gestion attentive des Conseils qui les assistent. Au sein des domaines princiers, les juridictions et les officiers locaux prennent en compte le changement d'autorité, sans pour autant s'écarter du modèle de l'administration monarchique. La présence des princes apanagés s'y marque surtout en cas d'action particulière, par exemple les faveurs des duchesses de Berry Marguerite d'Angoulême et de Marguerite de France à l'égard de l'université de Bourges ou l'utilisation du duché d'Anjou par François d'Alençon dans le cadre de ses menées politiques
Gourgues, Pascal. "Le Berry du VIIIème au début du XIème siècle : Etude sur les manifestations de pouvoir dans la seconde moitié du haut Moyen âge." Paris 2, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA020038.
Full textWanegffelen, Thierry. "Des chrétiens entre Rome et Genève : une histoire de choix religieux en France, vers 1520-vers 1610." Paris 1, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994PA010696.
Full textFrom 1520 up to 1580, western christianity was split by the two competing protestant and catholic reformations. Each camp set up its own church which pretended to be universal, yet this denominational settlement (konfessionsbildung) was too quick to be fully acceptable by all christians (it hardly covered a life-span). Neither the history of churches nor a history of doctrines have so far properly insisted on the existence of a distinctive via media advocated by a number of contemporaries. This approach rests on a history of religious sensibility, and a number of individual cases emerge. Four groups of people were involved at the time : nicodemites, moyenneurs, temporiseurs et ireniques. The nicodemites (in particular Marguerite de Navarre and her confessor, Gérard Roussel) and the middle-of-the-road moyenneurs (Claude D’Espense, cardinal Charles de Lorraine, Charles du Moulin, Jean de Monluc and Michel de L'Hospital. . . ) Lived in the fir st half of the sixteenth century, prior to the 1550-60 turning point. They could still regard themselves as catholic, though it was increasingly difficult to avoid denominational commitment. The irenics (especially the protestant jean hotman de villiers and the catholic pierre de l'estoile) only paid lip service to religious allegiance, while the delaying temporiseurs (Hugues Sureau du Rosier, and some inhabitants of troyes in champagne and lectoure in gascony) tri ed to postpone their choice indefinitely in the 1560s-1580s. This study questions received denominational interpretation s, by introducing new, hitherto unexplored distinctions between catholicism and the catholic reformation. In tum, it ope ns, new perspectives on the conversion of Henri IV, seventeenth-century arminianism and jansenism, not ot forget later deism in the age of the enlightement
Nassieu-Maupas, Audrey. "Peintres et lissiers à Paris dans la première moitié du XVIe siècle." Paris, EPHE, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006EPHE4083.
Full textRoussel, Diane. "Paris en ordres et désordres : justice, violence et société dans la ville capitale au XVIe siècle." Paris 13, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA131027.
Full textDoes Paris in the early modern period deserve the fiendish reputation of the ‘crime capital’, as the monarchic propaganda would have us to believe in order to glorify the Lieutenance générale de Police, created in 1667 ? Does the French capital in the 16th century produces crime or is it, on the contrary, a matrix of civilization? While the Crown widens its guardianship in police, the figures of the professional thief and murderer, as well as the delinquent vagabond, mobilize the efforts of reform as they invade the imagination of the Parisian chroniclers. The sources of the judicial practice (letters of remission, criminal instructions of the Paris’ Parliament and the seigniorial court of Saint-Germain-des-Prés) show on the other hand the omnipresence of common violence. The study of its forms and circumstances as well as the sociology of criminals allows distinguishing specific patterns in the Parisian violence. Whereas the craze for sword duel shapes the urban homicide, the records of small crime present numerous hints of the slow pacification of townsmen’s behaviours. Justice, but also the professional group and the neighbours’ community exert a narrow social control over the youth with rival but mostly complementary modalities. However, the traumatizing event of Henri IV assassination, in 1610, reveals the end of this traditional community system of disorder regulation, weakened by the new challenges of the population increase, the impoverishment and the raising sociocultural gap, and shows the population’s request for State protection
Books on the topic "Berry (France) – 16e siècle"
Le Protestantisme belge au 16e siècle: Belgique, Nord de la France, Refuge. Carrières-sous-Poissy, France: La Cause, 1999.
Find full textEarly modern France, 1560-1715. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.
Find full textFrançoise, Autrand, Stirnemann Patricia Danz 1945-, Villela-Petit Inès, and Toulet Emmanuelle 1957-, eds. Les Très riches heures du duc de Berry et l'enluminure en France au début du XV siècle. Paris: Somogy, 2004.
Find full textStirnemann, Patricia. Les Très riches heures du duc de Berry et l'enluminure en France au début du XVe siècle. Paris: Somogy, 2004.
Find full textSociété historique du Val de Sèvre, ed. Dictionnaire des familles de Saint-Maixent: Selon les registres des paroisses Saint-Saturnin et Saint-Léger, du 16e siècle à 1802. [Saint-Maixent-L'Ecole]: Société historique du Val de Sèvre, 2002.
Find full textLacour, Francesca. Les fils de saint François en Berry: Le couvent des Cordeliers de Châteauroux du XIIIe siècle à nos jours. La Crèche: Geste, 2011.
Find full textStructures sonores de l'humanisme en France: De Maurice Scève, Delie, object de plus haulte vertu (Lyon, 1544) à Claude Le Jeune, Second livre des meslanges (Paris, 1612). Paris: H. Champion, 2005.
Find full textVoyageurs étrangers à la cour de France: 1589-1789 : regards croisés. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2014.
Find full textL' Université de Caen aux XVe et XVIe siècles: Identité et représentation. Leiden: Brill, 2006.
Find full textRoy, Lyse. L'Université de Caen aux XVe et XVIe siècles: Identité et représentation. Leiden: Brill, 2005.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Berry (France) – 16e siècle"
Guyotjeannin, Olivier. "Fils et filles de roi de France, du xiie au xve siècle : du lignage au royaume." In Jean de Berry et l’écrit, 113–31. Éditions de la Sorbonne, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.psorbonne.54203.
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