Contents
Academic literature on the topic 'Franc-maçonnerie – Provence (France) – 18e siècle'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Franc-maçonnerie – Provence (France) – 18e siècle.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Franc-maçonnerie – Provence (France) – 18e siècle"
Hivert-Messeca, Yves. "La Franc-maçonnerie en Provence (Basses-Alpes, Var, arrondissement de Grasse) du Consulat à la Seconde Guerre Mondiale." Nice, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992NICE2010.
Full textWith about thirty lodges in the French Basses-Alpes and Var departements, Freemasonry became during the Empire period, one of the main forms of provencal sociability. During the Constitutional Monarchy, Freemasonry decreased. There is not any lodge in the Haute-Provence. During the Second Empire period, lodges are created in Antibes, Cannes, Digne, Grasse, Hyeres, Sisteron and Vallauris. During the radical Republic, Freemansonry took a very important part in politics, education, press, associations and the economy. After this properity period during the twenties, the provencal Freemasonry got encumbrances, difficulties and enmities during the next ten years. In 1940, Freemansonry is forbidden all over in France
Beaurepaire, Pierre-Yves. "L'autre et le frère." Artois, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997ARTO0006.
Full textTwo or three thousands foreigners visited masonic lodges in eighteenth century France. Foreign origins of freemasonry, its ideal of cosmopolitism and of universalism are well kown. However it is impossible, in a voluminous specialised bibliography dedicated to masonic sociability, to find a single article connected with foreign freemasons and their cultural mediations in France. Thanks to foreign masons, the founders ideal of 1717 was beginning to take shape. In spite of social, religious, cultural or linguistic differences, the other was recognized as a fellow. The masonic archivs in France, Great Britain, Netherlands, Germany and Russia bring an original contribution to the social and cultural study of the foreigners in early modern France. It is possible to follow british tourists, using the lodges' network as a logistic support abroad, scandinavian and german diplomats, helvetic merchants, irish students. . . During their peregrination in France. It is possible to piece together their different networks, and to precise their strategy of integration to the french society. At the end of the eighteenth century, it is clear that the genesis of nationalism and conservatism fought back masonic cosmopolitism as well as the cosmopolitan ideal of the Enlightenment
Chevalier, Arille M. J. "L' exil des patriotes hollandais en France et la loge maçonnique "Les vrais Bataves" (1790-1795) à l'Orient de Dunkerque." Nice, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008NICE2026.
Full textPorset, Charles. "Recherches sur le dix-huitième siècle, les lumières et la franc-maçonnerie." Clermont-Ferrand 2, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992CLF20040.
Full textTaking as its point of departure the galilean revolution, this research investigates its effects in the 18th century. The breakdown of the antique and medieval cosmos led to the reorganisation of the relation between god, the world and men. The deism aseexposed by voltaire is the middle-way between orthodoxy and atheism taken by the "lumieres". Likewise, by declaring men to be the sole object and purpose of men, the freemasonry, then establishing itself, acknowledged that secularisation of the sacred which was to animate philosophical debate throughout the century ; in a different field, general grammar, by claming words to be the signs of thought, was creating the conditions for the development of a science of language. By postulating the rationality of the real, the galilean breakthrough led to a revolution in the ways of seeing ; if appearance was no longereessence and god no longer - the foundation of all knowledge -, the experience alone could be at the basis of science. In this way the "lumieres" delimited the space of a new phenomenology, substituting the science of man as man for the science of beeing as a beeing of tradition
Balmont, Michel. "Sémiotique du mot de passe : un exemple, les rituels maçonniques français entre 1725 et 1830." Rennes 2, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992REN20009.
Full textTo use a password is not only an exchange of words. In fact it is a complex ritual, mixing words and gestures. It must be considered as a text which can be understood through a semiotic analysis. This ritual has a triple function. Of course it is meant to check the qualification of the one who wants to enter, but also to integrate him, as he is standing in the doorway, into the community. At last, the ritual states the rules of communication in the group
Cros, Lauriane. "Franc-maçonnerie, réseaux maçonniques et dynamiques bordelaises au XVIIIe siècle." Thesis, Bordeaux 3, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018BOR30008.
Full textThe freemasonry movement that developed in France throughout the 18th century is defined by the Encyclopédie as a « gathering of chosen people bound together by an obligation to love each other like brothers, to help each other in need, and to maintain an inviolable silence about anything related to the order ». Then, Bordeaux was - behind Paris - a major French Masonic center experiencing particular dynamics resulting from the city's geographic position. As a trade, diplomatic city as well as the first French port of the Age of Enlightenment, Guyenne's capital city was characterized by a plural identity within which was incorporated a Masonic movement benefitting from a human and social diversity and a remarkable economic growth. This major 18th- century trade port was intertwined with a national, European as well as Atlantic space, throughout the West Indies – especially Saint-Domingo. It thus played a central part in communications, where were expressed interconnections associated with Masonic sociabilities. During the last century of the Ancien Régime, several Masonic lodges were born within the city and they had a important role to play in the local life, following the foundation of the first lodge in 1732. These Masonic lodges both reflected the dynamism of Bordeaux and part of the reality of its elites. Consequently, these elites, took part in the Masonic sociability which helped shape the city's identity. The latter cannot be grasped without taking into account the Masonic interface and the economic, political, cultural and social networks associated with it. The dynamics of Bordeaux and of freemasonry were part of human and territorial logics, incorporated within the timeframe starting with a long 18th century till the revolutionary era. The latter witnesses the adaptation of masonry in a political framework that needs to be questioned as far as breaks and continuities are concerned
Mersch, Marie-Anne. "La franc-maçonnerie et les femmes au temps des Lumières : Angleterre, France et territoires allemands." Thesis, Bordeaux 3, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016BOR30055.
Full textFreemasonry spread throughout Europe in the eighteenth century. Although the Constitutions of Anderson barred women from membership right from the beginning, women were initiated in France and Germany. The present research starts from the observation that we are confronted to a double phenomenon. On the one hand the formal exclusion from male lodges according to the regulations of the Grand Lodges. On the other hand the proved existence of the initiation of women in masonic lodges. The organization of these lodges suggests other remarks and several issues have arisen. What are the precise reasons of this exclusion and what are its origins? Are women defined in the same way in England, France and Germany? If we can identify the reasons of this exclusion, are they intrinsic to freemasonry itself or rather linked to the definition of the public and private spheres? How can we explain that these rules of exclusion could be overcome and that a model of integration be invented? In the first part of this study the research is based on the mentalities existing in the three different societies with regard to the freemasons’ opinions on women. The second part is analysing the arguments brought forward to justify women’s exclusion from freemasonry. The third part deals with women's lodges and particular attention is given to the speeches delivered in these lodges as well as to the rituals in use. The documentation consists mostly in primary sources, such as books published in the eighteenth century, press articles, but also masonic songs and poems
Tase, Nozomu. "Construire l'espace maçonnique : Les loges bordelaises des Lumières au Premier Empire." Thesis, Université Côte d'Azur (ComUE), 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019AZUR2023.
Full textAppeared in the 17th century in the British Isles, Masonic lodges spread rapidly in European and colonial cities during the 18th century with a cosmopolitan project to establish a free and fraternal space of sociability beyond the political, religious, national and geographical boundaries. In the French kingdom, where there were only legal associations recognized by the King or the Church and integrated into the society of orders and corporations, the success of Freemasonry was exceptional within the sociability of Old Regime by its fast and durable implantation, its international networks, and its social openness. This thesis aims to analyze how and why contemporaries commit themselves to construct, organize, control, delimit and reconfigure the spaces and networks of Masonic sociability from the Enlightenment to the end of the First Empire in Bordeaux, a major Masonic center at the regional, national and European level. To make a micro-history of Bordeaux lodges in times of "revolutionary transition", the author resorted to the systematic exploitation of new Masonic sources from Moscow and Minsk, without forgetting the careful re-reading of Masonic documents preserved at the National Library of France, the Municipal Library and the Municipal Archives of Bordeaux, the Departmental Archives of Gironde and Herault. At the end of this research, the author achieved three main findings. By analyzing the functions of the local authority of Masonic regulation from the Loge Générale founded in the mid-1740s to the federation of lodges during the Revolution and the Provincial Grand Lodge under the First Empire, this thesis has highlighted the importance of local initiative in the organization, maintenance and survival of the Masonic space, and the complex and contradictory relations of the Bordeaux lodges with the national obedience located in the capital. This thesis has also described the different forms of Masonic solidarity and beneficence in the process of passing from Christian charity to secular philanthropy, not only as a dynamic of the Masonic fraternity, but also as a means of dialogue with the outside world for a form of sociability without official patents. Finally, this thesis has clarified the continuity and vitality of Masonic sociability under the Revolution with its rapid reprise of activity under the Thermidorian Convention and the Directory by analyzing the reactions and adaptations of the lodges to the change of political and social conditions in order to expand the knowledge on the Revolutionary history of French Freemasonry
Sala, Céline. "Élites, sociabilité et réseaux relationnels : les Francs-Maçons en Roussillon et en Catalogne des Lumières à la Restauration." Nice, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006NICE2003.
Full textFreemasonry in the Roussillon and Catalonia came to the fore within a new geo-political context. In fact, the Roussillon had only recently been attached to France (an altogether different context from that of a province which had always been part of France). What is more, Perpignan, a border town is geographically the furthest from Paris. The sociability of the Freemasons of the Roussillon under the Ancien Regime appeared as an on-going process and to understand it, presupposes the restitution of the networks to which the elite were attached and of which they were members. In the temple that the Masonic society formed, a web of relationships was woven, simple yet complex, visible or beneath the surface, stable or unstable. Having placed these elements in perspective, we will attempt to explicit the profile of the Masonic elite in the Roussillon. An elected society, the Freemasons were in search of recognition through its membership, which qualified the Assembly by closing it to others. This research aims to show an essential distinction between, on the one hand, Masonic daily life (within its Temples) which enables its structural evolution to be taken into account; and on the other hand, the brothers' daily lives within secular society. The study of the Masonic structure and its evolution within the Masonic Lodge of the Temples in Roussillon precedes the analysis of the destiny of the Masons as subjects and then as citizens