Tesis sobre el tema "Dommages de guerre à l'industrie"
Crea una cita precisa en los estilos APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard y otros
Consulte los 17 mejores tesis para su investigación sobre el tema "Dommages de guerre à l'industrie".
Junto a cada fuente en la lista de referencias hay un botón "Agregar a la bibliografía". Pulsa este botón, y generaremos automáticamente la referencia bibliográfica para la obra elegida en el estilo de cita que necesites: APA, MLA, Harvard, Vancouver, Chicago, etc.
También puede descargar el texto completo de la publicación académica en formato pdf y leer en línea su resumen siempre que esté disponible en los metadatos.
Explore tesis sobre una amplia variedad de disciplinas y organice su bibliografía correctamente.
Guillard, David. "Les armes de guerre et l'environnement naturel : essai d'étude juridique /". Paris ; Budapest ; Kinshasa [etc.] : l'Harmattan, 2006. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb40129846r.
Texto completoHabibzadeh, Tavakol. "Sanctions économiques et réparation des dommages : les conséquences juridiques de l'occupation du Koweit par l'Irak". Université Robert Schuman (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998STR30024.
Texto completoVaillant, Clémence. "La réparation des dommages causés au patrimoine artistique et culturel français au cours de la Première Guerre mondiale : restitution et compensation". Thesis, Université de Lorraine, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021LORR0107.
Texto completoCultural heritage suffered from many ravages during conflicts that have shaped History (destructions, transfers, wartime plunders). Despite punctuated attempts to protect it and restitutions of goods of which it was composed, it was not until the beginning of the 20th century that a global and restorative mechanism in international law was enacted.Thus, at the end of World War I came a time for assessment, involving the necessity for Allied et Associated Powers to settle a peace agreement. Once the principle of integral repair was agreed on by consensus, its implementation had to be defined. This study considers the extent of the German reparation obligation and its allies in its cultural aspect according to the treaty of Versailles. This text highlights the presence of favorable provisions towards the heritage ruined by confrontations and the passage of troops, thereby underlining the transition from a compensatory system to a restorative one, based on the combination of financial compensation, the systematic obligation of restitution and especially the recourse to artistic compensations, which represents, at the time, an innovation.These reports lead us to wonder about the reasons and the perspectives caused by this change. It is then essential to figure out the legal nature of the processes used, and the justification of infringements of the property right, aiming at the reconstruction of artistic sets. Furthermore, ought we to deduce that, at that moment, the protection of the cultural heritage - or simply the related duty of penalty - switched from the action field of a national legal system to an international one? We will focus on the roles of the administrations setting up and on the concepts which may have inspired the settlement of later conflicts (calculation of art damages, seizures of artistic guarantees)
Ludmann-Obier, Marie-France. "Le contrôle de l'industrie chimique en zone française d'occupation en Allemagne (1945-1949)". Université Robert Schuman (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986STR30006.
Texto completoWith its 62 factories and 200,000 workers, the huge chemical trust IG Farben, provided considerable support to Adolf Hitler and his policies. After the war, its properties were confiscated and handed over to the control council, though, in fact, they were administered by allied trustees in their respective zones. The first part of this work studies the regulatory framework which tightly bound the chemical industry in post-war Germany. After reviewing the most essential elements of the quadripartite texts relative to the economy in general, the long elaboration by the technical commitees in Berlin of those texts specifically impacting the chemical industry is examined. The content of these texts has been analysed along with the reactions caused by their publication. This analysis is repeated for the texts specific to the french zone and the structures developed to control the chemical industry there. This latter effort also sheds light on the problems surrounding these structures. The second part deals with the conditions of production : physical plant (factories with their problems of war damage, reconstruction and start-up) and product output. The problem of reparations and compensation having been one of the most important clashes between France and Germany during this period, we tried an assessment of the different types of reparations on the main branches of production and attempted a global estimate of the reparation impact based on data provided by the french authorities. It seemed important in the end to join to this study on the chemical industry three fields closely connected to it : control of scientific research, the transfer of german scientists to France and the question of patents
Saint-Lager, Arnaud de. "La cooperation internationale dans l'industrie de l'armement conventionnel, dans le monde libre, a la veille de la guerre du golfe : quelle realite?" Paris 5, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1991PA05D014.
Texto completoGreuet, Mathilde. "Les ruines de guerre dans les Hauts-de-France, 1921 - 2023". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lille (2022-....), 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024ULILH002.
Texto completoThe thesis is focused on two historiographical fields: on the first hand, the historiography of the war and the post-war period, and on the other hand, Cultural Heritage studies. For this research, we intend to follow the fate of several war ruins in the Hauts-de-France area in order to study representative cases of the different political and social uses that are made of war ruins from the destruction of buildings to nowadays. In the 20th century, a renewal took place in the desire to preserve war ruins. During the First World War, debates appeared in France concerning the conservation of certain ruins and the modalities of reconstruction in general. Despite the importance of war ruins and debates about them at the time, few buildings are preserved as “Remains and Memories of War” after the war. During the reconstruction, pilgrims and tourists who came to discover the ancient battlefields and to meditate there were interested in the ruins. Despite this, the list of ruins and war vestiges which were supposed to be preserved was gradually reduced to facilitate reconstruction.At the end of the Second World War, the Ministry of Reconstruction and Urban Planning (MRU) was responsible for the reconstruction of the country. Despite everything, a certain number of war ruins remained in the landscape and experienced variable fates. Some were leveled off or buried under new buildings during the reconstruction or town planning operations of the 1960s and 1970s. Other destructions were abandoned and were naturally covered with vegetation. In most cases, we witness the gradual disappearance of the remains due to abandonment and time. Despite everything, war ruins remain visible in our current landscapes in Hauts-de-France. This raises the question of the evolution of the management and recognition of war ruins during the 20th and 21st centuries, but also the question of the challenge of conserving these ruins in the territories. To understand the different dynamics put in place, we propose to study representative cases of the management of war ruins over the last century: The Weppes bunkers, the "Red château" of Villers-Bretonneux, the ruins of Chemin des Dames and those of the Somme, the case of the war memorials to the deads including Noyon's one, the ruins of Amiens, the abbey of Vauclair, the bunker of Éperlecques and finally the Crèche's coastal battery. These examples allow us to show different types of support, as well as the debates and preservation choices to which they lead and the developments in recognition over the long term
Padiou, Nicolas. "Dispersi sunt lapides sanctuarii : la reconstruction des églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle après la Première Guerre Mondiale (1918-1933)". Paris, EPHE, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010EPHE4027.
Texto completoNasr, Joseph. "Le Rien en architecture, l'architecture du Rien : penser le "Rien", exister le "Rien", le "Rien est une pensée". Paris 8, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA083059.
Texto completoMan lives on the Earth : he has the will and the knowledge to build, to destroy, and to rebuild, he is a destructive creator. Between what exists and what does not exist, between what is missing and what is not (non-existing existence – existing non-existence), he has the desire to "want the Nothing" and "desire the Nothing". It seems to me that Nothing is simultaneously the "something" and the "Nothing ". How to want it, think it, and reify it ? It is a substantial and phenomenal Nothing : between what concurrently exists and does not exist, between what neither exists nor does not exist. It makes the existence possible in a state of existence : drunkenness, chance, suffering, destruction, astonishment, absence, childbirth, death. The substantiality and the phenomenality of the Nothing, confer on it the potential for the existence of a constructive concept. Its purpose is to bring into existence the non-existence : "immatérialization" of the real, the visible, and the "materialization" of the transparent and the invisible. In this Nothing, Man reaches the paroxysm of the "aesthetic of destruction" and the "aesthetic of suffering". The destruction is a "Nothing" : it brings about the disappearance in order to "reveal the disappearance". Ruin, whether human or architectural, is "Nothing" (enchanted ruin) : its presence reveals the absence. The destruction of Ruin is a "Nothing" (destroy destruction through destruction itself) : its absence allows fot presence, its invisibility allows for visiblity, oblivion activates memory. It is a will to bring about the appearance out of the disappearance. The disappearance of the disappearance reveals the "absence of trace" that becomes the only "trace of the absence"
Langlinay, Erik. "L'industrie chimique française et ses mutations, 1900-1931". Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017EHES0149.
Texto completoThe French Chemical industry appears in the beginning of the century as a backward industry compared with the german one. Indeed there is a slow growth and a a certain number of progress, in research for instance. The Chemical Industry is structured by a general system of cartels and harsh labour. At the outbreak of the War, the French Chemical industry is ill prepared and has to shift rapidly. It’s improvment is made through the basic development of traditionnal factories and an intensification of work due to colonial workforce for the most. At the end of the war, the chemical industry as to convert to civil markets. The 1920-1921 crisis shows the fragility of this industry. When the economic growth is back in 1922-29 the German chemical is more competitive thane ever having rationalized its structures. Thus the inner market is developped. At the end of the period, scientific research is rising. Nevertheless the capitalistic transformation is far for being made. The branch is still divided in archaïc (foreign workforce) and modern trends
Druelle, Clotilde. "Un laboratoire réformateur, le Département du commerce en France et aux Etats-Unis de la Grande guerre aux années vingt". Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004IEPP0026.
Texto completoAvrane, Colette. "Les ouvrières à domicile en France de la fin du XIXe siècle à la Seconde Guerre mondiale : Genèse et application de la loi de 1915 sur le salaire minimum dans l'industrie du vêtement". Phd thesis, Université d'Angers, 2010. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00560477.
Texto completoHérault, Paul. "L'internationalisation des chaînes de valeur dans l'industrie de défense : le cas du naval". Thesis, Paris Sciences et Lettres (ComUE), 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018PSLED005.
Texto completoMany research works have already been dedicated to the internationalization of value chains. Whereas this research is often performed through macroeconomics or focused on civilian sectors, this thesis examines how the process of functional and geographic unbundling can apply to such a regulated sector as the defense industry, where exports are strictly controlled by states.Based on original data provided by Naval Group, this dissertation set out several estimates of the internationalization level of French navy programs. Although programs related to nuclear deterrence remain almost exclusively « made in France », many factors contribute to the internationalization of value chains in the naval industry: transfer of technology, local content requirements, integration of commercial or dual-use technologies, internationalization corporate strategies. Referring to the concept of modularity, this thesis reveals that changes in production process can foster innovation in product architecture
Skora, Sylvain. "La reconstruction de la Champagne méridionale après la guerre de Trente Ans (1635-1715)". Thesis, Dijon, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015DIJOL025.
Texto completoChampagne’s southern and eastern borders, approximately within today’s Haute-Marne, were severely hit by the Thirty Years’War, due mainly to their frontier position with two fearsome foes, Franche-Comté and Lorraine. The open war between France and the Habsburgs in 1635 didn’t however come to an end in 1648, after the Peace of Westphalia, but dragged on until 1659-60 against Spaniards and Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine. Following a twenty-five-year old conflict, the point at issue is to what extent Bassigny and the Plateau de Langres were destroyed. Historians can rely on the famous Journal by the parish priest of Hortes Clément Macheret relating that period’s disasters, but many other archives can lead on to further research. Louis XIV’s personal reign (1661-1715) spans the reconstruction period of southern Champagne. Several questions still remain unanswered today : - How important were the devastations and demographic losses caused by the Thirty Years’War ?- How fast was the recovery after 1660, and from what human and economic resources ? - How did people manage to rebuild their region ? The question at stake is to understand what factors have favoured or, on the contrary slowed down the reconstruction of Champagne during that period. The comparison with other damaged provinces, such as Lorraine, Alsace or Franche-Comté throughout that endless conflict, may be also helpful. Although it hasn’t been much studied by the historians of Champagne, this difficult recovery during the second half of the 17th century has, in many ways, given birth to the fine demographic and economic surge of the Enlightenment
Mourlon, Fabrice. "L'aide aux victimes du conflit nord-irlandais, 1969-2006". Lyon 3, 2009. https://scd-resnum.univ-lyon3.fr/in/theses/2009_in_mourlon_f.pdf.
Texto completoAssistance to the victims of the conflict in Northern Ireland has given mixed results. Before being officially acknowledged and support mechanisms were organised for them since the signing of the Good Friday Agreement of 1998, victims received compensation by the State. They found support among their families and informally-organised groups. The cease-fire of 1994 marked the beginning of a new concern for the human cost of the conflict which claimed almost 4000 lives and maimed 40 000 people and had a psychological impact on many individuals and communities. Acknowledging and assisting those people came from the realisation that the conflict has to be resolved permanently and from fears that violence might erupt again. However, no clearly defined strategy was formulated. A strong volontary sector, encouraged by the first generous round of European funding, was essential in helping formulate and carry out the first provisions for victims. Nonetheless, after ten years of assistance, the victim sector is still concerned about issues of truth about the past, acknowledgement, and divisions. Indeed, the Northern Irish conflict resolution model has tackled psychological and material support seperately from issues related to truth and reconciliation. There no ideal model in the field which theorists are yet to come up with. This in part explains why the British government and the European Union have acted with pragmatism
Padiou, Nicolas. "Dispersi sunt lapides sanctuarii. La reconstruction des églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle après la Premiere Guerre Mondiale (1918-1933)". Doctoral thesis, Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2012. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-85693.
Texto completoAprès la séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat (1905), les communes françaises n’étaient plus autorisées à financer la construction de nouvelles églises ou à assumer les grosses réparations des églises qui leur appartenaient déjà. Face aux critiques des catholiques, l’Etat a classé de nombreuses églises comme monuments historiques pendant les années 1905-1914, permettant ainsi aux communes de les entretenir pour des raisons patrimoniales et plus cultuelles. Investies d’une forte dimension nationale, les églises ont joué un rôle très important dans la propagande de guerre des différents pays belligérants en 1914-1918. Contrairement à ce qu’affirmait la propagande française, les églises ne semblent pas avoir fait l’objet d’un acharnement particulier de la part des armées allemandes. À l’issue du conflit, l’Etat français a mis en place un système d’indemnisation des dommages de guerre très complexe. Pour compléter ce système, le chanoine Emile Thouvenin a fondé, en 1919, une coopérative de reconstruction dans chaque commune détruite du département de Meurthe-et-Moselle. Avec l’appui de la préfecture, il a créé, en 1921, une coopérative vouée à la reconstruction des églises du diocèse de Nancy. Cette coopérative œuvra souvent en marge de la loi de séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat et de la loi sur les dommages de guerre. L’initiative du chanoine Thouvenin n’avait cependant pas pour but de contourner la législation en vigueur : il s’agissait surtout d’accélérer le processus d’indemnisation des dommages et d’approbation des projets de reconstruction des églises. L’implication des autorités officielles dans la reconstruction des églises avait par ailleurs l’avantage de rendre à l’Eglise une partie de son rôle d’institution officielle. Lors des cérémonies de consécration des églises reconstruites, les élites civiles et religieuses de Meurthe-et-Moselle se sont constamment attachées à perpétuer l’esprit de l’Union sacrée, même pendant le Cartel des Gauches (1924-1925) marqué par un regain d’anticléricalisme. Par ailleurs, le chanoine Thouvenin s’est plus intéressé aux aspects financiers et institutionnels qu’au style des églises reconstruites : certaines d’entre elles sont des copies conformes des édifices néo-romans ou néogothiques d’avant-guerre, d’autres apparaissent résolument modernes
After the separation of Church and State (1905), French towns were no longer authorized to finance the construction of new churches, or the major repairs of churches that already belonged to them. Faced with criticism from the Catholics, the French State classified many churches as official historical monuments during the years 1905-1914, thus enabling the towns to repair their churches for the purpose of preserving the nation’s heritage. Invested with a strong national dimension, churches have played an important role in the war propaganda of the various belligerent countries. Contrary to French propaganda, the churches were apparently not destroyed by the German armies in particular. After the conflict, the French State established a very complex system of compensation for war damages. In 1919, the canon Émile Thouvenin founded a reconstruction cooperative in each municipality of the department of Meurthe-et-Moselle. With the support of the préfécture, he created in 1921 a cooperative devoted to the reconstruction of churches in the diocese of Nancy. This cooperative worked often on the very edge between the Law of Separation and the Law on War Damages. This initiative’s intention, however, was not to avoid the law: It was first of all created to accelerate the process of compensation for damages and the approval of projects for rebuilding churches. The involvement of the official authorities had the additional advantage of returning the Church to its role as official institution. During the consecration ceremonies of rebuilt churches, civil and religious elites of Meurthe-et-Moselle were constantly attached to perpetuate the spirit of the Sacred Union, even during the anticlerical phase of the Left-Wing ‘Cartel des Gauches’ (1924-1925). Furthermore, canon Thouvenin had shown more interest in the financial and institutional questions than in the style of churches. Some of them are copies of the Neo-Romanesque or Neo-Gothic churches built before the war while others seems definitely modern
Carette, Alexandre. "Mercenaires et sociétés militaires privées depuis la fin de la guerre froide : analyse de la recrudescence de l'industrie militaire privée". Thèse, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/17472.
Texto completoPadiou, Nicolas. "Dispersi sunt lapides sanctuarii. La reconstruction des églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle après la Premiere Guerre Mondiale (1918-1933)". Doctoral thesis, 2009. https://tud.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A25956.
Texto completoAprès la séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat (1905), les communes françaises n’étaient plus autorisées à financer la construction de nouvelles églises ou à assumer les grosses réparations des églises qui leur appartenaient déjà. Face aux critiques des catholiques, l’Etat a classé de nombreuses églises comme monuments historiques pendant les années 1905-1914, permettant ainsi aux communes de les entretenir pour des raisons patrimoniales et plus cultuelles. Investies d’une forte dimension nationale, les églises ont joué un rôle très important dans la propagande de guerre des différents pays belligérants en 1914-1918. Contrairement à ce qu’affirmait la propagande française, les églises ne semblent pas avoir fait l’objet d’un acharnement particulier de la part des armées allemandes. À l’issue du conflit, l’Etat français a mis en place un système d’indemnisation des dommages de guerre très complexe. Pour compléter ce système, le chanoine Emile Thouvenin a fondé, en 1919, une coopérative de reconstruction dans chaque commune détruite du département de Meurthe-et-Moselle. Avec l’appui de la préfecture, il a créé, en 1921, une coopérative vouée à la reconstruction des églises du diocèse de Nancy. Cette coopérative œuvra souvent en marge de la loi de séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat et de la loi sur les dommages de guerre. L’initiative du chanoine Thouvenin n’avait cependant pas pour but de contourner la législation en vigueur : il s’agissait surtout d’accélérer le processus d’indemnisation des dommages et d’approbation des projets de reconstruction des églises. L’implication des autorités officielles dans la reconstruction des églises avait par ailleurs l’avantage de rendre à l’Eglise une partie de son rôle d’institution officielle. Lors des cérémonies de consécration des églises reconstruites, les élites civiles et religieuses de Meurthe-et-Moselle se sont constamment attachées à perpétuer l’esprit de l’Union sacrée, même pendant le Cartel des Gauches (1924-1925) marqué par un regain d’anticléricalisme. Par ailleurs, le chanoine Thouvenin s’est plus intéressé aux aspects financiers et institutionnels qu’au style des églises reconstruites : certaines d’entre elles sont des copies conformes des édifices néo-romans ou néogothiques d’avant-guerre, d’autres apparaissent résolument modernes.:Volume 1: Introduction Première partie. La séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat et ses conséquences pendant l’avant-guerre. 1905-1914 I. Les églises à la veille de la loi de séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat II. Les conséquences de la séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat III. Catholicisme et patriotisme à la veille de la guerre Deuxième partie. Les églises pendant la Première Guerre mondiale. 1914-1919 I. La « passion » des églises du diocèse de Nancy II. Les premiers débats sur la reconstruction III. Le bilan des destructions Troisième partie. Le cadre institutionnel et les grandes étapes de la reconstruction des églises I. Les prémices de la reconstruction II. La coopérative de reconstruction des églises du diocèse de Nancy III. Les lieux de culte reconstruits en marge ou hors du cadre de la coopérative diocésaine IV. Le rôle des architectes et des entrepreneurs Quatrième partie. La loi sur les dommages de guerre et la loi de séparation I. La place des églises dans l’urbanisme II. L’application aux églises de la loi sur les dommages de guerre III. Le contournement de la loi de séparation Cinquième partie. « Le bouquet sur le faîte », la dimension symbolique des églises reconstruites I. Un style « première reconstruction » ? II. « Domine salvam fac republicam ». La construction des églises et la perpétuation de l’Union sacrée III. La réception et la postérité des églises Conclusion Sources Bibliographie Chronologie Notices biographiques Index des personnes Index des lieux Table des matières détaillée Volume 2: Annexes I. Chronologie des archives des dommages de guerre II. Les églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle entre 1905 et 1914 III. L’Eglise et les églises pendant la guerre IV. Le bilan matériel de la guerre V. L’organisation de la reconstruction VI. Les architectes et les entrepreneurs VII. L’application de la loi Cornudet du 14 mars 1919 VIII. La coopérative de reconstruction des églises IX. Le coût des églises reconstruites X. L’association diocésaine de Nancy Iconographie générale I. Cartes II. Les images de lieux de culte pendant la guerre III. Les églises provisoires IV. L’urbanisme dans les villages reconstruits V. Les chantiers de reconstruction VI. Les matériaux de construction VII. L’iconographie régionale et patriotique VIII. Les protagonistes de la reconstruction des églises IX. Les cérémonies de consécration X. Les mairies XI. Les églises construites dans les communes industrielles de l’arrondissement de Briey hors du cadre de la coopérative XII. Les églises, lieux de mémoire de la Première Guerre mondiale Catalogue des églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle endommagées pendant la Première Guerre mondiale Première partie. Les églises gravement endommagées Deuxième partie. Les églises peu ou très peu endommagées Répertoire des architectes ayant participé à la reconstruction des églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle Table des matières détaillée
After the separation of Church and State (1905), French towns were no longer authorized to finance the construction of new churches, or the major repairs of churches that already belonged to them. Faced with criticism from the Catholics, the French State classified many churches as official historical monuments during the years 1905-1914, thus enabling the towns to repair their churches for the purpose of preserving the nation’s heritage. Invested with a strong national dimension, churches have played an important role in the war propaganda of the various belligerent countries. Contrary to French propaganda, the churches were apparently not destroyed by the German armies in particular. After the conflict, the French State established a very complex system of compensation for war damages. In 1919, the canon Émile Thouvenin founded a reconstruction cooperative in each municipality of the department of Meurthe-et-Moselle. With the support of the préfécture, he created in 1921 a cooperative devoted to the reconstruction of churches in the diocese of Nancy. This cooperative worked often on the very edge between the Law of Separation and the Law on War Damages. This initiative’s intention, however, was not to avoid the law: It was first of all created to accelerate the process of compensation for damages and the approval of projects for rebuilding churches. The involvement of the official authorities had the additional advantage of returning the Church to its role as official institution. During the consecration ceremonies of rebuilt churches, civil and religious elites of Meurthe-et-Moselle were constantly attached to perpetuate the spirit of the Sacred Union, even during the anticlerical phase of the Left-Wing ‘Cartel des Gauches’ (1924-1925). Furthermore, canon Thouvenin had shown more interest in the financial and institutional questions than in the style of churches. Some of them are copies of the Neo-Romanesque or Neo-Gothic churches built before the war while others seems definitely modern.:Volume 1: Introduction Première partie. La séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat et ses conséquences pendant l’avant-guerre. 1905-1914 I. Les églises à la veille de la loi de séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat II. Les conséquences de la séparation des Eglises et de l’Etat III. Catholicisme et patriotisme à la veille de la guerre Deuxième partie. Les églises pendant la Première Guerre mondiale. 1914-1919 I. La « passion » des églises du diocèse de Nancy II. Les premiers débats sur la reconstruction III. Le bilan des destructions Troisième partie. Le cadre institutionnel et les grandes étapes de la reconstruction des églises I. Les prémices de la reconstruction II. La coopérative de reconstruction des églises du diocèse de Nancy III. Les lieux de culte reconstruits en marge ou hors du cadre de la coopérative diocésaine IV. Le rôle des architectes et des entrepreneurs Quatrième partie. La loi sur les dommages de guerre et la loi de séparation I. La place des églises dans l’urbanisme II. L’application aux églises de la loi sur les dommages de guerre III. Le contournement de la loi de séparation Cinquième partie. « Le bouquet sur le faîte », la dimension symbolique des églises reconstruites I. Un style « première reconstruction » ? II. « Domine salvam fac republicam ». La construction des églises et la perpétuation de l’Union sacrée III. La réception et la postérité des églises Conclusion Sources Bibliographie Chronologie Notices biographiques Index des personnes Index des lieux Table des matières détaillée Volume 2: Annexes I. Chronologie des archives des dommages de guerre II. Les églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle entre 1905 et 1914 III. L’Eglise et les églises pendant la guerre IV. Le bilan matériel de la guerre V. L’organisation de la reconstruction VI. Les architectes et les entrepreneurs VII. L’application de la loi Cornudet du 14 mars 1919 VIII. La coopérative de reconstruction des églises IX. Le coût des églises reconstruites X. L’association diocésaine de Nancy Iconographie générale I. Cartes II. Les images de lieux de culte pendant la guerre III. Les églises provisoires IV. L’urbanisme dans les villages reconstruits V. Les chantiers de reconstruction VI. Les matériaux de construction VII. L’iconographie régionale et patriotique VIII. Les protagonistes de la reconstruction des églises IX. Les cérémonies de consécration X. Les mairies XI. Les églises construites dans les communes industrielles de l’arrondissement de Briey hors du cadre de la coopérative XII. Les églises, lieux de mémoire de la Première Guerre mondiale Catalogue des églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle endommagées pendant la Première Guerre mondiale Première partie. Les églises gravement endommagées Deuxième partie. Les églises peu ou très peu endommagées Répertoire des architectes ayant participé à la reconstruction des églises de Meurthe-et-Moselle Table des matières détaillée