Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Marseille (France) – History »
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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Marseille (France) – History"
Regis, Helen A. « Ships on the Wall : Retracing African Trade Routes from Marseille, France ». Genealogy 5, no 2 (25 mars 2021) : 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5020027.
Texte intégralTortel, Emilien. « Marseille, city of refuge : international solidarity, American humanitarianism, and Vichy France (1940-1942) ». Esboços : histórias em contextos globais 28, no 48 (12 août 2021) : 364–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-7976.2021.e78244.
Texte intégralMazzella, Sylvie. « Marsiglia : cittŕ portuale e di immigrazione. Riflessioni sulla «seconda generazione» ». MONDI MIGRANTI, no 3 (mars 2009) : 191–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/mm2008-003011.
Texte intégralPace, Loriana, Renaud Leconte et Tancrède De Folleville. « History, diagnosis and repair of the Corniche Kennedy in Marseilles ». MATEC Web of Conferences 364 (2022) : 04010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/202236404010.
Texte intégralCanepari, Eleonora. « Temporary Housing and Unsettled Population : Drivers of Urban Change in Early Modern Marseille and Rome ». Journal of Early Modern History 25, no 1-2 (5 mars 2021) : 118–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700658-bja10031.
Texte intégralHubbell, Amy. « Made in Algeria : Mapping layers of colonial memory into contemporary visual art ». French Cultural Studies 29, no 1 (12 janvier 2018) : 8–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0957155817739751.
Texte intégralGueydan-Turek, Alexandra. « Penser l’échange artistique franco-algérien : la bande dessinée Alger–Marseille : allers-retours de Nawel Louerrad et Benoît Guillaume, et le musée du MuCEM ». Nottingham French Studies 57, no 1 (mars 2018) : 92–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/nfs.2018.0206.
Texte intégralLoseby, S. T. « Marseille : A Late Antique Success Story ? » Journal of Roman Studies 82 (novembre 1992) : 165–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/301290.
Texte intégralBOURY-ESNAULT, NICOLE, GERARD BELLAN, DENISE BELLAN-SANTINI, CHARLES-FRANCOIS BOUDOURESQUE, PIERRE CHEVALDONNÉ, ALRICK DIAS, DANIEL FAGET et al. « The Station Marine d’Endoume, Marseille : 150 years of natural history ». Zootaxa 5249, no 2 (1 mars 2023) : 213–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5249.2.3.
Texte intégralColler, I. « Arab France : Mobility and Community in Early-Nineteenth-Century Paris and Marseille ». French Historical Studies 29, no 3 (1 juillet 2006) : 433–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00161071-2006-006.
Texte intégralThèses sur le sujet "Marseille (France) – History"
Bellan, Katharina. « Marseille filmée : images, histoire, mémoires : 1921-2011 ». Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017AIXM0208.
Texte intégralThis research proposes to analyse Marseille filmed, through a corpus of films that have been shot from 1921 to 2011, on a dual viewpoint combining the socio-historical and the aesthetic perspectives to moving images.This vast time frame (which spans almost a century) allows an analysis of the historical processes and memory constructions shaping the city of Marseille, based on films of fiction, documentaries and télévision productions. Focusing the attention on what is not visible at the first sight, the backgrounds, the details, opens to a research that studies the relationships between the city, cinema, history and memory
Puget, Julien. « Les agrandissements d’Aix et de Marseille (1646-1789) : Droits, espaces et fabrique urbaine à l’époque moderne ». Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015AIXM3011.
Texte intégralFrom two city expansion operations in the seventeenth century (Aix in 1646, Marseille in 1666), this research aims to understand the practical arrangements for production of urban space under the old regime, both in human terms and equipment.This study begins at ground level at the finest scale of urban materiality, the plot. From a cross-reflection on the rights of the land and property market, the challenge here is to understand the weight of structures and private legal mechanisms in urban process.Changing scale of analysis, a set of questions related to the building of the economy domain allows to highlight the economic, social and legal conditions surrounding the sites of construction. The goal here is both to identify the rules framing constructive activity and to determine the contours of the practice of individuals in this area. This axis induces a reflection on the structuration of a constructive public order at the end of the seventeenth century.Finally, this research addresses urban space in its larger whole, both hardware and administratively. From the institutional and public frameworks to carry out these operations, the issue of integration and management of these new spaces to the existing urban order came up
Maret, Auderic. « Marseille et sa classe dirigeante à la Renaissance (env. 1460 - env. 1560). D'une principauté méditerranéenne au royaume de France ». Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017EHES0029.
Texte intégralUntil 1481, Marseilles is a part of an independant state, the county of Provence and it’s the biggest city, even if it’s not the capital. But, in 1481, the last count of Provence died without a son and he gives in his testament all his goods and territories to the king of France Louis XI. After that, Marseilles, like the rest of the former county is integrated in the French royal domain. But, in Provence the cultural and political structures and practices are different from the kingdom of France, and Marseilles belongs to a politico-cultural space where the political life is influenced by the model of “commune”, we can also see in the north of Italy. My aim in this thesis is to study the mobility between a politico-cultural space influences by the counts of Provence and the political structures and culture of the “commune” to a politico-cultural space dominated by the king of France thanks to a structure called “bonne ville”. I decided to study the council of the city which is the main structure of the municipal power and the leaders who are in this council in order to see the modifications after 1481 about the culture and the identity of this ruling class. I propose with this thesis an essay of cultural history of the municipal power. Each city is a political system, where different powers coexist. Those powers move and fix themselves towards the other ones. In the 1st part, I study how the municipal power becomes the most important one in Marseilles during the reign of René the 1st of Anjou. Then, in the second part, I study the leaders of the council, the foundations of their power and the modifications after 1481. Finally, in the 3rd part, I study the new ambitions of the leaders of Marseilles which lead in the 17th century to build a real thalassocracy in the Mediterranean world
Fino al 1481, Marsiglia è la città più grande della contea di Provenza, uno stato indipendente, pur senza esserne la capitale. In quell’anno, l'ultimo conte di Provenza muore senza eredi e dona la sua contea al re di Francia, Luigi XI. Le strutture e le pratiche politiche della Provenza sono però molto diverse rispetto a quelle del regno di Francia: Marsiglia fa parte di uno spazio politico-culturale del Mediterraneo, dove la vita politica urbana è segnata da un modello comunale del tutto simile a quello che si riscontra nelle città dell'Italia centro-settentrionale. L’obiettivo di questa tesi è di studiare il passaggio di questo spazio politico-culturale, segnato dall’eredità angioina e da un governo di tipo comunale, a quello dominato dal re di Francia, nel quale la relazione tra il sovrano e le città è costruita attorno al modello della "bonne ville". Per studiare questo tema, si è scelto di concentrarsi sul consiglio della città di Marsiglia, l'istituzione simbolo del potere municipale, e sugli uomini che lo componevano, al fine di apprezzare le mutazioni dovute al cambiamento di sovranità avvenute al suo interno. L’intento è di analizzare i cambiamenti legati alla cultura e all’identità della classe dirigente, nell’ottica di una storia culturale del potere municipale. Tutte le città possono definirsi come un sistema politico all’interno del quale si trovano a coesistere diversi poteri, che si relazionano fra loro in base agli avvenimenti e ai cambiamenti interni ed esterni alla città stessa. La prima parte della tesi si concentra sul processo mediante il quale il potere municipale ha preso il sopravvento a Marsiglia sotto il regno di Renato I (1434-1480). Nella seconda, invece, si analizzano gli uomini che formano il consiglio della città, l’origine del loro potere e le mutazioni che avvengono dopo il 1481. Infine, l’ultima parte ha per oggetto le trasformazioni nell’identità e nella cultura del gruppo dirigente cittadino in seguito al cambiamento di sovranità, evento che getterà le basi della talassocrazia marsigliese del XVII secolo
Lupo, Sébastien. « Révolution(s) d'échelles : Le marché levantin et la crise du commerce marseillais au miroir des maisons Roux et de leurs relais à Smyrne (1740-1787) ». Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015AIXM3030.
Texte intégralThe capitulations granted by the Porte in 1740 set a favourable framework for French trade in Levant. However, the 18th century means decline for it. Smyrna, which emerged at that time as the first Ottoman échelle, offered a fitting place to observe and to understand this crisis stemming from the debasement of exchange rates and woolen clothes, the most exported articles. And yet, the Roux company from Marseilles established a firm in Smyrna in 1759 after turning to outsiders. Thanks to the contributions of economic sociology, this research shows that the Levantine context, prone to revolutions of all kinds, didn't offer all the expected amenities. The social structure legally enforced and dominated by the merchants of Marseilles worked in accordance to embedded cautiousness which likened the expatriated partners to potentially opportunist subordinates. Such an organization hampered their activity in the Eastern market. Whereas the Mediterranean became an outlying space for world trade, the Roux failed to develop their Levantine firm despite the diversity of their networks. The domination of Marseilles over the clothing industry in Languedoc contributed, in fact, to its jeopardizing and the quality decline of its products. At the end of the Seven Years' War, these exportations entered in a declining stage maintained by the inertia of the merchants' practices which also account for the lack of diversification. Thus, network defects combine with the complexity of the Levantine market, the geopolitical troubles of the 18th century and the transition to English hegemony to explain the crisis of the Levantine trade from Marseilles
Michaud, Francine. « Un signe des temps : accroissement des crises familiales autour du patrimoine à Marseille à la fin du XIIIe siècle ». Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/17633.
Texte intégralMontel, Laurence. « Marseille, capitale du crime : histoire croisée de l'imaginaire de Marseille et de la criminalité organisée (mille huit cent vingt à mille neuf cent quarante) ». Paris 10, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA100149.
Texte intégralThe starting point of this study is the criminal reputation of Marseilles - French “Chicago” - throughout the XXth century. I worked on the history of the “Milieu marseillais”, that is on national and local representations of criminals since the beginning of the XIXth century. Justice and police materials are also used, in order to follow the arising of real trafics (prostitution, drugs), and the changes of theft practices. At the end of the 1930s, some nouveau riche traffickers become campaign aides for local politicians, thus ensuring impunity. Is this the time for French organized crime ?
Claverie, Élisabeth. « Les dockers à Marseille de 1864 à 1941 : de leur apparition au statut de 1941 ». Aix-Marseille 1, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996AIX10088.
Texte intégralSince the 19th century dockers working on the marseilles docks have been troublesome. They started competing with the porters and consequently traditions were turned upside town. They were quickly negatively perceived by the town society and the various communities made it even worse. Instability, precarity and the lack of definite status were the characteristics of the people working on the marseilles docks. The history of dockers comes along with that of a fairly deprived lower class that was gradually settling in the twenties. Unsupervised without any guarantee they started fighting for their rights very early. In marseilles they soon became a social political and economical stake : an economical one when strikes entailed a decrease in the port traffic, a social one because of their possible influence on the other town workers and the dockers of other harbours. And most of all their political role prevailed on the period spanning between the two world wars. In those days marseilles had a rather agitated political life and this unrest pervaded the docks : through the dockers it is the struggle between the left wing forces and the sabianists which took place. From 1935 the communists succeeded in ruling over the docks and their trade-union became most powerful. This strength allowed the dockers to gain advantages from 1936 to 1939 and the idea of a status became apparent. The dockers had a strategic role to play in the economy and the government decided to grant them a status during world war ii so that the port activities should start again as soon as the conflict was over. The law, passed on the 28 june 1941, gave the dockers a status but at the same time it confined them in a corporation : it is a return to the 19th century porter's society
Raveux, Olivier. « Une histoire méditerranéenne : la métallurgie et la construction mécanique à Marseille au XIX siècle ». Aix-Marseille 1, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996AIX10092.
Texte intégralMarseilles is a symbol of a mediterranean town reached by steam and iron during the 19th century. Advanced industry, metallurgy and mechanical engineering, has found its place and has managed to become a basic of the town's economic success story. Marseilles' industry, atypic and varied proves different from that of the european north-west. Cast iron making has remained a low-key activity. Other sectors have taken prominence : machine making, second melting industry and non ferrous metals. The history of that field, underrated for too long, takes the opposite view to the factors that are supposed to account for mediterranean europe's economic lag. There has been no shortage of men, capital, technological knowledge and markets. Quite like barcelona, genoa and piraeus, marseilles is entirely part of the 19th century industrial landscape. In spite of its final failure, the metallurgy and mechanical engineering of marseilles is the most accomplished of the mediterranean success combining openness and local dynamism
Lambert, Olivier. « Marseille et Madagascar : histoire d'une aventure outre-mer : entrepreneurs et activités portuaires, stratégies économiques et mentalités coloniales (1840-1976) ». Paris, EHESS, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999EHES0030.
Texte intégralRicateau-Marciano, Florence. « Formation et carrière de élèves de la classe d'architecture de l'Ecole des Beaux-Arts de Marseille 1813-1914 ». Aix-Marseille 1, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999AIX10011.
Texte intégralLivres sur le sujet "Marseille (France) – History"
Vie d'Isarn, abbé de Saint-Victor de Marseille (XIe siècle). Paris : Les Belles Lettres, 2010.
Trouver le texte intégralRégis, Bertrand, et Guyon Jean, dir. Saint-Victor de Marseille : Le guide. Saint-Laurent-du-Var : Mémoires millénaires, 2014.
Trouver le texte intégralSaint Victor de Marseille : Études archéologiques et historiques : actes du colloque Saint-Victor Marseille, 18-20 novembre, 2004. Turnhout, Belgium : Brepols, 2009.
Trouver le texte intégralBoulanger, Patrick. Mémoires du savon de Marseille. Marguerittes [France] : Editions de l'Equinoxe, 1994.
Trouver le texte intégralarchaeologist, Pelletier Jean-Pierre, dir. Saint Victor de Marseille : Étude archéologique et monumentale. Turnhout : Brepols, 2009.
Trouver le texte intégralFukasawa, Katsumi. Toilerie et commerce du Levant : D'Alep à Marseille. Paris : Editions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1987.
Trouver le texte intégralLeidet, Gérard, et Bernard Régaudiat. Marseille-Paris, les belles de mai. Paris : Éditions Syllepse, 2018.
Trouver le texte intégralSmail, Daniel Lord. Imaginary cartographies : Possession and identity in late medieval Marseille. Ithaca : Cornell University Press, 2000.
Trouver le texte intégralLe Grand Théâtre de Marseille. [Marseille] : Autres temps, 2006.
Trouver le texte intégralMediterranean crossroads : Marseille and modern architecture. Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 2011.
Trouver le texte intégralChapitres de livres sur le sujet "Marseille (France) – History"
Winter, Bronwyn. « A Mediterranean Bazaar ». Dans Making Waves, 141–54. Liverpool University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789620429.003.0010.
Texte intégralVincent, Xavier Labat Saint. « Trade in the Mediterranean in the Early Modern Era : A Brief Review of the French Literature ». Dans New Directions in Mediterranean Maritime History. Liverpool University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9780973007381.003.0003.
Texte intégralJirat-Wasiutynski, Vojtech. « École de Marseille : région et histoire de l’art en France au xixe siècle ». Dans La notion d’« école », 219–29. Presses universitaires de Strasbourg, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pus.13162.
Texte intégralHealey, Luke. « ‘The Gaze Always Finds Zidane’ : Aesthetics and Overdetermination in Toussaint, Delbée, and Gordon and Parreno ». Dans Pour le Sport, 225–46. Liverpool University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781800856899.003.0011.
Texte intégralActes de conférences sur le sujet "Marseille (France) – History"
Comair, Georges, et Jerry R. Rogers. « History of the Marseille Canal in France ». Dans World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2011. Reston, VA : American Society of Civil Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/41173(414)198.
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