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Marie Antoinette and the Downfall of Royalty

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(3,6 Sterne; 5 Bewertungen)

"Paris in 1792 is no longer what it was in 1789. In 1789, the old French society was still brilliant. The past endured beside the present. Neither names nor escutcheons, neither liveries nor places at court, had been suppressed. The aristocracy and the Revolution lived face to face. In 1792, the scene has changed."

France was now on the verge of the Reign of Terror (la Terreur), the violent years following the Revolution, and this book chronicles the terrible period of French history which culminated in the proclamation: "Royalty is abolished in France. All public acts will be dated from the first year of the Republic. The seal of State will be inscribed with this motto: Republique française." (Summary by Ruth Golding, with quotations from the book itself) (11 hr 9 min)

Chapters

01 – Paris at the Beginning of 1792

19:10

Read by Libby Gohn

02 – Count de Fersen’s Last Journey to Paris

16:52

Read by Monika Rolley

03 – The Death of the Emperor Leopold

15:49

Read by Monika Rolley

04 – The Death of Gustavus III

21:16

Read by bala

05 – The Beginnings of Madame Roland

27:55

Read by Jules Hawryluk

06 – Madame Roland’s Entrance on the Scene

26:39

Read by Lucretia B.

07 – Marie Antoinette and Madame Roland

23:02

Read by Monika Rolley

08 – Madame Roland at the Ministry of the Interior

16:12

Read by Monika Rolley

09 - Dumouriez, Minister Of Foreign Affairs

17:45

Read by Jules Hawryluk

10 – The Council of Ministers

13:36

Read by Jules Hawryluk

11 – The Fête of the Swiss Of Chateauvieux

30:08

Read by Jules Hawryluk

12 - The Declaration of War

21:24

Read by Jules Hawryluk

13 - The Disbanding Of The Constitutional Guard

19:33

Read by Jules Hawryluk

14 - The Sufferings of Louis XVI

16:31

Read by bala

15 - Roland's Dismissal from Office

15:34

Read by Jules Hawryluk

16 - A Three Days' Ministry

19:02

Read by Jules Hawryluk

17 - The Prologue to June Twentieth

18:30

Read by Jules Hawryluk

18 - The Morning of June Twentieth

22:37

Read by Jules Hawryluk

19 - The Invasion of the Tuileries

23:25

Read by Jules Hawryluk

20 - Marie Antoinette on June Twentieth

16:13

Read by Jules Hawryluk

21 - The Morrow of June Twentieth

17:58

Read by Jules Hawryluk

22 - Lafayette in Paris

19:08

Read by Jules Hawryluk

23 - The Lamourette Kiss

15:29

Read by Joy Suzanne Grazer

24 - The Féte of the Federation In 1792

20:25

Read by bala

25 - The Last Days at the Tuileries

11:27

Read by Chiquito Crasto

26 - The Prologue to the Tenth of August

11:34

Read by Chiquito Crasto

27 - The Night of August Ninth to Tenth

11:58

Read by Chiquito Crasto

28 - The Morning of August Tenth

20:12

Read by Chiquito Crasto

29 - The Box of the Logograph

10:26

Read by Chiquito Crasto

30 - The Combat

15:10

Read by Chiquito Crasto

31 - The Results of the Combat

19:02

Read by Chiquito Crasto

32 - The Royal-Family in the Convent of the Feuillants

11:21

Read by Chiquito Crasto

33 - The Temple

19:24

Read by Chiquito Crasto

34 - The Princess de Lamballe's Murder

12:58

Read by Chiquito Crasto

35 - The September Massacres

17:54

Read by Chiquito Crasto

36 - Madame Roland during the Massacres

16:48

Read by Chiquito Crasto

37 - The Proclamation of the Republic

16:46

Read by Chiquito Crasto

Bewertungen

Worth a listening

(3 Sterne)

The book though brilliant, has a difficult style. Sometimes poetic, sometimes quite dry. The end has gruesome chapters. I liked very much to see the side that was showing a royal perspective. I could suddenly sympathize with Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Fearing for their kids and lives. I felt very sorry for Louis XVII, the little boy. what had the children done to anyone? Losing everything and many loved ones. The terrible waste of the senselessly sacrificed Swiss Guards and many more.How few the apparently payed real culprits of the massacres were is a meaningful aspect. Some of the readers were a bit difficult to understand. Especially the last reader was good though.