Frédéric Bluche

French legal historian (1951–2024) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Frédéric Bluche (30 June 1950 – 3 January 2024) was a French legal historian who specialized in the French Revolution and the First Empire.[1]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...
Frédéric Bluche
Born(1950-06-30)30 June 1950
Died (aged 73)
NationalityFrench
EducationPantheon-Assas University
OccupationLegal historian
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Biography

Born in 1950, Bluche was the son of fellow historian François Bluche, with whom he shared the "same passion for history" according to Christian Amalvi.[2] He directed five theses and served on the jury for two.[3] He notably published Le prince, le peuple, et le droit in 2000. He also edited multiple articles in the Encyclopædia Universalis.[4] He earned a doctorate in legal history for Pantheon-Assas University in 1978[5] and taught this subject at the same school.[2]

Frédéric Bluche died on 3 January 2024, at the age of 73.[6]

Works

  • Le Plébiscite des Cent-Jours (avril-mai 1815) (1974)
  • Le Bonapartisme : aux origines de la droite autoritaire, 1800-1850 (1980)
  • Le Bonapartisme (1981)
  • Lois fondamentales et succession de France (1984)
  • Danton (1984)
  • Septembre 1792 : logiques d'un massacre (1986)
  • Chronique du royaume d'Harkhanie : roman (1988)
  • Les Révolutions françaises : les phénomènes révolutionnaires en France, du Moyen âge à nos jours (1989)
  • La Révolution française (1989)
  • Les Mémoires secrets d'Alexandre (1999)
  • Le prince, le Peuple et le Droit : autour des plébiscites de 1851 et 1852 (2000)
  • Manuel d'histoire politique de la France contemporaine (2001)

Awards

References

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