1. The Ancien Régime Challenged
2. Revolutionary Action
3. Creating a
Regenerated France
4. Exclusions and Inclusions
5. The Church and the
Revolutionary State
6. International Reactions to the Revolution
7. Monarchy
and Revolution
8. The Revolution At War
9. The End of the Monarchy
10. The
Peasantry and the Rural Environment
11. Debating Womens Role in the
Revolution
12. A New Civic Culture
13. The Republic at War
14. Revolt in the
Vendée
15. Slavery and Emancipation
16. 'The Terror' at Work
17. The
Thermidorian Reaction
18. The Directory
19. The Rise of Napoleon
20. Law and
Order
21. God, the People, and the Empire
22. Governing the Empire
23. The
Experience of Warfare
24. Living Under the Empire
25. Resistance and
Repression
26. The Russian Catastrophe
27. The Anti-Napoleon
28. Collapse
29.
The Hundred Days
30. Reflecting on Revolution and Empire
Philip Dwyer is Professor of History and founding Director of the Centre for the Study of Violence at the University of Newcastle, Australia. His books include Napoleon: The Path to Power (2008); Citizen Emperor: Napoleon in Power (2013); and Napoleon: Passion, Death and Resurrection, 18151840 (2018). He is co-editor of The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars (2022). He is currently writing a global history of human violence.
Peter McPhee is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Melbourne, Australia. His books include Living the French Revolution 17891799 (2006); Robespierre: a Revolutionary Life (2012); and Liberty or Death. The French Revolution 17891799 (2016). He is currently working on a book on the history of the French landscape 17702020.