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  1. Albert-Xavier-Émile Mathiez (French pronunciation: [albɛʁ ɡzavje emil matje]; 10 January 1874 – 25 February 1932) was a French historian, best known for his Marxist interpretation of the French Revolution.

  2. Albert Mathiez, a prolific historian between the world wars, embraced a Marxist interpretation of the French Revolution. Born in eastern France, Mathiez’s family were peasant farmers. His upbringing and his family’s struggles would come to shape Mathiez’s political perspectives.

  3. May 14, 2018 · The French historian Albert Mathiez (1874-1932) was one of the major 20th-century historians of the French Revolution. Albert Mathiez was born to an innkeeper's family at La Bruyère in eastern France on Jan. 10, 1874. He graduated from the École Normale in 1897.

  4. Albert Mathiez was one of the major 20th-century historians of the French Revolution. Albert Mathiez was born to an innkeeper's family at La Bruyère in eastern France on Jan. 10, 1874. He graduated from the École Normale in 1897.

  5. Jan 28, 2016 · Never was the alleged dictator more challenged, more opposed, more impotent than on the morrow of the establishment of the Cult of the Supreme Being! On the morrow of the Festival of the 20th Prairial, opposition to him raised its head even in the Committee of Public Safety.

  6. Mathiez's triple role of historian, patriot, and polemicist deserves attention not only as a chapter in French intellectual history but more importantly because his personal experiences in 1914-18 profoundly al-tered historical understanding of the collective French experience of. 1789-94.

  7. But if the outline of his political career is familiar, his complex personality remains rather cryptic and the controversy over his behaviour continues to be lively. To his many admirers, Robespierre was the leading figure of the Revolution; to his detractors, he was its great villain.

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