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      • The interwar total population grew very slowly, from 38.8 million in 1921 to 41.2 million in 1936.
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  2. The interwar total population grew very slowly, from 38.8 million in 1921 to 41.2 million in 1936. Educationally, there was steady improvement, and secondary enrollment grew from 158,000 in 1921 to 248,000 in 1936. University enrollment grew from 51,000 to 72,000.

  3. French census statistics from 1938 show an imperial population with France at over 150 million people, outside of France itself, of 102.8 million people living on 13.5 million square kilometers. Of the total population, 64.7 million lived in Africa and 31.2 million lived in Asia; 900,000 lived in the French West Indies or islands in the South ...

  4. The interwar years. Frenchmen concentrated much of their energy during the early 1920s on recovering from the war. The government undertook a vast program of reconstructing the devastated areas and had largely completed that task by 1925.

  5. The value of the franc fell by about 50 percent during 1919, the first year of peace. To pay off bondholders, France was forced to borrow at extremely high short-term rates. The French government took little action to rectify the economic situation, relying on laissez-faire economics instead.

  6. This was the proposal for European unity made by the French statesman Aristide Briand. When taking office as foreign minister in 1925 he had declared his ambition to establish “a United States of Europe,” and on September 9, 1929, he made a speech to the then 27 European members of the League in which he proposed a federal union.

  7. The period we know as the French Revolution, starting in earnest in 1789, was a time of dramatic transformation in France. Political transformation first and foremost, but social transformation too. The Palace of Versailles found itself at the very heart of the revolution.

  8. Demographics. Unlike other European countries France did not experience a strong population growth in the mid-to-late 19th century and first half of the 20th century.