The French army 1750–1820

Careers, talent, merit

Author:
Rafe Blaufarb
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This book examines the shifting ideas and practices of the Old Regime as they attempted to implement meritocracy in the military profession. It treats the Old Regime concept of merit and the efforts undertaken from 1750 to 1789 to realize it in the royal officer corps. The book reinterprets the meritocratic revolution of 1789 in the light of the bitter conflicts over hereditary merit (and its violations) that had polarized the officer corps during the last decades of the Old Regime. It examines how the carefully crafted revolutionary military reforms under the weight of successive revolutionary crises. The perception of military decline prompted reformers to enact a series of professionalizing measures which transformed the French army. Exploring the ideological, political, and military factors that transformed the officer corps after the overthrow of the monarchy in August 1792, the book argues that republican rule marked a sharp, but transitory, break in the history of revolutionary meritocracy. It discusses the rise of a new sense of military professionalism during the Thermidorean and Directorial years. The book examines how Napoleon's search to reconstruct monarchy and found a dynasty recombined and transformed the notions of merit his regime had inherited from the revolutionary governments of the past decade. It surveys the meritocratic legacy of the Old Regime, Revolution, and Empire during the nineteenth century and beyond.

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