|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Books: Death Masque
CARNIVAL IN ROMANS
by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie
Braziller; 426 pages; $20
French Historian Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie managed a singular coup last year. His book Montaillou, a painstakingly detailed account of life in a small French town in the Pyrenees at the beginning of the 14th century, became a surprise bestseller. But then, Montaillou was a singular town. The curious beliefs, the robust lives and the sexual proclivities of its townspeople, revealed through the testimony in their subsequent heresy trials, afforded an intriguing peephole into another time.
In Carnival in Romans Le Roy Ladurie provides a new apertureand another compelling view. The place is the small city of Romans in southeastern France. The year is 1580. France is still recovering from the widespread slaughter of the Huguenots in the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre of 1572; skirmishes still go on between Catholic and Huguenot. Town and countryside are periodically ravaged by roving bands of brigand soldiers. Class bitterness over increasingly burdensome taxes breaks out in tax strikes, urban unrest and peasant revolt. It all coils up toward Mardi Gras, culminating in a bloody midnight clash.
This is, as Le Roy Ladurie senses, the stuff of old drama with modern resonances. Yet Carnival in Romans is no mere clone of Montaillou: it is a more demanding worka long day's journey into light. In that sense it is a braver book. The author dares, for example, to spend the entire second chapter talking about taxes. He cannot do otherwise. If sex and its avoidance preoccupied Montaillou, taxes and their avoidance seem to have preoccupied Romans and the countryside around it.
There was good reason for concern. The small rural landowner was being squeezed dry. More and more parvenu nobles, exempt from taxes, were buying country property; the mounting costs of a burgeoning bureaucracy thus fell on fewer and fewer Frenchmen. Petitions for nobles and clergy to share in the tax load went unheard.
The townspeople of Romans resented the same fiscal injustice, but theirs was a more complicated grievance. Taxes went into the pockets of corrupt administrators and stayed there. Instead of paying their bills, these unscrupulous city fathers ran up an enormous municipal debt, then lent the city the money they had embezzled at considerable interest.
Fury over finances and helplessness in the face of roving brigands compelled peasant and townsman alike to form "leagues" to advance their common purposes. Armorers did a brisk business in swords, helmets and arquebuses, forerunners of the musket. In February 1579 the drapers of Romans paraded with weapons and elected a burly colleague, Paumier, as their festival chief. He also became the factional leader of angry craftsmen, tradesmen and plowmen. Soon there were two governments in Romans: Paumier and his followers had seized control of the city gates, a vital link to leaguers in the countryside. By the latter part of 1579, butchers and bakers were defiantly withholding taxes. Daringly and, as it turned out, fatally, Paumier's faction was also demanding complete restitution of the funds stolen by the town administrators over the previous two decades.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- Top Stocks of the Decade: What the Winners Tell Us
- Health Reform's Senate Win: Did Reid Make It Tougher Than It Had to Be?
- Snow Job for the Avatar Opening?
- Agent Orange Poisons New Generations in Vietnam
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade from Hell
- Iran's Opposition Loses a Mentor But Gains a Martyr
- Sarkozy Stands By France's Hated Immigration Minister
- Have Yourself a Sandinista Christmas...
- U.S. Companies Shut Out as Iraq Auctions Its Oil Fields
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Agent Orange Poisons New Generations in Vietnam
- Top Stocks of the Decade: What the Winners Tell Us
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- Autism Numbers Are Rising. The Question is Why?
- In Nigeria, an Ailing President and Peace Process
- Have Yourself a Sandinista Christmas...
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Health Reform's Senate Win: Did Reid Make It Tougher Than It Had to Be?





RSS