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  1. The Kingdom of France is the historiographical name or umbrella term given to various political entities of France in the medieval and early modern period. It was one of the most powerful states in Europe from the High Middle Ages to 1848 during its dissolution. It was also an early colonial power, with colonies in Asia and Africa, and the ...

  2. Catholicism (1593–1610) Signature. Henry IV ( French: Henri IV; 13 December 1553 – 14 May 1610), also known by the epithets Good King Henry or Henry the Great, was King of Navarre (as Henry III) from 1572 and King of France from 1589 to 1610. He was the first monarch of France from the House of Bourbon, a cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty.

  3. The Government of the first Bourbon restoration replaced the French provisional government of 1814 that had been formed after the fall of Napoleon . It was announced on 13 May 1814 by King Louis XVIII . After the return of Napoleon from exile, the court fled to Ghent and the government was replaced by the French Government of the Hundred Days ...

  4. Floor plan of the conference hall of the Chamber of Deputies. Chamber of Deputies ( French: Chambre des députés) was a parliamentary body in France in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: [1] 1814–1848 during the Bourbon Restoration and the July Monarchy, the Chamber of Deputies was the lower house of the French Parliament, elected by ...

  5. The restoration era in France, 1814-1830 (1968) 223pp; Wolf, John B. (1940) France: 1815 to the Present (1940) online free pp 1–75. ประวัติศาสตร์นิพนธ์. Alexander, Robert (2003). Re-Writing the French Revolutionary Tradition: Liberal Opposition and the Fall of the Bourbon Monarchy. Cambridge UP.

  6. The Bourbon Restoration made the Catholic Church again the state religion of France. Other religions were tolerated, but Catholicism was favored both financially and politically. Its lands and financial endowments were not returned, but the government now paid salaries and maintenance costs for church activities.

  7. France. Neoclassicism is a movement in architecture, design and the arts which emerged in France in the 1740s and became dominant in France between about 1760 to 1830. It emerged as a reaction to the frivolity and excessive ornament of the baroque and rococo styles. In architecture it featured sobriety, straight lines, and forms, such as the ...