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poster of A History of the European Rural Life
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A History of the European Rural Life (2024)

The history of the European peasantry, which has undergone many upheavals over the centuries: from its rise in the Middle Ages after the fall of the Roman Empire, through the oppression of the nobility and the Church, to the struggles for freedom and modernization in the present era.

Release Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2024

Country: FR
Language: En | Fr | Ga | It | Es
Runtime: 56

Catherine Ringer
Self - Narrator (voice)
Massimo Montanari
Self - Historian
Chris Wickham
Self - Historian
Edith Peytremann
Self - Archaeologist
Sheilagh Ogilvie
Self - Historian
Jean-Pierre Devroey
Self - Historian
Morgan Ody
Self - Farmer
Olivier Savoy
Self - Farmer
Tim Soens
Self - Historian
Lyndal Roper
Self - Historian
Antonio Onorati
Self - Farmer
Carlo Ginzburg
Self - Historian
Eugene Costello
Self - Archaeologist
Gérard Béaur
Self - Historian
Laurent Brassart
Self - Historian
Omar Bessaoud
Self - Agroeconomist
Marie Savoy
Self - Farmer
Edouard Lynch
Self - Historian
Mario Donato
Self - Local Historian
Tiago Saraiva
Self - Historian

Season 1:

The Beginning / The Lords, and Those Who Dig
Episode 1: The Beginning / The Lords, and Those Who Dig (Apr 23, 2024)
By the 6th century, the disintegration of the Roman Empire was complete: no more state, no more big cities. The European peasantry was born. A change of scale. The great Roman commercial agriculture disappeared. These first peasants, freed from the weight of the State, taxes and the obligation to feed the Empire's major cities, produced only as much as they needed. Peasant communities were freer than ever. This golden age came to an end in the 8th century. The new warrior elites imposed a return to domination, taxes, and the invention of drudgery and serfdom. The Church took part in the reconquest, tracking down the old rural cults.
Rebellion and War / Revolutions
Episode 2: Rebellion and War / Revolutions (Apr 23, 2024)
Around the year 1000, growth resumed in Europe. This was the product of the work of peasants, who were even more exploited and despised, especially by city dwellers who were making a comeback. The rise of commercial agriculture was based on cereals, the main source of profit for the ruling classes. The banks of the River Po and the coasts of the North Sea were drained to conquer new wheat lands. The destruction of these wetlands disrupted the peasant economy and led to catastrophic flooding, the effects of which are still felt today. In the 14th century, famine, war and plague put an end to growth. The era of the great anti-feudal revolts began, with their mystical and egalitarian overtones. From the French Jacquerie of 1358 to the German Peasants' War of 1525, all were drowned in blood.
Towards Freedom / The Immobile Peasant, the Moving Peasant
Episode 3: Towards Freedom / The Immobile Peasant, the Moving Peasant (Apr 23, 2024)
Peasants don't need to know. If they knew how to read or write, they could challenge the titles of the rulers and the authority of the Church, like the Italian miller Menocchio, declared a heretic and burned alive in 1600. Peasant knowledge was just as suspect. Peasant witches, often simple bonesetters, were hunted down, accused of worshipping Satan and burned by the thousands. On the threshold of modern times, in the name of progress and profitability, the dominant classes launched an offensive against the old village solidarities. England set the example by privatizing communal lands. By depriving farmers of an indispensable resource, they were condemned to disappear. France followed a different path. Still in the majority, its peasantry played a major and little-known role in the Revolution which, in 1789, put an end to a thousand years of feudal rule.
Against the Rest of the World / Peasant Masses
Episode 4: Against the Rest of the World / Peasant Masses (Apr 23, 2024)
In the 19th century, Europe's farmers were finally free. But the Industrial Revolution and modernization precipitated their decline. Deserting the countryside, they left en masse for the cities. As the rural exodus gathered momentum, conservatives saw peasants as the embodiment of all traditional values. Reputed to be more obedient and hard-working than workers, they were the main cannon fodder of the First World War. Fascism and Nazism took this mystification to the extreme, invoking the eternal peasant as the guardian of soil and blood. But the real peasant is subject to the dictates of the state, technocrats and agronomists. Unaffected by political regimes, the steamroller of industrial agriculture has continued to advance ever since. Yet the peasants are still there, making other voices heard.

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