Andrew Trout's new book on Paris during the period preceding the end
Louis XIV's reign is a fascinating social history of the city anchored
by the lives of two of its most famous citizens: Cardinal Richelieu and
Louis XIV. Beginning with the emergence of Richelieu as a political
force and concluding with the end of Louis XIV's reign, Trout describes
the city as it looked during the seventeenth century and answers a
myriad of interesting questions: Did the houses have numbers? Were
residential buildings flush with the street? What was anyone likely to
see along the River Seine? By answering such questions, Trout constructs
a social history of the city that is unequalled. Trout's book is
illustrated with maps and engravings that bring the city to life. City
on the Seine is an indispensable work of social history.