Why did the growth of the French population slow so much in the second part of the 19th century and partially into the 20th century compared to other European Powers?
Would this be due to the French tradition of splitting property among all children, as opposed the just the eldest male child? I know this created issues in Canada where farms began to become impractical.I think a large part of it is cultural. In the early 18th century France was exceptional in Europe in that it has a large class of small farmers taking up almost the whole country, with the result that they tended to limit their offspring so as to avoid breaking up holdings into unsustainable fragments when passing them on to the next generation.
A slight problem with this is looking at Quebec, such problems were not an issue as they just lead to large scale emmigration. In contrast France saw relatively little emigration throughout this period. Why would they not continue to have children and then see emmigration like Germany or Britain?This presumably had some impact on French cultural norms, particularly given that the very nature of the tendency meant that the farmer class remained an unusually large proportion of the population.
Couldn't tell you how much of an impact this had, but France appeared to be far more liberal than other countries, so birth control was likely more socially acceptable.
Would this be due to the French tradition of splitting property among all children, as opposed the just the eldest male child? I know this created issues in Canada where farms began to become impractical.
Yeah, that's it.Would this be due to the French tradition of splitting property among all children, as opposed the just the eldest male child? I know this created issues in Canada where farms began to become impractical.
Well, firstly, the period I'm talking about would be the early 19th century, after the redistribution of land that accompanied the revolution, by which point the level of cultural exchange between Metropolitan and Canadian Frenchmen was limited compared to what it had once been, so there would be certain divergences there.A slight problem with this is looking at Quebec, such problems were not an issue as they just lead to large scale emmigration. In contrast France saw relatively little emigration throughout this period. Why would they not continue to have children and then see emmigration like Germany or Britain?
A declining birth rate seems like an odd way to govern population in an era of mass migrations.
However, France is one of the few countries where this became a popular tradition, rather than a purely aristocratic one.There were many places other than France where there was a tradition of splitting up land between all children (e.g. in the Kievan Rus').
Ha, you can actually see where the Napoleonic Wars end...![]()
This seems to fit in.
Not really, because it's not comparative, and the whole point of the discussion is a comparative analysis of French population growth with comparable contemporary states.This seems to fit in.
Ha, you can actually see where the Napoleonic Wars end...![]()