Abrégé de l'Histoire universelle depuis Charlemagne jusques à Charlequint (Tome…

(11 User reviews)   1819
Voltaire, 1694-1778 Voltaire, 1694-1778
French
Ever wonder what history looks like when you take the kings and saints off their pedestals? That's exactly what Voltaire does in this wild ride through eight centuries. Forget the dry textbooks you had in school—this is history with attitude. Voltaire picks apart the so-called 'great' events from Charlemagne to Charles V, asking the uncomfortable questions everyone else was too polite to mention. Why did Europe keep tearing itself apart over religion? How much of what we call 'glory' was just vanity and violence? He treats popes, emperors, and conquerors not as marble statues, but as flawed, often ridiculous people. Reading this feels like having coffee with the sharpest, most sarcastic friend you've ever had, one who's read all the boring chronicles so you don't have to. It's less a timeline of facts and more a relentless investigation into why humans keep making the same brutal mistakes. If you think history is settled, Voltaire is here to start an argument.
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So, what's this book actually about? The title translates to Abridged Universal History from Charlemagne to Charles V, but 'abridged' is a bit of a Voltairean joke. It covers nearly 800 years of European history, from around 800 AD to the 1500s. But this isn't a simple list of battles and coronation dates.

The Story

Voltaire structures his history as a sweeping narrative of power, faith, and folly. He starts with the empire of Charlemagne and marches through the Crusades, the rise of the Papacy's political power, the Mongol invasions, and the intellectual awakening of the Renaissance, ending with the reign of Charles V. The 'plot' is the relentless cycle of human ambition. You'll see kings fighting for land they can't hold, popes excommunicating emperors, and scholars slowly rediscovering reason amidst the chaos. The central thread isn't a person, but an idea: the painful, messy, and often absurd struggle between superstition and enlightenment, between authority and individual thought.

Why You Should Read It

You should read this because Voltaire is furious, funny, and phenomenally smart. He doesn't just tell you what happened; he gives you his blistering opinion on it. He mocks the endless religious wars, pities the common people crushed under the wheels of history, and celebrates the flashes of art and science that broke through the darkness. Reading him, you realize how much of our modern skepticism comes from this era. He treats history not as a sacred record, but as a cautionary tale. You're not getting a neutral account—you're getting a guided tour by history's most brilliant critic. It makes you look at today's headlines and wonder what Voltaire would say about them (probably something devastatingly witty).

Final Verdict

This is the perfect book for anyone who finds typical history books a bit too reverent. It's for the reader who loves big ideas, sharp wit, and a perspective that hasn't aged a day. If you enjoy authors like Stephen Greenblatt or Yuval Noah Harari who connect past thinking to the present, you'll find a kindred spirit in Voltaire. Fair warning: it helps to have a rough mental timeline of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, as Voltaire assumes you know the major players. But don't worry about getting every date right. Read it for the voice, the passion, and the thrilling sense that history is an argument we're all still having.



✅ Community Domain

This text is dedicated to the public domain. Access is open to everyone around the world.

Elizabeth Nguyen
1 year ago

A bit long but worth it.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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