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The Jacquerie (1358) by Henri Grobet
VERMINEUX "1358" Demo MCD 2025
1. Sans Valeur 2. Le Ciel Fait Grise Mine 3. Falling Back in Fields of Rape (Current 93 cover)
A short demo EP based on the Jacquerie.
Written and recorded in the Spring of 2024 in room 218 on a Tascam 424 mkII
This was intended to be half of a split that did not materialize.
1358 | Vermineux
La Jacquerie et l'affranchissements des paysans de la terre de Faucogney en 1412.
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Main AuthorFinot, Jules, 1842-1908.Language(s)French PublishedParis, L. Larose et Forcel, 1883. SubjectsJacquerie, 1358. Faucogney, France > Faucogney, France / History. Physical Description72 p.
Main AuthorFinot, Jules, 1842-1908.Language(s)French PublishedParis, L. Larose et Forcel, 1883. SubjectsJacquerie, 1358. Faucogney, France > Faucogney, France / History. Physical Description72 p.
« Ce que l’homme sain hait le plus et comprend le moins, c’est la dégénérescence de son propre type. Il perçoit là une menace précise, immédiate, personnelle, un danger profond qui ne laisse aucune place à la réflexion et à l’indulgence. Ainsi le paysan déteste instinctivement et sans rémission le mendiant rural : il sent trop bien que ce serait là son sort s’il se relâchait dans son dur travail. Réciproquement, l’être abâtardi hait les formes supérieures de son type comme on peut haïr l’incarnation de sa propre condamnation, de son propre remords. »
Gustave Thibon, Destin de l’homme (Éd. Desclée de Brouwer, 1941).
Disjacquewort (noun)
Historical: A rare, derogatory term originally coined during medieval insurrections to describe a rebellious individual or group engaging in acts of defiance or violence against authority, typically in a manner deemed disrespectful or irreverent by the ruling class. The term blends "disrespect" with "Jacquerie," referring to the violent peasant revolts in France, and "bloodwort," a plant historically associated with bloodshed and healing.
Figurative: A person or movement characterized by a rebellious spirit, often manifesting in disdain for established norms or authority, and resorting to aggressive or unconventional methods.
Example: The disjacqueworts of the village rose against their oppressors, their actions as bitter as the bloodwort that stained the fields.
James, G. P. R. (George Payne Rainsford). (1841). The jacquerie: or, The lady and the page; an historical romance. London: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans.
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Main Author:
James, G. P. R. 1801?-1860.
Language(s):English
Published:London, Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans, 1841.
Subjects:
Jacquerie, 1358
Digitized by the Internet Archive
In 2009 with funding from
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
http://www.archive.org/details/jacquerieorladyp01jame
Jacquerie, 1358 /Fiction.
Physical Description:3 v. 19 cm.
https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/008720731/Cite
a peasants' revolt… See the full definition
When Was the First jacquerie?
The first jacquerie was an insurrection of peasants against the nobility in northeastern France in 1358, so-named from the nobles' habit of referring contemptuously to any peasant as "Jacques," or "Jacques Bonhomme" (in French bonhomme means "fellow"). It took some time—150 years—for the name of the first jacquerie to become a generalized term for other revolts. The term is also occasionally used to refer to the peasant class, as when Madame Defarge in Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities tells her husband to "consider the faces of all the world that we know, consider the rage and discontent to which the Jacquerie addresses itself with more and more of certainty every hour."
Examples of jacquerie in a Sentence Recent Examples on the Web
This is a modern-day jacquerie, an emotional wildfire stoked in the provinces and directed against Paris and, most of all, the elite. — The New York Review of Books, 21 Mar. 2019
First Known Use of jacquerie
1523, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology for jacquerie
Middle French, from the French peasant revolt in 1358, from jacque peasant — more at jacket
Time Traveler for jacquerie
The first known use of jacquerie was in 1523
See more words from the same year
“Jacquerie.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/jacquerie. Accessed 23 Feb. 2022.