🎉 New to MixCache.com? Sign up now and get $5.00 FREE CREDIT towards any books! Create Account →

Rivers, Forests, and Vineyards: Environmental History of France MTA
Landscape transformation from medieval land use to modern conservation and climate challenges
2nd Edition

Book Details
5 ratings · Read ratings & reviews
Log in to purchase and rate this book.
About this book:

Rivers, Forests, and Vineyards: Environmental History of France *Rivers, Forests, and Vineyards: Environmental History of France* traces the evolution of the French landscape from the medieval period to the contemporary era. The narrative begins with the medieval mosaic of forests, communal pastures, and monastic vineyards, where land use was governed by local custom and the rhythms of a relatively warm climate. This shifted during the early modern period as the French state, epitomized by Colbert’s 1669 Forest Ordinance and the construction of the Canal du Midi, began to treat nature as a strategic national asset. The state reasserted control over forests for naval timber and rewired the nation's hydrology through ambitious engineering to facilitate trade and project monarchical power.

The industrial and modern eras accelerated these transformations through technological and biological upheavals. The 19th century saw the arrival of railways, which marginalized canals and reoriented economic geography, while the phylloxera crisis forced a scientific reinvention of the French vineyard through grafting and the birth of the *Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée* system. Massive state projects like the reforestation of the Landes and the damming of the Rhône Basin for hydropower exemplified a technocratic drive to master the environment. However, the total wars of the 20th century left deep scars of industrial destruction and chemical pollution, eventually fueling a grassroots environmental movement and a more robust legal framework for conservation.

In the post-war period, the countryside underwent a "silent revolution" characterized by the rural exodus and agricultural intensification. Traditional polyculture and hedgerows were replaced by mechanized monocultures and chemical inputs, leading to significant biodiversity loss. Urban centers also shifted, repurposing industrial brownfields into green spaces and reclaiming riverfronts from industrial use. As the 20th century closed, environmental governance became increasingly influenced by European Union directives, moving toward integrated water management and the protection of ecological networks through initiatives like Natura 2000.

Today, the French landscape faces the existential challenges of climate change, manifested in retreating glaciers, frequent heatwaves, and shifting agricultural zones. Modern policy focuses on a "just transition," attempting to balance the historical heritage of *terroir* with the need for renewable energy, sustainable farming, and ecological resilience. The book concludes that the history of France is etched into its physical geography, and the future of its rivers, forests, and vineyards depends on a collective effort to manage these resources within the limits of a warming planet.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book traces France's environmental history through the interconnected lenses of rivers, forests, and vineyards, revealing how these elements shaped medieval ecologies, state formation, and economic development from the 10th century to present.
  • It examines how human interventions—from medieval forest clearance and canal building to industrial pollution and climate adaptation—have repeatedly transformed French landscapes while creating path dependencies that constrain contemporary environmental choices.
  • The work details the evolution of French viticulture, including monastic innovations, the phylloxera crisis that forced vineyard reinvention through grafting, and current challenges posed by climate change to traditional terroir systems.
  • It analyzes the trajectory of state environmental governance, from Colbert's 1669 Forest Ordinance establishing royal control over forests to modern EU-directed water management and biodiversity policies, highlighting recurring tensions between central authority and local customs.
  • The book connects historical patterns to current challenges, showing how past decisions about energy (hydropower/nuclear), agriculture, and land use created both foundations for modern France and vulnerabilities now tested by climate change, biodiversity loss, and social equity concerns.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for students and scholars of environmental history, historical geography, or French studies seeking a comprehensive long-view analysis of landscape transformation. It will also benefit environmental policymakers, conservation practitioners, and sustainability professionals who need historical context for contemporary resource management challenges. General readers with interests in how natural resources shape national development, or those concerned with climate change adaptation strategies, will find valuable insights in the book's examination of centuries-long human-environment interactions in France.

Author:

Christopher Stone

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 21, 2026

Word Count:

62,167 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 21 minutes

Sample:

Read Sample


🎁 Includes the ebook FREE
Read instantly while you wait for your paperback to arrive — no extra charge.
🚚 FREE Shipping in the USA
$10 flat rate per book to all other countries
Order:

Click to order this paperback:

Buy Now
Ebook included · Print made to order Secure Payment

Print copy is made to order and ships worldwide. Includes the ebook free, ready to read instantly.


$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!

Ratings & Reviews

5 ratings