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Seller's Description:
Near Fine in Very Good+ dust jacket. 0802005438. DJ and boards show light shelf wear.; A bright, solid book. Dust jacket in Mylar jacket protector.; Large 8vo 9"-10" tall; 359 pages; "Greenwood re-creates a Quebec in which trust between French and English Canadians was an early casualty of the execution of Louis XVI and the descent of the French Revolution through terror into war. Fearing invasion, the English community, through the law officers of the crown, drafted draconian legislation and established an efficient counter-intelligence service. Lower Canada in these years was a hotbed of spies and counter-intelligence, highlighted by the trial for high treason of an American undercover agent for revolutionary France. Placing the legal history of Quebec in the foreground of these dangerous and dramatic events, Greenwood reveals this period as a turning point that altered not only French-English relations but Canada's legal and constitutional inheritance."
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. No Dust Jacket. Signed on the title page and inscribed by F. Murray Greenwood, this copy is tight and square with a clean unmarked interior and a sound binding.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 0802005438. Tight square unmarked book in glossy dust jacket just slightly sunned on spine.; 9.50 X 6.50 X 1.50 inches; 360 pages.
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Seller's Description:
Dust Jacket Included. 23.5cm, xvi, 359p., 6 maps with corrections, select bibliography, index, original burgundy cloth with gilt titles, yellow illustrated jacket, a fine copy in fine jacket (N2).
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall xvi, 359pp., index, biblio., notes, photos, maps, errata slips. Osgoode Society Publication. "Many people assume that a French-English cleavage has always existed and historians have been uncertain as to just how it unfolded. This book provides the answer. Greenwood recreates a Quebec in which trust between French and English Canadians was an early casualty of the execution of Louis XVI and the descent of the French Revolution through terror into war. Fearing invasion, the English community, through the law officers of the crown, drafted draconian legislation and established an efficient counter-intelligence service. Lower Canada in those days was a hotbed of spies and counter-intelligence, highlighted by the trial for high treason of an American undercover agent for revolutionary France. Placing the legal history of Quebec in the foreground of these dangerous and dramatic events, Greenwood reveals this period as a turning point that altered not only French-English relations but Canada's legal and constitutional inheritance."