Books on the History of Political Ideas are available in a wide selection in the Books store.
Evolution in the higher worlds
This book demonstrates undeniable originality. It is indeed extremely rare for a work to dare to address the highest levels of metaphysics in an experimental manner. Accessing divine or planetary consciousness are experiences that each of us can realize and live intimately within our own being. While it may be a "narrow path," it is nonetheless accessible to all who sincerely desire to move toward the light.
More info →World War II
World War II: From the Rise of Fascism to the Allied Victory. Combining a chronological and thematic approach, this work offers an introductory and reference overview of the Second World War, from the rise of the threat in 1929 to the postwar trials. It begins by analyzing the events' origins and recounting the early years. It then describes its global development.
More info →The narratives of history
From the First World War to the end of the last century, this book brings together a selection of 80 seminal speeches, offering explanations, contextualization, and analysis. For each speech, it reveals the context, the issues at stake, and the stakes involved. Personalities as diverse as Jean Jaurès, the Dalai Lama, and Simone Veil take the floor to shape history. This guide thus offers a vibrant journey through the era.
More info →What we owe to Greece
Le Figaro History: What we owe to Greece
Le Figaro Histoire, your new rendezvous with History. A high-end magazine in 3 parts that will fascinate the curious as much as the novices and the initiated: the news of History, a Major Dossier, the Spirit of Places.
More info →200 Women of History
Through their extraordinary personalities, the women gathered in this work have had a decisive destiny for international history. Women of art, letters, power, knowledge, action or faith, each is the subject of a complete presentation: supported by a bibliographic reference, a short biography illustrates their singularity; cross-references allow navigation from one entry to another and an index facilitates their quick consultation.
More info →The Sultan's favorite
Kingdom of Morocco, 17th century. Wrongly accused of murder, the eunuch Nouss-Nouss must, in order to save his life, carry out a mission: to convince Alys, a young Englishwoman whom the sultan intends for his harem, to convert to Islam.
Fiercely devoted to her religion, the captive risks death if she does not submit to the sultan's wishes. By telling him her own story
History of China
A crucial cog in the new world order, China cannot be understood without its social, intellectual, and political history. A life's work, the result of fifty years of research, and an unsurpassed reference, John Fairbank's book unfolds the long narrative of the "Middle Kingdom" from Paleolithic cultures to the present day. Examining the origins of a 4,000-year-old civilization, the author provides the keys to understanding a culture that remains shrouded in myth and fantasy.
More info →Unknown history of men
Unknown history of men for one hundred thousand years. Based on texts hitherto "forbidden", having himself explored inviolate sites, Robert Charroux, treasure hunter and philosopher, traces paths, formulates hypotheses, sheds light on our past and questions - not without anguish - our future.
The unknown history of men for the last hundred thousand years is a comprehensive work, a reference book, and a very controversial one, you should know!
Inquiry into the law of January 3, 1973
The investigation into the Law of January 3rd is a shocking book. It shows, point by point, how France was enslaved by debt with just one seemingly innocuous piece of legislation. It reveals how the elite of high-ranking civil servants gradually surrendered to the French nation, its soul, and its independence. It is the story of successive manipulations, organized and orchestrated to benefit only one entity: private banks. Thanks to this law, France was conquered without a trace.
More info →The doomsday fanatics
For 2,000 years, a few pages of the Bible have fueled the imagination, fears, and even warlike fury. The Book of Daniel and the Book of Revelation, however, are marginal within the biblical canon. They were written between the 2nd century BC and the 2nd century AD to give hope to believers in times of turmoil, before being used as texts of war. Today, American fundamentalists and jihadists alike are once again brandishing the threat of the end times.
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