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   <subfield code="a">The publisher wishes to apologize for the omission of the final two lines of Professor James Goldsmith's article, ‘The Crisis of the Late Middle Ages: The Case of France', published in French History, Volume 9 Number 4, December 1995. The last paragraph of the article should read as follows: The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in France were not the opening phase of several centuries of cyclical stagnation, but at most a temporary interruption in a long wave of social and economic development that extended from the early Middle Ages through the entire pre-industrial era. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the most powerful negative force was unquestionably the Black Death. The Hundred Years War compounded the effects of the Black Death, through war destruction and disturbance of normal markets. Together, these disasters shook France violently, but temporarily. Ultimately, neither the Black Death nor the Hundred Years War had a durable impact on the basic socio-economic structures of France. What Michel Le Mené noted for the region around Angers in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries was true for almost all of France: ‘en dépit de la récession gén´erale et des crises successives, la province traversera la période sans modification profonde de son milieu économique ...ce qui frappe finalement, quand on considère d'un peu haut l'ensemble de la période, c'est avant tout la pérennité des structures sociales et foncieres. Tout se passe comme si, sous l'orage, le monde angevin avait courbe l'echine pour passer avec moins de dommage à travers la tourmente.'141 With peace and the population recovery of the second half of the fifteenth century, the French economy bounded forward to renewed growth with the same stock of techniques and the same agrarian institutions it had prior to the crisis. 141 Le Mené, Les campagnes angevines, p. 504.</subfield>
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