Table from Encarta
Rulers of France Rulers of France
France Country History France Country History
Roman Arch, Reims, France Roman Arch, Reims, France

France Country History

YEAR EVENT
BC 51 Julius Caesar completed the Roman conquest of Gaul.
AD 732 Frankish ruler Charles Martel halted the advance of Muslim armies in Europe, routing them between Tours and Poitiers.
800 Charlemagne was crowned Emperor of the Romans. After his death his kingdom was divided between France and the Holy Roman Empire.
1309-1377 Avignon served as the seat of the papal court.
1453 France defeated England in the Hundred Years' War.
1643-1715 Louis XIV ruled France. Absolute royal authority was consolidated during his reign.
1789-1799 The French Revolution overthrew the monarchy. France became involved in a series of wars with European powers that lasted until 1815.
1804 Napoleon I, who took power in 1799, declared the First Empire in Paris.
1814 Napoleon was defeated and the monarchy was restored. A year later Napoleon returned to power, but was ultimately defeated at the Battle of Waterloo.
1848 Revolution led to the declaration of the Second Republic.
1852 Napoleon III declared the Second Empire.
1870-1871 Prussia defeated France in the Franco-Prussian War, ending the Second Empire. The Third Republic was founded.
1900 Paris hosted II Olympic Games.
1914-1918 France fought on the side of the Allies during World War I. Much of the war was fought on French soil.
1924 Paris hosted VIII Olympic Games; Chamonix hosted I Winter Olympics.
1940 Germany invaded France and occupied about two-thirds of the country during World War II (1939-1945). The unoccupied zone, Vichy France, came under the control of Marshal Henri Pétain, who largely collaborated with the Germans.
1946 After World War II, France adopted a new constitution and the Fourth Republic was founded.
1957 France was a founding member of the European Economic Community.
1958 Charles de Gaulle, who came out of retirement to address the crisis over the French war with Algeria, was elected president after a new constitution established the Fifth Republic.
1962 France granted independence to Algeria after a long and bloody civil war with the colony.
1968 Unrest by students set off a general strike throughout France, which helped bring about de Gaulle's resignation the following year. Grenoble hosted X Winter Olympics.
1981 The Socialist Party, led by François Mitterrand, came to power in the general elections. Mitterrand was re-elected to another seven-year term as president in 1988.
1992 Albertville hosted XVI Winter Olympics.
1993 The Socialist government was beset by corruption scandals, and was defeated in the general elections by a rightist coalition; Edouard Balladur became prime minister.
1994 The rail tunnel under the English Channel was completed, linking France and Britain.
1995 François Mitterrand retired as president after two terms in office, and was succeeded by Rally for the Republic party leader Jacques Chirac. The French government provoked widespread opposition for its resumption of nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific.
1996 Sales of French beef plummeted following revelations that BSE-infected cattle had been exported to France.
1997 The Socialist Party, in alliance with the Communist and Green parties, won a crushing victory in the parliamentary elections, ushering in a period of cohabitation with the right-wing president, Jacques Chirac. Lionel Jospin, the leader of the Socialist Party, became prime minister.
1998 Host nation for the tournament, France won football's World Cup.
1999 France became a founder member of the single European currency, the Euro.
2001 Corsica Bill on future autonomy of the island was passed.
2002 On January 1, France adopted Euro notes and coins. The established pattern of French politics was shaken in a presidential election that saw the far-right candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen beat Socialist Lionel Jospin to the second round run-off against Jacques Chirac of the RPR. Chirac won the run-off and appointed Jean-Pierre Raffarin as prime minister. Raffarin confirmed in office after June's parliamentary elections.
2004 Alain Juppé, former prime minister, convicted of corruption.
2005 Voters rejected the proposed EU constitution in May's referendum. In a series of suspected arson incidents, dozens of immigrants were killed in Paris hostels and apartment blocks. Later in the year there was rioting in disavantaged districts of Paris and the unrest spread to other major cities.
2007 Right-winger Nicolas Sarkozy won the presidential election. His UMP party won June's general election but lost ground to the Socialists. François Fillon was reappointed prime minister.
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France
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