Abstract
All prominent peasant personalities of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries made use of books in acquiring their at times stupendous knowledge. Typically, the efforts of these rising intellectuals were initially fostered by educated friends who opened their libraries to them. Soon, the members of this newly educated class compiled their own private libraries, which they in turn opened to their rural friends and by which they became guides for disseminating innovative knowledge both by book and by example.




Comments (0)