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The French Republic: Symbols, History and Values

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Title: The French Republic: Symbols, History and Values


1
The French RepublicSymbols, History and Values
  • Course developed in the frame of the Interact EU
    France-Turkey University Dialog
  • by
  • Prof. Dr. Jean Marcou
  • October 2008

2
General Scheme
  • 1- The Symbols of the Republic (11 slides).
  • 2- Waiting the Republic (7 slides).
  • 3- The establishment of the Republic (7 slides).

3
The Symbols of the Republic
  • Marianne
  • Marianne is the allegorical figure of the
    Republic.
  • The first representation of Marianne wearing the
    Phrygian cap appeared during the French
    Revolution.
  • The origins of this name are not clear.
    Marie-Anne was one of the most popular feminine
    forename in the campaigns at the end of the 18th
    century. That is why Marianne refers firstly to
    the people. But such a reference could have also
    a pejorative dimension because the aristocracy
    used the name derisively.

4
The Symbols of the Republic
  • Marianne
  • This symbol is not a States symbol which the
    Constitution refers to (as the motto, the flag or
    the anthem). But under the Third Republic
    (1870-1939) the busts of this proud and
    determined woman were disseminate in the
    town-halls all over France. Maurice Agulhon
    speaks of a Mariannes Cult at the end of the
    19th Century. Today, busts of Marianne continue
    to be disseminated mainly in Town-halls and
    Schools.
  • It has become a quasi-official assimilated figure
    which expresses a popular support for the
    Republic and which appears now on official
    documents, stamps, coins. Marianne can be
    described in fact as an anonymous power, which
    contrasts today with official portrait of the
    President also shown in official places.
  • The most recent designs of Marianne uses the
    features of celebrities like Brigitte Bardot,
    Catherine Deneuve or Laetitia Casta.

5
The Symbols of the Republic
  • The Phrygian Cap
  • It is the symbol of liberty, which used to be
    worn by freed slaves in Greece and Rome.
    Mediterranean seamen and convicts manning the
    galleys also wore a similar type of cap, and
    revolutionaries from the South of France are
    believed to have adopted the headgear.
  • As Marianne, it is not a States symbol but it is
    a popular symbol of the Revolution and Republic.
  • Generally, it is associated to Marianne but it is
    interesting to observe that sometimes, since the
    Third Republic, as this cap could be regarded as
    a call of revolt, it was replaced by a wreath or
    a tiara to give Marianne a greater character of
    wisdom.

6
The symbols of the Republic
  • The tricolour Flag Blue, White, Red
  • It is a States emblem which the Constitution
    refers to (art. 2)
  • These 3 colours were brought together in the form
    of a cockade during the first events of the
    French Revolution and meant the Union of the
    colour of the King (White) with the colours of
    Paris (Blue and Red). So, the origins of the flag
    are not really republican
  • At the beginning of the Revolution, these 3
    colours were in fashion in Paris because they
    were also the colours of the American Flag and
    some of the French first revolutionaries had
    before participated to the War of Independence of
    the US.

7
The Symbols of the Republic
  • The Tricolour Flag
  • In 1794, during the First Republic, this emblem
    became officially the national flag. It was
    replaced by the white flag at the beginning of
    the restoration but after the Revolution of 1830,
    Louis-Philippe, breaking with the most
    conservative royalists (the légitimistes)
    adopted the tricolour flag.
  • During the Revolution of 1848, the tricolour flag
    was challenged by the red flag brandished by the
    people on the barricades, but finally it was
    saved by Lamartine who invoked the revolutionary
    past of the emblem.
  • Under the Third Republic a consensus emerged
    around the three colours and the tricolour flag
    was confirmed as the national flag.
  • The Constitutions of 1946 ad 1958 instituted the
    blue, white and red flag as the national emblem

8
The Symbols of the Republic
  • The Motto Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
  • As a legacy of the Age of Enlightenment, this
    motto appeared during the Revolution.
  • The Revolution and the First Republic mainly
    focused on Liberty and Equality
  • Then, the motto felt into disuse during the
    Empire and the Restoration.

9
The symbols of the Republic
  • The motto Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
  • It reappeared during the Revolution of 1848
    marked with a religious dimension priests
    celebrated the "Christ-Fraternité" and blessed
    the trees of liberty that were planted at the
    time.
  • Discarded again under the Second Empire, this
    motto definitively established itself under the
    Third Republic but solidarity was sometimes
    preferred to equality (which implies a
    levelling of society), and the Christian
    connotation of fraternity was not accepted by
    everyone.
  • Anyway, since the Third Republic the motto is
    usually inscribed on the public buildings and the
    public documents.
  • The motto appears also officially in the
    Constitutions of 1946 and 1958.

10
The Symbols of the Republic
  • The National Anthem  La Marseillaise 
  • This air was composed by Claude-Joseph Rouget de
    Lisle, captain in the Engineering corps
    garrisoned in Strasbourg, during the night of 24
    to 25 April 1792, at the beginning of the war
    launched by Austria against the French
    Revolution. The song, entitled Chant de Guerre
    pour lArmée du Rhin (War song of the Rhines
    army), was taken up throughout the country and
    used by the Marseille volunteers as a marching
    song. These volunteers were singing it as they
    entered Paris on 30 July 1792, and the Parisians
    dubbed it the  Marseillaise .
  • Under the First Republic, the anthem was one of
    the most popular civic songs and was declared
     National Song  in 1795.

11
The symbols of the Republic
  • The National Anthem  La Marseillaise 
  • Then, it was forbidden during the Empire and the
    Restoration, but during the 19th Century it
    became a very popular revolutionary song not only
    in France but also in the world. For example, the
    Russian revolutionaries used to sing it and in
    1917 and the Bolcheviks adopted it as their first
    anthem. But finally they preferred first another
    French revolutionary song the  International 
    (composed during the Commune of Paris in 1871)
    and then a Soviet anthem which is still the
    Russian anthem today.
  • Indeed in 1879,  La Marseillaise  had become
    the national anthem and was associated to a
     bougeoise  République.
  • At last the Marseillaise was made the official
    national anthem by the constitutions of the
    Fourth and Fifth Republics (Article 2 of the
    Constitution of 4 October 1958)

12
The Symbols of the Republic
  • The National Feast The 14 July
  • 14th of July 1789 is the first important
    revolutionary day in Paris. The storming of the
    Bastille signalled the first victory of the
    people of Paris against a symbol of the Old
    Regime. This fortress was the prison where the
    King used to send the opponents. At the beginning
    of the 18th Century, Voltaire stayed near 1 year
    in the Bastille. Thats why the edifice was
    razed to the ground in the months that followed
    the storming.
  • On July 14, 1790, the first Anniversary of the
    insurrection was celebrated with great pomp and
    named  La Fête de la Fédération  ("Feast of the
    Federation).

13
The symbols of the Republic
  • The National Feast The 14 July
  • The commemoration of July 14th was abandoned in
    the following years. Under the Third Republic,
    however, republican leaders (Gambetta especially)
    cast about for ways to celebrate the foundations
    of the regime. A Deputy for the Seine Department,
    Benjamin Raspail, moved that July 14 be named the
    national holiday of the Republic, and Parliament
    passed an act to that effect on July 6, 1880.
  • Nowadays, July 14th is as popular as ever and
    celebrated with a mixture of solemn military
    parades (on the Champs Elysées) and easygoing
    dancing and fireworks.
  • In 1994, German soldiers serving in the Eurocorps
    took part in the parade on the Champs-Elysées,
    symbolizing the reconciliation between the two
    Nations.

14
Waiting for the Republic
  • The First Republic (1792-1804) and the Revolution
  • The Revolution didnt established a Republic at
    the beginning but installed a Constitutional
    Monarchy set up by the Constitution of 1791 (the
    first French constitution)
  • As the Revolution was growing up and the war
    raging between France and Austria, the Palace of
    Louis XVI was stormed in August 1792. After the
    deposition of the King the Republic was
    proclaimed for the first time on September 1792.
  • Constitutionally the First Republic subdivided
    into 3 periods
  • The National Convention (1792-95), itself
    subdivided into 3 periods girondine (1792,
    moderate), montagnarde (1793-94), Reign of
    terror, Robespierre) and thermidorian (1794-95)
  • The Directory (1795-1799) regime which attempted
    a strict separation of powers specially to end
    the domination of the Assembly
  • The Consulate (1799-1804) installed after the
    Coup of 18 Brumaire by Napoleon Bonaparte which
    prepared the establishement of the First Empire

15
Waiting for the Republic
  • The First Restoration (1815-1830)
  • After the defeat of Napoleon I the Allies
    restored the Bourbon Dynasty dispelled by the
    Revolution in 1792.
  • The 1815-1848 is known as the Restoration in
    the French History and can be described as the
    major attempt to establish a constitutional
    Monarchy in France.
  • From 1815 to 1830, the first period of this
    attempt took place with the reigns of 2 kings
    Louis XVIII (the brother of the decapitated Louis
    XVI) and Charles X. The second one tried renew
    with the traditions of the Old Regime.

16
Waiting for the Republic
  • The Revolution of 1830
  • In July 1830, the dissolution of the Chamber of
    Deputies and the Ordinances which set up a rigid
    legislation to control the press and a
    restriction of the suffrage resulted in the July
    Revolution (known as  Les Trois glorieuses )
    and later in the July Monarchy.
  • Indeed the liberal Chamber of Deputies declared
    the French throne vacant, and elevated Louis
    Philippe (of the House of Orléans, the second
    branch of the Bourbon dynasty).

17
Waiting for the Republic
  • The July Monarchy (1830-1848)
  • Known as the Bourgeois Monarch or the King
    Citizen, Louis-Philippe accepted the tricolour
    Flag assumed the Title of  King of the French 
    and tried to establish a moderate constitutional
    monarchy explicated by his famous statement in
    January 1831 "We will attempt to remain in a
    juste milieu (the just middle), in an equal
    distance from the excesses of popular power and
    the abuses of royal power.
  • The regime of Louis-Philippe failed for political
    reasons in particular, its refusal to establish
    the universal suffrage. In response to the demand
    of the people to abolish the census suffrage,
    Guizot (the PM of Louis Philippe) is said to have
    answered There will be no reform. Get rich
    enrichissez-vous- and then you can vote !

18
Waiting for the Republic
  • The Revolution of 1848 and the Second Republic
    (1848-1852)
  • The regime also failed for social reasons. During
    July Monarchy (1830-1848), France experienced
    rapid industrialization which resulted in the
    development of an important working class and in
    grave social problem.
  • The February 1848 Revolution ended the July
    Monarchy and led to the creation of the Second
    Republic (1848-1852). The Two major goals of this
    Republic were Universal suffrage and Unemployment
    relief (proclamation of the right to work and
    creation of the  National workshops )
  • The Revolution of 1848 is mainly known for having
    enacted the male universal suffrage, for the
    definitive abolition of slavery and for the
    rising of social rights.

19
Waiting for the Republic
  • The Revolution of 1848 and the Second Republic
    (1848-1852)
  • In June 1848, after the closure of the National
    workshops, a new revolt occurred and was harshly
    repressed. This marked the end of the hopes of a
    "Democratic and Social Republic and the victory
    of the Moderates over the Radical Republicans.
  • These "June Days" uprisings of 1848 were the
    reflect of the class conflict existing since the
    beginning of the Revolution. This reaction to the
    workers rebellion led to the victory of the
    middle class and finally to a moderate Republic.
  • Since the Revolution of 1789, Republic was a
    synonym of Revolution, after the repression of
    the June Days it had been demonstrated for the
    first time that a Republic was able to restore
    authority and order.

20
Waiting for the Republic
  • From the Second Republic to Third Republic
  • This conservative tendency continued after the
    repression of the June Days.
  • December 1848 Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte (The
    First Napoleons nephew) won the Presidential
    election with a huge majority. Then important
    limitations to citizens rights and liberties were
    carried out (limitations to the press liberty,
    restrictive conditions to the universal
    suffrage).
  • December 1851 Louis Napoleon organized a coup
    which was quickly ratified by a plebiscite to
    establish the Second Empire.
  • 1852-1870 The Second Empire of Napoleon III,
    after an authoritarian period moved to a more
    liberal one. But when Napoleon III was defeated
    by the Prussian in 1870, the Republic was again
    proclaimed (4 September 1870) and this was the
    beginning of the definitive establishment of the
    Republic in France, specially because the other
    experienced regime (constitutional monarchy and
    empire had failed).

21
The establishment of the Republic
  • The uncertain beginning of the Third Republic
    (1870)
  • 4 September 1870 proclamation of the Republic in
    Paris by the Republican after the first defeat
    and capture of Napoleon in Sedan (Eastern
    France).
  • The attempt of the new government of National
    Defence finally failed to organize the resistance
    to the Prussians and France had to surrender in
    January 1871.
  • The Republican nature of the new regime is not
    sure because its new assembly elected in February
    1871 has a significant royalist majority.

22
The establishment of the Republic
  • A Conservative Republic versus a social Republic
    The Paris Commune (1871)
  • The uncertain Republic led by Adolphe Thiers
    began by crushing a Revolution the Paris
    Commune. This Revolution was the result of the
    social disaster of the war and reflected the
    rising of a socialist movement due to the
    development of an important working class in
    France.
  • March to May 1871 The Commune ruled Paris and
    fought the government of Adolphe Thiers located
    in Versailles. This civil war events, related by
    Marx (The civil war in France) was seen by
    communists, left-wing socialists and anarchists
    as a model of how a socialist revolution could
    rise.
  • May 1871 The Commune failed and was harshly
    repressed by the Thiers Republic. For the second
    time, a Republican regime had demonstrated that
    it could be conservative, repress a revolution
    and restore order and authority.

23
The Establishment of the Republic
  • The long establishment of the Third Republic
    (1870-1879)
  • It took more than six years to really establish
    the new republican regime because, despite the
    proclamation of the Republic the first assembly
    elected in 1871 was royalist.
  • Due to the Comte of Chambords will to maintain
    the symbol of the Old Regime (specially the White
    Flag of the former Kings of France) the royalists
    (divided into 2 tendencies) missed their last
    chance to re-establish a constitutional monarchy.
  • The Third Republic never had an actual
    constitution. It was based on the Constitutional
    laws of 1875 and confirmed by the success of the
    Republican to the legislative and senatorial
    elections in 1877 and 1879.
  • Firmly installed at the head of the government,
    after 1879, the Republicans began a sort of
    Republicanisation of the uncertain regime born
    after the defeat of 1870-71.

24
The establishment of the Republic
  • The First decades of Third Republic a key-moment
    of the establishment of the Republic in France
    (1879-1914)
  • The 2 last decades of the 19th Century (known
    sometimes as the République des Jules or the
    Radical Republic) are a major republican period.
  • The Consecration of the Symbols of the Republic
    la Marseillaise and the Tricolour Flag (1879),
    the motto and the National Feast (1880) and of
    course Marianne
  • The Consecration of Republican rights and
    liberties creation of a free, laïque and
    compulsory public education (since 1879 to the
    end of the 1880s), liberty of the Press (1881),
    social rights and right to strike (1884),
    decentralization and establishment of a local
    power (1871 and 1884), liberty to create
    associations (1901), separation of State and
    religions (1905).

25
The Establishment of the Republic
  • The Two faces of the established Republic
    (1879-1914)
  • This Republic based on the symbols of liberty of
    the French Revolution shows less Republican
    aspects
  • Scandals and corruption (The scandal of the
    medals 1887, scandal of Panama 1892, affaire des
    fiches 1904)
  • Populism with the Boulanger crisis (1887)
  • Nationalism and militarism with the preparation
    of the revenge (La Rechange) against Germany
    (strong nationalist education at school, creation
    of a compulsory military service of 3 years in
    1905).

26
The establishment of the Republic
  • The Two faces of the established Republic
    (1879-1914)
  • Other non-republican aspects
  • Antisemitism with the famous Dreyfus Affair
    (1894-1906). A French Jewish artillery officer
    was sentenced to life imprisonment for treason.
    All the accusations set up by counter-intelligence
    officers were demonstrated to be baseless but
    high-level military officials ignored the
    evidence which exonerated Alfred Dreyfus.
    Finally, he was exonerated and reinstated as a
    major in the French Army in 1906.
  • Colonialism with the development of a huge
    colonial empire by the Republican politicians
    during the two last decades of the 19th Century.

27
The establishment of the Republic
  • The End of Third Republic (1914-1940)
  • After the victory of WW1, probably the peak of
    Third Republic (Georges Clémenceau), the
    political debate is still not dominated by fights
    between Royalists and Republicans but mainly by
    the Right-Left Bipolarisation.
  • Between the 2 wars, the Popular Front reflects
    this evolution. This Front (Union of Radicals,
    Socialists and Communists) won the May 1936
    legislative elections. Headed by the socialist
    Léon Blum, it engaged in various social reforms.
    The worker movement welcomed this electoral
    victory by launching a general strike in May-June
    1936, resulting in the negotiation of the
    Matignon agreements, one of the cornerstone of
    social rights in France which enacted the law
    mandating 2 weeks each year of paid vacations for
    workers and the law limiting the workweek to 40
    hours.

28
Conclusion
  • The Suicide of the Third Republic (1914-1940)
  • During the 2 wars the Third Republic, unable to
    balance its parliamentary system, stumbled from
    crisis to crisis.
  • The defeat of June 1940 was a result of a poor
    military preparation and strategy and of the
    political instability which the regime has to
    faced since the 20s.
  • This defeat is a black page in the history of the
    Republic not only because France was forced to
    come to terms with Nazi Germany in an humiliating
    armistice signed on June 22d 1940, but also
    because, on July 10th 1940, the Republican
    Parliament gave full powers to Marshall Petain
    who proclaimed the following days the regime of
    Vichy.
  • The Republic in fact was not definitively
    established... But this is another story

29
The End
  • Edited by Jean Marcou- 2008
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