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The French Revolution

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Title: The French Revolution


1
The French Revolution
2
It was the best of times, it was the worst of
times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the
age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief,
it was the epoch of incredulity
-- Charles Dickens
A Tale of Two Cities
3
Breakdown of Ancien Regime (Old Oder)
  • Origins of the French Revolution

4
Economic Causes
  • Public opinion resisted increase in taxes
  • Govt financed its enormous expenditures through
    borrowed
  • In 1780 debt was so bad that 50 of Frances
    budget went to pay interest only 25 went to
    military 6 to king and court at Versailles
    less than 20 went to function of state
  • Couldnt declare bankruptcy no central bank
    couldnt print French currency was gold
  • Had to increase taxes tax system was unfair to
    increase revenues you would have to change the
    system

5
Socio-Economic Data, 1789
6
The French Urban Poor
7
Financial Problemsin France, 1789
  • Urban CommonersBudget
  • Food 80
  • Rent 25
  • Tithe 10
  • Taxes 35
  • Clothing 20
  • TOTAL 170
  • Kings Budget
  • Interest 50
  • Army 25
  • Versailles 25
  • Coronation 10
  • Loans 25
  • Admin. 25
  • TOTAL 160

8
Social Causes  Old Regime (Ancien Regime)
  • Since Middle Ages 25 million inhabitants of
    France were legally divided into 3 orders or
    estates.

9
The 3 Estates
  • 1st Estate Roman Catholic clergy. 100,000
    members owned 10 of land paid voluntary gift
    every 5 years in taxes church levied a tax
    (tithe) on landowners of about 10.
  • 2nd estate 400,000 (2) noblemen and women who
    owned 25 of land taxed lightly or not at all
    had many manorial privileges taxed the
    peasants, fishing and hunting rights.
  • 3rd estate commoners
  • few lawyers, merchants, officials (educated and
    wealthy) bourgeoisie middle class
  • more artisans and unskilled day laborers
  • majority peasants and agricultural workers

10
The Suggested Voting PatternVoting by Estates
Clergy 1st Estate
1
Aristocracy 2nd Estate
1
1
Commoners 3rd Estate
Louis XIV insisted that the ancient distinction
of the three orders be conserved in its entirety.
11
The Number of Representativesin the Estates
General Vote by Head!
Clergy 1st Estate
300
Aristocracy 2nd Estate
300
648
Commoners 3rd Estate
12
Out With the Old
  • Old Regime no longer corresponded to social
    reality
  • social system still based on feudal times
  • now society was based on wealth and education
    emerging elite (aristocracy and bourgeoisie) that
    was frustrated with bureaucratic/absolute
    monarchy

13
Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes
1st What is the Third Estate?
Everything! 2nd What has it been
heretofore in the political order?
Nothing! 3rd What does it demand? To
become something therein!
Abbé Sieyès1748-1836
14
Political Causes
  • Weak King Louis XVI
  • careless, heartless, foolish wrong man at the
    wrong time
  • most hated for his Austrian wife, Marie
    Antoinette
  • lived extravagantly
  • depleted the French treasury

15
The French Monarchy1775 - 1793
Marie Antoinette Louis XVI
16
Let Them Eat Cake!
  • Marie Antoinette NEVER said that!
  • Madame Deficit
  • The Austrian Whore

17
Stage 1 of Revolution
  • Moderate Stage 1789 1792

18
Louis calls Estate General (Congress)
  • Estates General had not been summoned in over 200
    years!
  • 1st and 2nd estate dominate the talks given
    uneven vote
  • 3rd estate urges reform, relief for the poor,
    equal voice
  • Weeks of arguing 3rd estate leaves meets on the
    Kings Tennis Court

19
Convening the Estates General May, 1789
Last time it was called into session was 1614!
20
Tennis Court Oath a vow to save France from ruin
  • Conservatives gather on the right, liberals on
    the left
  • Call themselves National Assembly and start
    making laws
  • (Does this have some precedent in the American
    Revolution?)

21
The Tennis Court Oathby Jacques Louis David
June 20, 1789
22
Bastille Day (July 14, 1789)
  • Rioting throughout Paris mob showed up at the
    Kings prison (the Bastille) looking for weapons
  • Sparked the Great Fear countryside peasants
    attacked landlords for food stores

23
Storming the Bastille, July 14, 1789
  • A rumor that the king was planning a military
    coup against the National Assembly.
  • 18 died.
  • 73 wounded.
  • 7 guards killed.
  • It held 7 prisoners 5 ordinary criminals 2
    madmen.

24
August 4, 1789 National Assembly meets
  • Ends serfdom, feudalism and all class privilege
  • Liberte, Egalite and Fraternite
  • Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
  • Called for the creation of a limited monarchy

25
National Assembly1789 - 1791
Liberté!
Egalité!
Fraternité!
August DecreesAugust 4-11, 1789 (A renunciation
of aristocratic privileges!)
26
The Tricolor (1789)
The WHITE of the Bourbons the RED BLUE of
Paris.
Citizen!
27
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the
Citizen Posed New Dilemmas
  1. Did women have equal rights with men?
  2. What about free blacks in the colonies?
  3. How could slavery be justified if all men were
    born free?
  4. Did religious toleration of Protestants and Jews
    include equal political rights?

28
National Assembly (1789 1792)
  • Reform France church lands are confiscated sold
    to pay debt
  • Radicals called for the death of the King and
    nobles (King tried to escape 1790 to Austria)
  • émigrés nobles fled France for more friendly
    countries
  • Upper class targeted by mobs and killed
  • Eventually dissolves monarchy and declares
    France  a republic

29
Stage 2 of Revolution
  • Reign of Terror 1793 1794)

30
Reign of Terror
  • Time of crisis England and Spain join Austria
    and Prussia in opposing the revolution food
    shortages and counterrevolution in western France
  • Power struggle between Radicals (Jacobins) and
    moderates Girondins
  • Jacobins take control of the legislature and
    install an emergency government Committee for
    Public Safety headed by Robespierre

31
The Political Spectrum
TODAY
1790s
The Plain(swing votes)
Montagnards(The Mountain)
Girondists
Monarchíen(Royalists)
Jacobins
32
Reign of Terror
  • Planned economy and Levee en masse (national
    conscription) and reign of terror round up
    nobles for execution thousands sent to national
    razor (guillotine).
  • Jan. 21, 1793 Radicals execute Louis XVI and his
    family
  • Wanted a republic of virtue
  • Changed the names of months abolished Sunday

33
Louis XVIs Head (January 21, 1793)
  • The trial of the king was hastened by the
    discovery in a secret cupboard in the Tuilieres
    of a cache of documents.
  • They proved conclusively Louis knowledge and
    encouragement of foreign intervention.
  • The National Convention voted387 to 334 to
    execute the monarchs.

34
The Death of Citizen Louis Capet
Matter for reflectionfor the crowned jugglers.
So impure blooddoesnt soil our land!
35
Marie Antoinette on the Way to the Guillotine
36
Maximilien Robespierre
  • Orders 1,000 of executions
  • Uses spies put people to death if they disagreed
    with the Revolution
  • Killed famous revolutionary leaders that he saw
    as a threat (Danton, DesMoulins)
  • 40 50,000 killed in all including peasants for
    ridiculous reasons bartender was killed for
    serving sour wine

37
Committee for Public Safety
  • Revolutionary Tribunals.
  • 300,000 arrested.
  • 16,000 50,000 executed.

38
Maximillian Robespierre(1758 1794)
39
Different Social Classes Executed
7
8
28
25
31
40
The National Razor
The last guillotine execution in France was in
1939!
41
The Radicals Arms No God!No Religion!No
King!No Constitution!
42
Reaction Stage (1794 1798)
  • Moderates react former members of National
    Assembly turn on Robespierre hes executed
    (1794)
  • Girondins readmitted
  • People are sick of the killing and the chaos
    terror did not help advance the revolution

43
The Arrest of Robespierre
44
The Revolution ConsumesIts Own Children!
Danton Awaits Execution, 1793
Robespierre Lies WoundedBefore the Revolutionary
Tribunal that will order him to be guillotined,
1794.
45
(1795) National Assembly meets and writes new
constitution
  • Power given to intellectuals
  • Five man directory formed (executive branch)
  • Controlled by wealthy merchants that wanted to
    expand their wealth overturned planned economy
    upset the sanscoullote

46
Resources
  • http//www.pptpalooza.net/. Susan Pojer, Howrace
    Greeley High School.
  • Censer, J.R., Hunt, L. (2001). Liberty,
    Equality, Fraternity Exploring the French
    Revolution. University Park, PA (The Pennsylvania
    State University Press).
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