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The French Revolution and Napoleon

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Title: The French Revolution and Napoleon


1
The French Revolution and Napoleon
  • 1789-1815
  • Chapter 6 notes

2
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3
Chapter 6
  • Section one One the Eve of Revolution
  • Section two Creating a New France
  • Section three Radical Days
  • Section four The Age of Napoleon Begins
  • Section fiveThe End of an Era

4
Section 1 On the Eve of Revolution
  • French society consisted of three social classes
  • The Clergy (First Estate)
  • The nobility (Second Estate)
  • The rest of the population (Third Estate)

5
In 1789 France faced
  • social discontent
  • severe financial crises
  • serious food shortages

6
Social Discontent
  • Only the Third Estate paid taxes.
  • All tariffs on import and export goods were paid
    for by the Third Estate.
  • Voting and holding of elected offices were
    limited to the wealthy

7
Wars
  • France fought numerous wars
  • Seven Years War
  • American Revolution
  • massive debts against the French treasury
  • all soldiers conscripted from the Third Estate

8
MARIE ANTOINETTE
9
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10
The Monarchy
  • Frivolous and extravagant lifestyles
  • Continued feudal privileges of the nobility
  • Little thought for the financial difficulties of
    the nation
  • Borrowed money at high interest rates

11
LOUIS XVI
Powered wig
Ermine collar, lined robe
Silk ruffled shirt
Leather gauntlets
Solid Gold chain
Beaver hat
Gold scepter
Ostrich feather
  • Silver embroidered robe

Silk pantaloons
Gold sword
Gold crown
Jewel encrusted
Jewel encrusted
Gold embroidery
Kid skin shoes
Silk stockings
12
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13
Food Shortages
  • General economic decline began in 1770s.
  • Bad harvests in 1780s (1788)
  • Food prices soared
  • Poorest peasants and urban workers went hungry
  • Food riots broke out in cities
  • Peasants burned manor houses of nobility

14
Marie Antoinette portrait gallery by Elisabeth
Louise Vigée Le Brun
15
Marie Antoinette
16
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17
The Estates General
  • The king called the Estates General to carry out
    reforms
  • Members of the Third Estate defied the king
  • Saying that they represented the people, they
    proclaimed themselves the National Assembly
  • They vowed not to disband until a constitution
    for France was drawn up

18
Bastille Symbol of the Revolution
  • The Bastille was an old fortress.
  • It was used as a prison for criminals and
    political prisoners.
  • On July 14, 1789, angry Parisians stormed the
    Bastille
  • This event quickly became the symbol of the
    French Revolution

19
BASTILLE
20
Section 2 Creating a New France
  • Spurred by popular uprisings and the storming of
    the Bastille, the National Assembly
  • ended feudal privileges
  • issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man
  • reorganized the Church
  • set up a limited monarchy in place of Frances
    centuries old absolute monarchy

21
LIBERTY LEADING THE REVOLUTION
22
The Revolution succeedes??
  • Throughout Europe, rulers and nobles denounced
    the reforms of the French Revolution.
  • By 1792 France was at war with most of Europe.

23
  • A Legislative Assembly sat from October 1791
    until September 1792, when, in the face of the
    advance of the allied armies of Austria, Holland,
    Prussia, and Sardinia, it was replaced by the
    National Convention, which proclaimed the
    Republic.

24
LOUIS XVI
25
  • The King was brought to trial in December of
    1792, and executed on January 21, 1793. In
    January of 1793 the revolutionary government
    declared war on Britain, a war for world dominion
    which had been carried on, with short
    intermissions, since the beginning of the reign
    of William and Mary, and which would continue for
    another twenty-two years.

26
The Phases of the Revolution
  • Moderate phase of National Assembly
    1789-1791gtgtgtConstitutional Monarchy
  • Escalating Violence 1792-1793gtgtgtReign of Terror
  • Reaction against extremism 1795gtgtgtThe Directory
  • Age of Napoleon 1799-1815

27
Moderate phase of National Assembly
  • Feudal privileges abolished hunting rights,
    manoral dues, special legal status, and tax
    exemption.
  • In fact, nobles had already lost these privileges
  • All citizens were now equal under the law.

28
NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
29
  • http//www.chateauversailles.fr/en/111_The_Grand_A
    partment_And_Hall_of_Mirrors.php

30
Declaration of the Rights of Man
  • Liberty, Equality, Fraternity slogan of the
    Revolution
  • All French men were equal
  • Every Frenchman had an equal right
  • See page 703

31
Womens March
  • Women marched on Versailles to get bread
  • Demanded to see the king
  • Brought Louis XVI, Marie Antoinette and their son
    back from Versailles to Paris.
  • Louis was under house arrest for the next 3
    years.

32
Reforms of the National Assembly
  • Political
  • All Male citizens were now equal under the law
  • Limited the power of monarchy
  • Established Legislative Assembly
  • All tax paying males could vote

33
Reforms of the National Assembly
  • Social
  • Abolished special privileges of nobility
  • Ended feudalism

34
Reforms of the National Assembly
  • Economic
  • Levied taxes based on ability to pay
  • Abolished guilds
  • Outlawed labor unions
  • Compensated nobles for lands seized and property
    destroyed by peasants

35
Reforms of the National Assembly
  • Religious
  • Declared religious freedom in France
  • Took over Church and sold off Church land
    holdings
  • Placed French Catholic Church under government
    control
  • Made church leadership an elected office, with
    government paid salaries

36
Constitution of 1791
  • Ended Church interference in government
  • Equality for all male citizens
  • State control in the hands of those with means
    and time to serve

37
European Reaction
  • Enlightened individuals applauded it
  • Nobles and monarchs denounced it
  • Neighboring states closed their borders
  • Arrested many who supported the Revolution
  • Prussia and Austria threatened to intervene
    Declaration of Pilnitz- a bluff

38
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39
War at Home and Abroad
  • Legislative Assembly lasted - 1 year.
  • Economic-currency problems, food shortages,
    hoarding.
  • Social class divisions-numerous factionssans
    culottes demanded a republic

40
ROBESPIERRE
41
Section 3 Radical Days
  • In 1792, Radicals took control of the National
    Assembly. In 1793, they executed the king and
    queen.
  • During the Reign of Terror, Robespierre and his
    Committee of Public Safety sent some 40,000
    French citizens to their death on the guillotine.

42
GUILLOTINE
43
Reign of Terror
  • The Committee of Public Safety and the
    Revolutionary Tribunal were instituted
    immediately after the execution of the King.

44
ROBESPIERRE HOLDING DECAPITATED HEAD
45
Reign of Terror
  • The Reign of Terror, during which the ruling
    faction ruthlessly exterminated all potential
    enemies, of whatever sex, age, or condition,
    began in September of 1793 and lasted until the
    fall of Robespierre on July 27, 1794

46
Reign of Terror cartoon
47
Reign of Terror
  • During the last six weeks of the Terror alone
    (the period known as the "Red Terror") nearly
    fourteen hundred people were guillotined in Paris
    alone.

48
Reign of Terror
49
  • The Convention was replaced in October of 1795
    with the Directory,
  • which was replaced in turn, in 1799, by the
    Consulate.
  • Napoleon Bonaparte became Emperor in May of
    1804.

50
LA REPUBLIQUE
51
Section 4 The Age of Napoleon Begins
  • Napoleon used his military exploits in the
    Revolution to gain power and took the title of
    emperor in 1804.
  • There is no place in a fanatic's head where
    reason can enter. N. Bonaparte

52
Napoleon
  • As emperor, Napoleon
  • strengthened the central government
  • modernized finance
  • instituted the Napoleonic Code.

53
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54
Emperor Napoleon
  • From 1804 until 1814, Napoleon subdued the
    combined forces of the Great European Powers.

55
NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
56
Napoleon built a vast empire by
  • annexing lands
  • making alliances
  • placing members of his family on the thrones of
    Europe.

57
Napoleon at Battle of Freidburg
58
Section 5 The End of an Era
  • Spurred by rising nationalism, people across
    Europe mounted rebellions against French rule.

59
NAPOLEON
60
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61
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62
End of an Emperor
  • Following a failed invasion of Russia, and major
    defeats at Leipzig, and Waterloo, Napoleon was
    removed from power.
  • In 1815, the Congress of Vienna sought to restore
    stability and order in Europe.

63
The Emperor
64
The Congress of Vienna
  • redrew national boundaries
  • restored hereditary monarchies
  • created the Concert of Europe, an organization
    pledged to maintain the balance of power, and to
    suppress any uprisings inspired by ideas of the
    French Revolution.

65
Concert of Europe
  • an organization pledged to maintain the balance
    of power, and to suppress any uprisings inspired
    by ideas of the French Revolution.

66
CONCLUSION
  • The French Revolution was not only a crucial
    event considered in the context of Western
    history, but was also, perhaps the single most
    crucial influence on British intellectual,
    philosophical, and political life in the
    nineteenth century.

67
  • In its early stages it portrayed itself as a
    triumph of the forces of reason over those of
    superstition and privilege.
  • As such, it was welcomed not only by English
    radicals like Thomas Paine and William Godwin and
    William Blake.

68
Paine, Godwin and Blake
  • saw it as a symbolic act which presaged the
    return of humanity to the state of perfection
    from which it had fallen away--

69
  • but by many liberals as well, and by some who saw
    it, with its declared emphasis on "Liberty,
    Equality, and Fraternity," as being analogous to
    the Glorious Revolution of 1688 as it descended
    into the madness of the Reign of Terror.

70
  • However, many who had initially greeted it with
    enthusiasm--Wordsworth and Coleridge, for
    example, who came to regard their early support
    as, in Coleridge's words, a "sqeaking baby
    trumpet of sedition"--had second thoughts.

71
VERSAILLES
72
  • Versailles is one of the largest, most elaborate,
    royal palaces ever built. This huge and
    magnificent palace started as a hunting lodge
    that was built for King Louis XIII in 1624. The
    small lodge was the beginning of an extremely
    huge palace that would cost the French government
    more then they could imagine.

73
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74
  • Louis XIV (The Sun King) built Versailles to be
    his home. To Louis, a magnificent palace was a
    must for royal life. All of the kings and nobles
    had to have wonderfully decorated palaces
    (houses), with beautiful paintings, ballrooms,
    and expensive furniture.

75
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76
  • made plans to build a palace that would,
    including gardens, cover a total of 37,000 acres.
    Over the period of time that they built the
    palace, 400 new sculptures were added along with
    1,400 fountains. When this was completed, the
    king, decided it was not enough. Jules
    Hardouin-Mansart was hired to redesign parts of
    the palace and add on to it in 1676.

77
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78
  • added a whole second story to the palace and
    designed and built the beautiful Hall of Mirrors.
    The Hall of Mirrors contained 17 windows with
    beautiful views matched to 17 arched mirrors. The
    hall was decorated with statues, busts of Roman
    Emperors, and guided candelabra. The ceiling was
    covered with paintings of Louis XIV's triumphs.

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80
  • Not only was the hall known for its beauty, but
    in the future it would be used as a meeting hall
    for such important events as the signing of the
    Treaty of Paris that ended the American
    Revolution and the Treaty of Versailles that
    ended World War I. Mansart also added the south
    and the north wings of the palace.

81
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82
  • Louis XV took over Versailles in 1722. In 1742,
    he hired an architect named Anges-Jacques
    Gabriel. He built more and more for the next
    century. A total of 36,000 workers worked on it
    until it was finished.Finally, when the
    construction was done, over 10,000 people lived
    in the palace, which included nobles and
    servants.

83
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84
  • In 1774, Louis XV died leaving a huge debt to his
    grandson Louis XVI. Even though he was incredibly
    in debt, Louis XVI had all the gardens redone
    right away. Perhaps this is why the French
    Government went bankrupt in 1788, and they had to
    give up the palace. This whole thing eventually
    started the French Revolution.In 1792,
    Versailles was abandoned. All of the furniture
    was sold and all the art was brought to museums.
    The palace was left empty. The French government
    decided to open up the palace as a museum, during
    the 1830's.

85
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86
  • In 1962, all of the belongings of the palace that
    could be located were brought back and the palace
    has almost been completely restored back to its
    original self. Also the gardens and statues have
    been restored, and more then 80 of the rooms have
    been remodeled and decorated. They are now open
    to the public.

87
  • http//www.virtourist.com/europe/versailles/versai
    lles.htm

88
The end
  • Read p 703.
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