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The French Revolution

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Title: The French Revolution


1
The French Revolution
  • The start of the modern era? The logical
    culmination of the Renaissance-Reformation-Scienti
    fic Revolution-Enlightenment?

2
Crises of the French Monarchy
  • The absolutism of the French monarchy as
    developed by Louis XIV could only succeed if the
    monarch were a strong and intelligent man.
  • The moral and intellectual failings of Louis XV
    and Louis XVI combined with the weakness of the
    French nobility a failing treasury and the
    Enlightenment using the emerging new journalism
    all led to chaos and THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.

3
  • While France was the wealthiest and most
    populated nation on the European continent the
    national treasury was nearly bankrupt.
  • Louis XV and his grandson Louis XVI employed a
    succession of finance ministers each of whom
    tackled the debt problem but each realized that
    only through taxation of the first and second
    estates could the problem truly be solved.

4
  • Louis XVI

5
  • 1770 Rene Maupeou appointed chancellor by
    Louis V Maupeou abolished the parlements and
    exiled their members. He knew that crushing the
    power of the nobility and submitting them to
    taxation would save France. BUT Louis V died
    and his young grandson Louis XVI came to power.
    Weak vacillating Louis XVI restored the
    parlements and their power in an attempt to get
    them to like him.

6
JACQUES NECKER
  • The French support of the American colonists was
    bringing France to ruin. Necker issued a report
    that France could be saved IF money in America
    and the pensions to the nobles were stopped. The
    nobles forced his removal.

7
  • 1786 Charles Alexandre de Calonne minister of
    finance proposed
  • Encourage internal trade
  • Lower gabelle
  • Transform peasants feudal obligations from
    services to cash
  • Land tax on all estates eliminating most other
    taxes
  • New local assemblies in order to bypass
    parlements

8
  • 1787 Calonne met with an ASSEMBLY OF NOBLES
    drawn from the first and second estates.
  • Nobles and Clergy refused to accept Calonnes
    ideas and demanded that the ESTATES GENERAL be
    summoned in order to raise taxes.
  • Estates General had not been called since 1614

9
  • Calonne was dismissed by Louis XVI and replaced
    by ETIENNE CHARLES LOMENIE DE BRIENNE, Archbishop
    of Toulouse.
  • Brienne was shocked to find out that the
    financial situation was truly as bad as had been
    stated.
  • Brienne suddenly supported Calonnes land tax
  • Parlement of Paris refused to accept any new
    taxes claiming that only the Estates General
    could approve taxes.

10
  • As a priest, Brienne met with the Assembly of the
    Clergy and asked the clergy to give a subsidy to
    the government for the debt.
  • The Assembly of the Clergy refused and instead
    reduced its contribution to the treasury DON
    GRATUIT.
  • Brienne resigned and was replaced by Jacques
    Necker back for time number two.
  • The Estates General was summoned all three
    estates wanted the body to convene but for
    different reasons. This divergence of desires
    and aims was the final step toward the FRENCH
    REVOLUTION.

11
1789
  • While the French Revolution was a process that
    covered many years, 1789 is recognized as the
    start and true date of the French Revolution.
  • Were the three estates in complete conflict?
  • Were some allied across estate divisions?
  • What was the Third Estate?
  • May 5, 1789 The ESTATES GENERAL opened at the
    Palace of Versailles.

12
  • The Third Estate supporting the First Estate and
    the Second Estate

13
Dream of the Third Estate?
14
  • France at the time of the French Revolution

15
  • The calling of the Estates General sent
    representatives of the estates to Versailles
    each estate sought to gain power at the expense
    of the monarchy.
  • The Third Estate was clearly the key as it was
    the largest by population and the center of power
    for the French economy.
  • The First and Second Estates had land and money
    but the Third Estate represented the growing
    entrepreneurs and urban economy of the nation.
  • Abbe Sieyes - What is the Third Estate?

16
  • Sieyes

17
Debate of Organization and Voting
  • The aristocracy moved to limit the power of the
    Third Estate.
  • Equal number of representatives for each estate
  • Voting by estate rather than individuals.
  • Louis XVI and his advisors thought the best
    solution for them was to strengthen the Third
    Estate the Third Estate was given twice as many
    representatives.

18
Cahiers de Doleances
  • The members of the Estate General brought with
    them cahiers de Doleances- list of grievances and
    demands for change.
  • While varied in approach, they sought to create
    equality among the subjects of Louis XVI
  • The question still was how was the Estates
    General to vote and to be organized?

19
  • The Third Estate refused to sit separately 1
    June 1789 the Third Estate asked members of the
    other estates to join them in organizing a new
    legislative body.
  • 17 June 1789 NATIONAL ASSEMBLY was born
    ending the centuries old Estates General.
  • Spontaneous revolution?

20
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21
Tennis Court Oath
  • 20 June 1789 National Assembly was locked out
    of its room in Versailles.
  • The National Assembly moved to the tennis court
    where it vowed never to leave Versailles until it
    had a constitution.
  • 27 June 1789 Louis XVI asked the 1st Estate and
    2nd Estate to meet as the National Assembly and
    vote by individual.
  • The National Assembly renamed itself the NATIONAL
    CONSTITUENT ASSEMMBLY.

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23
Journees Mob Rule or True People Power
  • While the National Constituent Assembly at
    Versailles began a civilized revolution of power
    ending the legislative stranglehold of the
    first and second estates the people of France
    and especially Paris began to take matters into
    their own hands.
  • July 1789 on the advice of his wife Marie
    Antoinette and his younger and more conservative
    brothers Louis XVI began to plan to stop the
    National Constituent Assembly. He also fired
    Jacques Necker who was admired by the Assembly
    and the people.
  • While many in the Assembly had desired a
    constitutional monarchy Louis decisions and
    actions pushed many moderates toward
    republicanism.

24
14 July 1789 Paris explodes and the Bastille
falls
  • Paris had been on the verge of exploding for
    months
  • Louis XVI had mustered troops outside the city in
    case of rebellion this only increased the
    feeling of tension within the city
  • 1788-1789 winter had been harsh leading to food
    shortages and bread riots all in an urban area
    where the vast majority of ones daily diet was
    bread.
  • After electing representatives to the Estates
    General the leading citizens of Paris continued
    to meet establishing a citizens militia and
    collecting arms.

25
  • The growing tensions and the firing of Necker led
    the people of Paris and their new militia to
    march on the symbol of royal power and abuse
    the Bastille.
  • Despite finding no political prisoners in the
    prison as they had expected the crowd killed
    several officers and the governor of the militia
    and later dismantled the prison.
  • The militia was reorganized into the NATIONAL
    GUARD under the leadership of the Marquis de
    Lafayette.

26
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28
  • The new symbol of the National Guard and later
    the revolution itself was the cockade a small
    badge of red and blue (the colors of Paris)
    separated by white representing the Bourbon
    monarchy.
  • Louis XVI was forced to recognize the National
    Guard.
  • The city and people of Paris became a factor in
    the revolution separate from the National
    Constituent Assembly.

29
The Great Fear Summer 1789
  • Rumors that Louis XVI was going to send troops
    into the countryside sparked a rebellion of the
    peasantry against the landed nobility.
  • Peasants burned chateaux, destroyed records, took
    food, refused to pay feudal dues.
  • They based their claims on their rights as
    citizens against the monarchy, the nobles, and
    injustices of rural life.

30
4 August 1789 Surrender of Feudal Rights
  • On 4 August 1789 nobles rose in the National
    Constituent Assembly and agreed to give away
    their ancient feudal rights.
  • Gone went all legal class distinctions among the
    people of France
  • Right to special courts and trials
  • Hunting rights
  • Fishing rights
  • Special exemptions in all aspects of life
  • Peasants feudal obligations

31
Louis XVI
  • While the revolution spread quickly throughout
    France the monarchy was incapable of deciding
    what to do.
  • Louis XVI was easily manipulated by his wife and
    brothers into trying to stop all reform as it
    would lessen his authority BUT
  • All that did was to push moderates toward the
    radicals and the people of Paris and away from
    compromise.

32
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
  • 27 August 1789 the National Constituent
    Assembly issued a statement of rights for the
    citizens of France.
  • Civic equality
  • Rights of property
  • Success of the bourgeoisie?

33
The Royal Family is Forced to Move to Paris
  • Louis XVI hesitated to accept the Declaration of
    the Rights of Man and Citizen and to accept the
    end of feudal rights this made the people of
    France more and more suspicious of him and the
    fear grew that he would use his troops to end the
    revolution.
  • The scarcity of bread pushed the women of Paris
    on 5 October 1789 to march to Versailles and
    demand that the royal family move to Paris where
    they can be watched.
  • 6 October 1789 after the women stormed the
    Palace of Versailles the royal family was
    forced to move to Paris with the women of Paris
    carrying pikes with the heads of Louis soldiers
    on top.
  • The National Constituent Assembly moved to Paris
    as well.

34
  • From 1789-1791, the National Constituent Assembly
    pursued a relatively moderate approach to the
    revolution.
  • They wanted a constitutional monarchy
  • Rational approach to administration
  • Unregulated economics BOURGEOISIE
  • Anticlericalism part of a long history in
    France
  • Protection of Property often united nobles and
    the bourgeoisie
  • Limit the impact of non-propertied classes
  • Civic equality NOT economic equality

35
The Constitution of 1791 the true death of the
Ancien Regime
  • 1. new unicameral legislature Legislative
    Assembly
  • 2. constitutional monarchy with delay veto not
    a final veto
  • War and peace powers rested in the Legislative
    Assembly
  • Redefinition of the term citizen

36
Active versus Passive Citizens
  • Indirect elections that attempted to halt the
    direct influence of the masses on politics
  • ACTIVE CITIZENS only could vote male, over 21
    and who paid taxes equaling three days wages.
  • Active citizens elected ELECTORS who then voted
    for the legislature. Electors and members of the
    legislature had property requirements to pass.
  • 25 million people 50,000 eligible to be
    electors or members of the Legislative Assembly
  • Women could not vote nor hold office
  • Power in France passed from aristocratic wealth
    to propertied wealth. Wealth not birth
    denoted privileges.

37
  • Olympe de Gouges 1791 Declaration of the
    Rights of Woman rewrote the Declaration of the
    Rights of Man and Citizen replacing woman for
    man.
  • She presented the issue of a revolution that
    sought equality by denying equality.

38
An Enlightened Reorganization of French Political
Boundaries
  • France had been organized into provinces whose
    border determination had been made centuries
    earlier.
  • The nation was reorganized into 83 DEPARTEMENTS
    of relatively equal geographic size. Gone were
    the old names of Burgundy replaced by terms
    from nature such as names of rivers and
    mountains.
  • All parlements and old courts were abolished and
    a uniform court system was established in each
    departement.

39
Provinces Departments
40
  • Chapelier Law 1791 a clear example of the
    conservative economic and social nature of the
    initial phase of the French Revolution may be
    seen in the assemblys passing of the Chapelier
    Law.
  • Despite the growing inflation in France, workers
    were now forbidden to orgaqnize into workers
    associations.

41
Confiscation of Church Lands
  • Royal debt NOT repudiated because the bankers
    it was owed to were now the leaders of the
    Legislative Assembly.
  • In an attempt to bring money into the national
    treasury, the Assembly confiscated and sold
    church lands.
  • This resulted in higher inflation, religious
    schism and eventually civil war.

42
Assignats
  • When the government confiscated church lands, it
    issued government bonds based on the eventual
    sale of the lands assignees.
  • People bought these bonds in great numbers and
    began using them as money.
  • The government began to issue far too many
    assignats devaluing them and leading to higher
    inflation and ruin for many of the urban poor.

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44
Civil Constitution of the Clergy 1790
  • The Roman Catholic Church was transformed into a
    branch of the French State think Henry VIII and
    Joseph II
  • Bishoprics reduced from 135 to 83
  • Diocese borders redesigned to fit civil borders
  • Clergy paid by the state only
  • Louis XVI reluctantly approved
  • Neither clergy nor Rome consulted
  • All clergy were to take an oath supporting the CCC

45
  • Clergy who refused to take the oath were
    revolution.
  • The pope denounced the CCC and The Declaration of
    the Rights of Man and Citizen removed by the
    government from their positions and labeled
    REFRACTORY.
  • The CCC made clergy and the religious decide
    between allegiances to the pope or to the
    revolution. This is viewed as a foolish move on
    the part of the Assembly and a leading factor in
    the developing anti-revolution movement that
    resulted in civil war and the Reign of Terror

46
  • Pius VI
  • once he condemned the CCC and the Declaration of
    the Rights of Man and Citizen the people of
    Paris burned him in effigy

47
Counter-revolutionaries
  • While Louis XVI dithered in Paris acting at
    times as if he accepted the revolution royalist
    forces worked to stop and reverse the
    revolutionary changes.
  • The counter-revolutionary/royalist forces were
    led by Louis XVIs younger brother Charles,
    Count of Artois.
  • By June of 1791, Louis XVI had been persuaded by
    his brothers and his wife to flee Paris to the
    nearby Austrian Netherlands.

48
  • Count of Artois

49
The Flight to Varennes
  • 20 June 1791, the royal family and a few servants
    left Paris in disguise and headed toward the
    Austrian Netherlands.
  • In the town of Varennes, the royal family was
    discovered and returned to Paris as traitors and
    enemies of the revolution.
  • Conservatives in the National Constituent
    Assembly who wanted to retain a constitutional
    monarchy claimed that the family had been
    kidnapped.

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51
Declaration of Pillnitz
  • EMIGRES pressured Leopold II brother and Marie
    Antoinette and Frederick William II of Prussia
    to make a move to protect the royal family.
  • Leopold and Frederick William stated that they
    would move to protect the monarchy if other
    nations agreed.
  • The French saw this declaration as an attack on
    the revolution.
  • as 1791 closed and the nation moved toward the
    start of the new Constitution of 1791 the NCA
    voted to ban any of its members from sitting in
    the new Legislative Assembly. BAD MOVE it kept
    the moderates of the NCA from running and left
    extremists poised to take control.

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53
1791 Internal Second Revolution
  • By 1791 virtually all aspects of government and
    religion had been changed within France.
  • There was a growing resentment of the revolution
    from aristocrats who lost power, peasants that
    disliked the attack on the church, and radicals
    who wanted the revolution to go farther.
  • The newly elected LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY was
    comprised of the radicals who wanted to push
    France even farther into revolutionary change.

54
JACOBINS
  • Deputies from the Third Estate had organized into
    a political club which met at an old Dominican
    friary calling themselves the Jacobins.
  • Versions of this club spread throughout France
    developing a network of radical thinkers. They
    studied and espoused Enlightened thought as they
    planned more revolutionary moves.

55
Girondists
  • Jacobins from the departement of Gironde
    organized within the Legislative Assembly like
    minded people who became known as Girondists.
  • The Girondists organized against the growing
    counter-revolution. In the LA they passed
    bills ordering émigrés to return to France or
    lose their property and refractory priests to
    support the CCC or lose their state pensions.
    Louis XVI vetoed both bills.

56
  • 1792 the Girondists led the LA in declaring war
    on Austria
  • The Girondists thought that a war would unite the
    nation and end the counter-revolution.
  • Louis XVI and the royalists thought the war would
    bring them back to power.

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The Convention Sans-culottes
  • September 1792 SEPTEMBER MASSACRES the Paris
    commune attacked the prisoners of the Revolution
    that were imprisoned in jail and murdered over
    1,200.
  • Paris Commune forced the LA to call for new
    elections based on UNIVERSAL MALE SUFFRAGE and to
    write a new democratic constitution.
  • The CONVENTION the group writing the new
    constitution began on 21 September 1792 The
    Convention will become the ruling body of France.
    The Convention declared France a republic.

59
Sans-culottes
  • The artisans and shopkeepers of Paris organized
    into a Jacobin group more radical than the
    Girondists. They refused to wear the knee
    breeches of the upper classes and referred to
    themselves at the sans-culottes.
  • The sans-culottes felt ignored by previous
    governments and as urban dwellers they felt the
    economic problems brought about by the revolution
    more acutely than the rural populace.
  • The sans-culottes sat in seats high up in the
    Convention creating their political name THE
    MOUNTAIN
  • Some view the sans-culottes as representing true
    democracy some see them as mob rule.

60
  • The Girondists met opposition from the more
    radical sans-culottes and the Parisian based
    Jacobins.
  • The Girondists were turned upon by the
    sans-culottes and Jacobins loosing power and
    influence and later their lives.

61
  • 1791 Pauline Leon petitioned the LA for the
    right of women to bear arms and fight for the
    revolution.
  • The words and theory of the revolution were being
    applied to all aspects of society taking the
    French Revolution to a second and deeper level of
    change.
  • Parisian government went from an elected council
    to a committee or COMMUNE of representative
    selected mainly by the working class.
  • 10 August 1792 Parisians attacked the Tuileries
    palace forcing the royal family to flee to the
    LA for protection. The monarchy was no more.

62
The execution of Louis XVI
  • While many Girondists favored allowing Louis XVI
    and his family to leave France the radicals in
    the Convention wanted his execution.
  • Many wanted retribution for the past sins of the
    French nobility and monarchy others realized
    that Louis in exile would be a rallying point for
    the émigrés and the kingdoms that wanted to stop
    the ideals of republicanism.

63
On 21 January 1793, Louis XVI was executed as a
traitor to France and the Revolution.
64
  • 16 October 1793 Marie Antoinette was executed
    after a trial accusing her of treason and incest.

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66
Europe and the French Revolution
  • The nations of Europe had had problems with the
    American Revolution but the execution of the
    French monarchs, the declaration of a republic,
    the revolutionary talk of social equality all
    put the kingdoms of Europe on edge.
  • While the British enjoyed watching the French
    have their problems as the revolution grew so
    did the concerns of the British. George, Prince
    of Wales - Regent for George III.
  • Edmund Burke Reflections o n the Revolution in
    France 1790 criticized early on the true
    application of the ideals of Liberty, Equality
    and Brotherhood.

67
  • Edmund Burke

68
  • In Great Britain, and other kingdoms, fear of the
    spread of revolutionary ideals led the
    governments to limit personal freedoms.
  • Habeas corpus suspended and it became possible to
    commit treason through writing.
  • Francis II HRE, Frederick William II of Prussia
    and Catherine the Great all ended attempts to be
    enlightened despots.

69
  • Attacks on Poland the Polish aristocrats had
    finally achieved the end of the LIBERUM VETO and
    organized a new constitutional monarchy.
  • These actions and the desire for Polish lands
    led Prussia, Russia, and Austria to partition
    Poland out of existence by 1795.

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71
The Revolution at War with Europe
  • The declaration of war by France against Austria
    and Prussia had served to unite disparate
    factions into a united French republic.
  • November 1792 the Convention declared French
    aid to any people wanting to overthrow
    oppression.
  • The Convention also declared the Scheldt River in
    the Austrian Netherlands open to free trade
    despite and agreement Great Britain had made with
    Austria and Holland.
  • Great Britain was about to declare war on France
    when France declared war. 1793 the Mountain
    began to direct the government.
  • April 1793 THE FIRST COALITION Austria,
    Prussia, Great Britain, Spain, Sardinia, and
    Holland moved against France in order to protect
    their own social, political, and economic
    interests.

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The Reign of Terror
  • Facing the First Coalition the Convention (led
    by the Mountain) organized small powerful
    committees to run the nation.
  • THE COMMITTEE OF PUBLIC SAFETY Jacques Danton,
    Lazare Carnot and Maximilien Robespierre they
    were to stomp out the enemies of the revolution
    within France.

74
Levee en Masse
  • June 1793 Parisian sans-culottes invaded the
    Convention and threw out the Girondists. The
    radical control of the Convention by the Mountain
    was finished.
  • 22 June 1793 a new constitution with full
    democracy for men was approved but its
    implementation was delayed until the fighting
    stopped.
  • 23 August 1793 Carnot implemented a mass
    mobilization of men and nation levee en masse
    the entire nation was reorganized for war.

75
  • 17 September 1793 price controls were put into
    place placating the sans-culottes as urban
    people the rising inflation in the nation
    affected them most of all.
  • Fearing counter-revolutionaries everywhere the
    Committee of Public Safety began a series of
    quasi-trials eliminating all opponents of the
    revolution. Leading this was Robespierre.

76
Robespierre on Terror
  • In the mainspring of popular government in
    peacetime is virtue, amid revolution it is as the
    same time virtue and terror virtue, without
    which terror is fatal, terror, without which
    virtue is impotent. Terror is nothing, but
    prompt, severe, inflexible justice it is
    therefore an emanation of virtue.

77
Republic of Virtue
  • The Committee of Public Safety sought to
    implement enlightened terminology and recreate
    France as a republic of virtue.
  • Roman Republic dress etc was adopted.
  • Vice destroyed

78
Society of Revolutionary Republican Women
  • Pauline Leon and Claire Lacombe established
    SRRW
  • Radicals demanded strict controls on food
    prices thugs against insufficiently
    revolutionary women
  • Pushed for true rights Convention began to fear
    the womens clubs and banned them using
    Rousseaus separate spheres ideas.
  • Olympe de Gouges executed 1793
  • Women banned from the galleries of the Convention

79
Dechristianization
  • 1793 calendar reworked staring with 1791 as the
    year 1
  • 12 month calendar 30 days
  • New names for days and months
  • Notre Dame Cathedral Temple of Reason
  • DEPUTIES ON MISSION sent to close churches and
    persecute Christians throughout France

80
  • Robespierre directed the revolution through
    executions left and right
  • Left enrages
  • Right Danton himself was executed accused of
    not connecting the revolution with moral virtue
  • LAW OF 22 PRAIRIAL (June 10, 1794)
    revolutionary tribunals allowed to convict
    without evidence

81
Fall of Robespierre
  • 26 July 1794 gave a speech to the Convention
    stating that many were out to get him and the
    revolution named no names then.
  • 27 July 1794 (9th of Thermidor) when
    Robespierre went to speak he was shouted down and
    arrested.
  • 28 July 1794 executed.

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84
Thermidorian Reaction end of the Reign of Terror
  • After the death of Robespierre the fall of the
    sans-culottes and the end of the Reign of Terror
    came quickly.
  • Girondists were restored to power in the
    Convention.
  • Committee of Public Safety had much of its power
    removed
  • Law of 22 Prairial rescinded
  • Paris Jacobin club closed
  • Jacobin clubs forbidden to correspond with each
    other
  • White Terror began
  • Christianity not officially restored but
    Catholic services were allowed
  • Thermidorian became a tern used to describe
    reactionary forces.

85
Constitution of the Year III
  • The constitution developed in 1793 was never
    implemented. Instead, the Convention issued the
    Constitution of the Year III neither democratic
    nor royalist. Revolution of property holders
    against the sans-culottes.
  • Bicameral legislature
  • Council of Elders - 40 years old men married
    or widowed
  • Council of 500 - 30 married or single men
  • Property qualifications for voting excepting
    soldiers

86
  • Executive body THE DIRECTORY five men
    selected by the Council of Elders from a list
    given by the Council of 500.
  • Treaty of Basel 1795 the Directory made peace
    with Prussia and Spain BUT STILL AT WAR WITH
    GREAT BRITAIN AND AUSTRIA

87
The Directory and new government fights left and
right
  • Royalists had been returning to France after the
    fall of Robespierre planning government takers.
  • 5 October 1795 (13 Vendemaire) royalist tried a
    revolt in Paris against the Directory. The
    Directory employed a new general to put down the
    rebellion with a whiff of grapeshot that man
    was NAPOLEON BONAPARTE

88
  • Napoleon Bonaparte

89
Gracchus Babeuf and the Conspiracy of Equals
  • Many sans-culotte objected to the end of the
    social and economic revolution.
  • 1796 Gracchus Babeuf and followers led a move
    to restore radical democracy Conspiracy of
    Equals.
  • The rebellion was quashed the Directory was not
    in favor of a return to social and economic
    changes.

90
  • Babeuf
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