Title: The French Revolution
1The French Revolution
2- The Enlightenment- an 18th century intellectual
movement based on the principles of reason and
common sense that challenged the prevailing
attitudes of religion and tradition.
3Important ideas
- Contractual government
- The General Will
- Limited royal power
- Checks and balances
- Social equality
- Humanitarianism
4Failure of the Enlightenment
- The use of pure reason did not take into account
some inescapable elements of human behavior such
as - Emotions
- Desires
- Passions
- Appetites
- Willpower
525 years of Chaos
- The French Revolution 1789-1799
- The Age of Napoleon 1799-1815
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7A turning point in Western Civilization
- after the revolution had run its course... Europe
was not the same place - the stage was set for the modern political,
social and economic systems that is the western
world today... - However, France seemed the least likely for such
dramatic changes.
8Underlying causes of the Revolution
- The legacy of the Middle Ages
- The inequalities of the Old Regime --privileges
of the 1st 2nd Estates - the corruption inefficiency of government and
justice - The English American Revolutions
- The Enlightenment writers
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14The Clergy
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1st Estate
2nd Estate
The Nobility
3rd Estate
Everyone else!
bourgeoisie
artisans
peasants and urban poor
The Old Regime
15The First Estate- 1 population 15 land
- The Upper Clergy / The Lower Clergy
- Paid no taxes- made a free gift
- Collected tithes from peasants
- Monopoly of religion-The Sunday pulpit
- Operated the French school system
- Censored books and plays
- Provided relief for the poor
- Kept birth, marriage and death records
16The Second Estate 2 - 30
- The Aristocracy or nobility, were exempt from
taxes - Nobles of the Sword Nobles of the Robe
- Collected feudal dues (banalities)
- Held highest positions in government, church
army - Liberals and Conservatives
17Third Estate 97 - 55
- Bourgeoisie educated and industrious, many paid
taxes but had no voice in government and were
denied top positions despite their talent. - Artisans
- Peasants paid the bulk of the taxes
- Day laborers gardeners, handymen, deliverymen,
thieves, beggars - Estimate census 21,000,000 people
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20Inherited debt
21Aid to the American colonists
22Life at Versailles Palace
23Pensions and gifts
24A limited tax base
25Marie Antoinette
26The fiscal crisis of Louis XVI 1786 3
billion livres in debtLouis plan to deal with
the debt problem
Assembly of Notables
- ask for permission to initiate a tax based on
land ownership - The response by the aristocracy(their hidden
agenda) - Louis had to call a meeting of the Estates-General
27The Estates-General
28The Tennis Court Oath, June 20, 1789 Louis
ordered all three estates to meet together
29The Liberal Agenda...
- limit the despotic, inefficient monarchy
- institute a written constitution
- guarantee the rights of all citizens
- establish a national Parlement
- reform the administrative judicial systems
- reform the tax and financial system
- Insure a free, uncensored press
- standardize weights measures
30- Louis changed his minddecided to disrupt the
assembly and sidetrack its goals - 18,000 troops called to Paris and Versailles
- Jacques Necker dismissed
- Backlash in Paris
31- 7 prisoners, 30 Swiss Guard.no gunpowder!
32The Great Fear ...July 20th - August 4th
- delegates at the Assembly resumed their
longwinded and inconclusive debates - a rumor was started- nobles were paying gangs of
brigands to steal destroy the crops of
peasants. - violent insurrections against landlords- burning
their castles and destroying all records of
feudal obligations(peasants in the countryside
sent the delegates at the Assembly an
unmistakable message)
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34The Declaration of Rights of Man
35Reforms of the National Assembly
- a statement on human rights
- abolition of special privileges
- The Constitution of 1791
- Constitutional Monarchy
- Unicameral legislature
- 83 departments replaced provinces
- Reforms to aid business
- - standardized weights and measures
- - The metric system introduced
- - tolls were eliminated
- subordination of the church to the state
36Three factors leading to the violent phase of the
Revolution
- 1) the counterrevolution
- devout Catholics
- royalists
- 2) threat of foreign invasion
- 3) the sans-culottes
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41The Sans-culottes
- Universal male suffrage
- Price controls on goods
- Wage guarantees for workers
- Graduated tax on wealth
- Punish food hoarders
- Create a classless society
- Forced the creation of a new government The
Convention
42- The National Convention succeeded the Legislative
(National) Assembly - on September 21, 1792, its 745 members met for
the first time - the next day, they voted to abolish the monarchy
and create a republic. - King Louis was put on trial-The vote against him-
360-361!
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44Problems facing the Convention
- The country was threatened by foreign invasions
- Incited by the clergy, peasants were in open
revolt - Many leading cities refused to cooperate with the
central government - The Revolutionary Guard roamed the countryside
searching for food-hoarders and enemies of the
revolution.
45- The slogan of the Revolution
- Liberty, Equality Fraternity
- By April, 1793, France was at war with Austria,
Prussia, Spain, - Great Britain, Sardinia and
Holland (known as the First Coalition)
46- Jacques Danton - popular and practical,
- began the levee en masse - he put the entire
nation on a war footing - 1st time in Europe that the total population was
mobilized, defended by a citizen army.
47- Maximillian Robespierre The
Incorruptible - the most powerful member of the Committee of
Public Safety - supported by the sans-culottes-
- Goal - remove all opponents of the Revolution-
Reign of Terror
48 A Republic of Virtue
- Places streets renamed
- A new calendar
- A national anthem
- Festivals and parades
- titles of distinction were outlawed
- Dress and fashion reflected the working class
- Slavery abolished
- One man, one vote
49- The terror actually started with the execution of
Louis in Jan, 1792 - Marie remained alive until October, 1793
- the use of the guillotine was not the work of
bloodthirsty madmen, but an enlightened method of
execution to save the Republic.
50- 16,000 were sent to the guillotine, including
nobles, their wives, the clergy anyone else
suspected of not supporting the Republic - During the upheavals between 1789 and 1799, it is
estimated than about 350,000 died
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53- other opponents of the Terror feared for their
lives and turned on Robespierre - July 28, 1794, Robespierre himself was executed
- the radical phase of the revolution was over.
54The Thermidorian Reaction
- After Robespierres execution, the Jacobin
government was dismantled - leadership passed back to the property-owning
bourgeoisie - a new constitution, approved in 1795
reestablished property qualifications for voting
and holding public office and created a new
government The Directory
55- The Directory relied on generals to enforce its
will - One these generals, Napoleon Bonaparte seized
control of the government in November 1799
56Some final commentsthe meaning of the revolution
- Weakened the political influence of the
aristocracy - Government positions would be awarded based on
merit - Transformed the dynastic state into a modern
state (liberal, secular rational) - Realized the ideas of the philosophes
- Equality before the law
- Trial by jury
- Freedom of speech, press and religion
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