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The Role of Women in Revolutionary France

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Susan M. Pojer, Web Mistresshttp://www.pptpalooza.net/ Women in the French Revolution Lara S. Ms. Pojer Sophomore EHAP – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Role of Women in Revolutionary France


1
Susan M. Pojer, Web Mistresshttp//www.pptpalooza.
net/
Women in the French Revolution
Lara S. Ms. PojerSophomore EHAP
2
What was the role of women in the French
Revolution?
3
The French Revolution 1789-1798
4
The Cultural Climate
  • Liberty! Equality! Fraternity!
  • Enlightenment ideals.
  • The term citizen becomes more widely used,
    instead of gender specific titles.

5
Female Soldiers
6
The Intervention of the Sabine Women by David
7
Théroigne de Mericourt1762-1817
  • Participated in the uprising of August 10th.
  • I was at ease playing the role of a man because I
    was always extremely humiliated by the servitude
    and prejudices under which mens pride keeps our
    sex oppressed.

8
Renée Bordereau
  • Became known as the Vendean Joan of Arc
  • Fought against the Republicans to avenge the
    deaths of 42 of her family members on the
    Royalist side
  • Later imprisoned by Emperor Napoleon

9
Other Female Soldiers
  • Françoise Deprés
  • Messenger, provisioner, troop leader
  • Easily recognized because she was missing an eye
    so she was often imprisoned
  • Jeanne Robin
  • Kept her sex a complete secret
  • Only told her generals wife because she needed a
    lighter weight jacket but couldnt ask him
    without giving up her cover

10
The October Days
  • October 5, 1789
  • Market-women fromParis marched to thepalace in
    Versailles
  • Angry over the increase in bread prices and
    food shortages
  • Tear out the Queens heart and fry her liver!

11
Feminists
12
Mary Wollstonecraft1759-1797
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1791)
13
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Civilized women are, therefore, so weakened by
false refinement, that, respecting morals, their
condition is much below what it would be were
they left in a state nearer to nature To remain,
it may be said, innocent they mean in a state of
childhood Fragile in every sense of the word,
they are obliged to look up to man for every
comfort if fear in girls, instead of being
cherished, perhaps, created, were treated in the
same manner as cowardice in boys, we should
quickly see women with more dignified aspects I
do not wish them to have power over men but over
themselves
14
Olympe de Gouges1748 - 1793
Declaration of the Rights of Women and the Female
Citizen (1791)
15
From De Gouges Declaration of the Rights of
Woman and the Female Citizen
  • Woman, wake up discover your rights.
  • Oh, women, women! When will you cease to be
    blind?
  • Regardless of what barriers confront you, it is
    in your power to free yourselves you have only
    to want to
  • I offer a foolproof way to elevate the soul of
    women it is to join them to all the activities
    of man
  • Man Tell me, what gives you sovereign empire to
    oppress my sex?

16
Aims of the Declaration of the Rights of Woman
  • Education for women
  • Equal opportunities for women
  • In employment
  • A claim to land
  • Equality for women in the eyes of the law
  • Women must receive equal punishments

17
Aims, Continued
  • A social contract between men and women in
    marriage
  • All wealth is shared
  • In the case of separation all property divided
  • Women and men equal in a marriage
  • Womens suffrage
  • A national assembly of women
  • Equal rights for women
  • Natural rights
  • Freedom of speech

18
Other Feminists
  • Etta Palm
  • Petitioned for education and legal rights for
    women
  • Claire Lacombe
  • Organized a club of Revolutionary Republican
    Citizenesses

19
Womens Petition to the National Assembly (1789)
  1. All the privileges of the male sex are
    irrevocably abolished throughout France.
  2. The feminine sex will always enjoy the same
    liberty, advantages, rights and honors as does
    the masculine sex.
  3. The masculine genre will no longer be regarded
    as the more noble genre all being should be and
    are equally noble.
  4. In the household both parties should enjoy the
    same authority

20
Womens Petition, Continued
  • That wearing breeches will no longer be the
    exclusive prerogative of the male sex, but each
    sex will have the right
  • When a soldier has compromised French honor, he
    will no longer be degraded by making him wear
    womens clothing
  • All persons of the feminine sex must be admitted
    without exception to the direct and departmental
    assemblies
  • They can also be appointed as Magistrates
  • The same applies to all positions, compensations,
    and military dignities
  • Nor do we hesitate to open the sanctuary to the
    feminine sex

21
Petition of Women of the Third Estate to the King
  • Written in respectful, polite terms, insisting
    changes, not demanding them (January 1, 1789)
  • Better education
  • Representation for women
  • Jobs which would open only to women, so
    prostitution would end
  • Resented that daughters were treated differently
    than sons and that old unmarried women were
    scorned
  • We ask to be enlightened, to have work, not in
    order to usurp mens authority, but in order to
    be better esteemed

22
Charlotte Corday
Girondin supporter who killed Jacobin Jean-Paul
Marat on July 13, 1793
23
The Murder
  • Corday sent a note to Marat earlier saying, I
    come from Caen. Your love for your country should
    make you curious to know about the plots that are
    taking place there. I will await your answer.
  • This note did grab Marats attention and though
    he was very sick, he let Corday in to see him
  • Corday told him the names of traitors and then
    stabbed him in the chest

24
The Aftermath
  • Just after Corday stabbed Marat, his friend
    rushed into the bathroom
  • A man sitting downstairs waiting for an article
    from Marat heard the commotion and assumed Marat
    had been attacked. When Corday got downstairs,
    this man hit her over the head with a chair
  • Four days later Corday was tried and guillotined

25
The Trial and Execution
In a conversation between the prosecutor (P) and
Corday (C) P Why did you kill Marat? Who
inspired you with so much hatred for him?C I
didnt need the hatred of others. I had plenty of
my own.P But what did you hope to gain from
killing him?C I killed one man to save a
thousand.P Do you think there was only one
Marat?C No, but by killing him I have warned
the others. His death will frighten the rest of
them.
Charlotte Corday en Prisonby Jacques-Louis
Muller
26
Charlotte Cordayby Paul Jacques Aimé Baudry
27
Death of Marat
by David
28
Supporting Men
The Marquis de Condorcet(Marie Jean Antoine
Nicolas Caritat)
Emmanuel Sièyes
29
Opposing Men
Pierre-Gaspard Chaumette
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
30
Jean-Baptiste-André Amar(1755-1816)
  • From The Report of Amar, October 21, 1793
  • Can women exercise political rights and take an
    active part in the affairs of government? Can
    they deliberate together in political
    associations or popular societies?
  • On these two questions the committee decided in
    the negative.
  • It demands a devotion without limits Are women
    capable of these cares and of the qualities that
    governance demands?
  • In general, we can respond no. Very few examples
    would contradict this

31
From The Report of Amar, Continued
  • Can women devote themselves to these useful and
    difficult functions?
  • No, because they would be obliged to sacrifice
    the more important cares to which nature calls
    them.
  • Each sex is called to a type of occupation which
    is fitting its action is circumscribed within
    this circle which it cannot break through,
    because nature which has set the limits for man
    commands imperiously and does not recognize any
    law.

32
From The Report of Amar, Continued II
  • In general, women are ill suited for elevated
    conceptions and serious meditations would you
    wish for them to be seen coming to the bar, to
    the tribune, to political assemblies like men,
    abandoning both reserve, the source of all
    virtues of their sex, and the care of their
    family?
  • In general, women are ill suited for elevated
    conceptions and serious meditations would you
    wish for them to be seen coming to the bar, to
    the tribune, to political assemblies like men,
    abandoning both reserve, the source of all
    virtues of their sex, and the care of their
    family?

33
From The Report of Amar, Continued III
  • There is another respect in which associations of
    women appear dangerous
  • Their presence in popular societies would give
    therefore then an active part in government to
    persons more exposed to error and to seduction.
    Let us add that women are disposed by their
    organization to an excess excitement which would
    be deadly in public affairs and that the
    interests of the state would soon be sacrificed
    to all that the intensity of passion can produce
    in errors and disorder.

34
Improvements for Women Made During the Revolution
  • Men and women were equally eligible to inherit
    property
  • Divorce legalized (so a woman could also choose
    to end a marriage)
  • In a divorce, women had a right to some of the
    common property
  • A system of education was created for both boys
    and girls

Susan M. Pojer, Web Mistresshttp//www.pptpalooza.
net/
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