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Revolution Brings Reform and Terror

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Revolution Brings Reform and Terror KEY IDEA The revolutionary government of France made reforms but also used terror and violence to retain power. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Revolution Brings Reform and Terror


1
Revolution Brings Reformand Terror
  • KEY IDEA The revolutionary government of France
    made reforms but also used terror and violence to
    retain power.

2
The Assembly Reforms France
  • In August 1789, as a response to the peasant
    uprisings and unrest, the National Assembly took
    steps to change France.
  • A new document was created, The Declaration of
    the Rights of Man, that ended all the special
    rights that members of the First and Second
    Estates had enjoyed and all French men equal
    rights.

3
Women and Reform
  • Though women did not get these rights, it was a
    bold step.
  • Olympe de Gouges was a playwright and journalist
    whose feminist writings reached a large audience.

Olympe de Gouges
4
  • Olympe de Gouges was a strong supporter of
    democracy and demanded the same rights for women
    that the French men were demanding.
  • She wrote her own document called the Declaration
    of the Rights of Woman.

5
Declaration of the Rights of Women
  • In this document she challenged the oppression of
    male authority and the notion of male-female
    inequality.Her ideas were rejected and she
    eventually met her fate to the guillotine as an
    enemy of the Revolution.

6
The State-Controlled Church
  • Other laws cut the power of the Catholic Church.
    The government took over church lands, hoping to
    sell them and raise money.

7
  • Plans for additional restrictions on the Church
    were abandoned as the delegates feared that they
    would lose support from the bourgeoisie.
  • The new laws about the church divided people who
    had backed the Revolution.
  • Catholic peasants remained loyal to the church.
    They were angry that the church would be part of
    the state. Thereafter, many of them opposed the
    Revolutions reforms.

8
Louis Fears the People
  • In June 1791, he and his family tried to escape
    the country. They were caught near the French
    border and brought back to Paris. From that
    point on, they lived under guard. After this, the
    king and queen were even less popular.

9
A Limited Monarchy
  • In the fall of 1791, the assembly drew up a new
    constitution that gave the king very little
    power.
  • The assembly then handed over its power to a new
    assembly, the Legislative Assembly.
  • The king was stripped of much of his authority
    and the Legislative assembly became the lawmakers
    of the country.

10
A Divided Assembly
  • After the new assembly began to meet, it fell
    into divided groups.
  • The Legislative Assembly split into three
    separate factions
  • Radicals
  • Moderates
  • Conservatives

11
The Radicals
  • The Radical (left-wing) faction wanted sweeping
    changes in the government and proposed that
    common people have full power in a republic.
  • They also opposed the king and the idea of
    monarchy.
  • The sans-culottes were an extreme left-wing
    faction who wanted a greater voice in government,
    lower food prices and an end to food shortages.

12
The Moderates
  • The Moderate faction wanted some changes in the
    government, but not as many as the radicals.
  • They were willing to accept the monarchy as long
    as the kings power was limited.

13
The Conservatives
  • The Conservative (right-wing) faction wanted very
    few changes in the government.
  • They believed that the best government for France
    was a limited monarchy.
  • The Émigrés, a group of nobles and and others who
    had fled during the peasant uprising, were an
    ultra-right wing who were hoping to undo the
    Revolution and restore the Old Regime.

14
Europes Absolute Rulers React
  • At the same time, France faced serious trouble on
    its borders. Kings in other countries feared
    that the French Revolution would spread to their
    lands.
  • They wanted to use force to restore control of
    France to Louis XVI, as well as protect their own
    positions as monarchs.
  • Soon France found itself at war with Austria and
    Prussia- a war it quickly began to lose.

15
Prussian Soldiers Advance on Paris
  • Foreign soldiers were coming near to Paris. The
    commander of the Prussian army threatened to
    destroy Paris if the royal family was harmed in
    any way.
  • The Prussian concern for Louis and his family
    raised suspicions that the king and queen were
    ready to help the enemy.
  • Angry French citizens imprisoned the royal family
    in a stone tower. Many nobles were killed in
    other mob action.

16
The National Convention
  • The government took strong steps to meet the
  • danger from foreign troops. It took away the
    kings powers.
  • In order to pacify the internal threat of
    radicals, the members of the Legislative Assembly
    gave up the idea of a a limited monarchy.
  • In 1792,the Constitution of 1791 was set aside,
    they declared the king deposed and dissolved the
    Legislative Assembly. After a new election, the
    National Convention (the new government) was
    formed.

17
Louis Loses His Head
  • A radical group, the Jacobins, began to demand
    the creation of a republic.
  • Under the leadership of many Jacobins, the
    National Convention declares Louis a common
    citizen and prisoner.

18
Louis Loses His Head
  • King Louis was tired for treason, convicted and
    sentenced to death. On January 21m 1793, Louis
    XVI was beheaded by the guillotine.

19
Louiss Death Troubles European Monarchs
  • Louis XVI was one of the first people to be
    executed with the newly invented guillotine.
  • The execution of the king was a victory foir the
    radicals in Paris, but it horrified other
    European monarchs and made their opposition to
    the French even stronger than ever.

20
The Guillotine- A Humane Execution
  • The guillotine was invented by Dr. Joseph Ignace
    Guillotine as an efficient, humane way to execute
    people that would cause its victims very little
    pain.
  • More than 40,000 French people were executed
    during the Reign of Terror.

21
The Guillotine- A Humane Execution
  • This pie graph shows the breakdowns of beheadings
    by class

22
The Terror Grips France
  • Following the death of Louis XVI, Maximilien
    Robespierre, began to lead France.
  • He made many changes
  • He set out to build a republic of virtue.
  • He and his party wanted to wipe out all memories
    of the royal family and nobility of France.

23
The Republic of Virtue
  • Robespierre ordered the following reforms
  • The calendar was changed to be more
    scientific. The calendar was divided into 12
    months of 30 days and renamed each month.
  • There were no Sundays in the new calendar because
    radicals considered religion to be too old
    fashioned and dangerous.
  • All churches in France were closed.

24
Maximillien Robespierre
  • Maximillien Robespierre believed passionately
    that only persons of absolute virtue should be
    political leaders. He believed in freedom for
    Jews and slaves, the abolition of the death
    penalty, and absolute loyalty to the state.

25
The Republic of Virtue
  • He was convinced that true patriots should devote
    themselves wholeheartedly to an existence of
    unselfish work and moral regularity.
  • He had no private life and very few friends
  • It is ironic that this believer in virtue
    presided over one of the most brutal periods in
    French history.

26
The Reign of Terror
  • Robespierre became the leader of the Committee of
    Public Safety. This committee was formed to
    investigate people who were believed to be a
    threat to the republic.
  • He ordered the death of as many as 40,000 people
    who did not agree with him.
  • His rule, which began in 1793, was called the
    Reign of Terror. It ended in July 1794, when
    Robespierre himself was put to death.

27
The Queen Meets the Guillotine
  • The Queen, Marie Antoinette, was sentenced to
    death by the Committee of Public Safety.
  • She met her death in a very dignified manner. It
    is rumored that she apologized to the executioner
    after accidentally stepping on his foot. Her
    last words were Monsieur, I beg your pardon, I
    did not do it on purpose.

28
Robespierre Turns on His Supporters
  • The enemies of the republic who troubled
    Robespierre the most were fellow revolutionaries
    who challenged his leadership.
  • He ordered the death of many of the leaders who
    helped him set up the republic.
  • By July of 1794, the National Convention realized
    that none of them were safe from Robespierre so
    in order to save their own lives, they turned on
    him.

29
Robespierre Meets The Guillotine
  • A group of conspirators demanded his arrest. By
    the next day, Robespierre was arrested, tried,
    convicted, sentenced to death and immediately
    executed by the guillotine.

30
The Directory
  • Tired of the killing and unrest, the French
    people wanted a return to order.
  • In 1795, the moderate leaders in the National
    Convention drafted a new plan for government.

31
The Directory
  • France got a new, but less revolutionary, plan of
    government - The Directory
  • The new constitution placed power in the hands of
    the upper middle class, a two house legislature,
    and an executive body of five men.
  • The five directors were moderates, not
    revolutionary idealists. Although there was some
    corruption among the directors, France was
    finally enjoying a time of peace.

32
The Directory Gives Rise to Napoleon
  • The Directory found a young general from Corsica
    to lead the French Army. This very talented man
    was Napoleon Bonaparte.

33
The End
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