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Attitudes & actions of monarchy & court Fear of Counter- Revolution Religious divisions Political divisions War Economic Crises The Causes of Instability in France 1792 - 1795
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Assembly Factions Royalists – Supported continued role of monarchy Jacobins – divided over the role of the monarchy Feuillants centerists wanted constitutional monarchy Girondins republicans but did not want the death of the king (Brissot, Corday) Montagne sat high in the assembly. Most radical group. (Robespierre, Danton, Saint Just, David)
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The Political Spectrum Jacobins Montagnards (“The Mountain”) Girondists Monarchíen (Royalists) 1790s: TODAY: Feuillants
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A Jacobin Club Meeting
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The National Convention The Decree of Fraternity * it offered French assistance to any subject peoples who wished to overthrow their government. When France sneezes, all of Europe catches cold!
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The First Coalition & The Brunswick Manifesto FRANCE 1792 - 1797 AUSTRIA PRUSSIA BRITAIN SPAIN PIEDMONT Duke of Brunswick if the Royal Family is harmed, Paris will be leveled!!
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The Storming of the Tuilieres: August 9-10, 1792
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Maximillian Robespierre (1758 – 1794)
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The Jacobins Jacobin Meeting House
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The Sans-Culottes: The Parisian Working Class
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Georges Jacques Danton (1759 – 1794)
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The Sans-Culottes Depicted as Savages by a British Cartoonist.
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The September Massacres 1792 Buveurs de sang [“drinkers of blood.”] Over 1,000 Parisians killed!
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The Politics of the National Convention (1792- 1795) MontagnardsGirondists Power base in Paris. Main support from the sans-culottes. Would adopt extreme measures to achieve their goals. Saw Paris as the center of the Revolution. More centralized [in Paris] approach to government. Power base in the provinces. Feared the influence of the sans-culottes. Feared the dominance of Paris in national politics. Supported more national government centralization [federalism].
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Louis XVI as a Pig
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Plaque for the first Guillotine
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Louis XVI’s Head (January 21, 1793)
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The Death of “Citizen” Louis Capet Matter for reflection for the crowned jugglers. So impure blood doesn’t soil our land!
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Attempts to Control the Growing Divisions 1.Revolutionary Tribunal in Paris try suspected counter-revolutionaries. A. Representatives-on-Mission * sent to the provinces & to the army. * had wide powers to oversee conscription. B. Watch Committees [comité de surveillance] * keep an eye on foreigners & suspects. C. sanctioned the trial & execution of rebels and émigrés, should they ever return to France.
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Law of General Maximum * September 5, 1793. * Limited prices of grain & other essentials to 1/3 above the 1790 prices & wages to ½ of 1790 figures. * Prices would be strictly enforced. * Hoarders rooted out and punished. * Food supplies would be secured by the army!
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Attempts to Control the Growing Crisis 1.T he printing of more assignats to pay for the war. 2.C ommittee of Public Safety [CPS] * to oversee and speed up the work of the govt. during this crisis. 3.C ommittee of General Security [CGS] * responsible for the pursuit of counter-revolutionaries, the treatment of suspects, & other internal security matters.
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Committee for Public Safety Revolutionary Tribunals. 300,000 arrested. 16,000 – 50,000 executed.
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The Levee en Masse: An Entire Nation at Arms! – 500,000 Soldiers An army based on merit, not birth!
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The Reign of Terror Terror is nothing other than justice, prompt, severe, inflexible. -- Robespierre Let terror be the order of the day !
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Law of Suspects September 17, 1793. * This law was so widely drawn that almost anyone not expressing enthusiastic support for the Republic could be placed under arrest
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Revolutionary Playing Cards
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A Republican Calendar
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A New Republican Calendar Year I1792 – 1793 II1793 – 1794 III1794 – 1795 IV1795 – 1796 V1796 – 1797 VI1797 – 1798 VII1798 – 1799 VIII1799 – 1800 IX1800 – 1801 X1801 – 1802 XI1802 – 1803 XII1803 – 1804 XIII1804 – 1805 XIV1805 The Gregorian System returned in 1806.
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Religious Terror: De-Christianization (1793-1794) The Catholic Church was linked with real or potential counter-revolution. Religion was associated with the Ancien Régime and superstitious practices. Very popular among the sans-culottes. Therefore, religion had no place in a rational, secular republic!
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The De-Christianization Program 1.The adoption of a new Republican Calendar: * abolished Sundays & religious holidays. * months named after seasonal features. * 7-day weeks replaced by 10-day decades. * the yearly calendar was dated from the creation of the Republic [Sept. 22, 1792] The Convention symbolically divorced the state from the Church!!
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The De-Christianization Program 1.The Paris Commune supported the: * destruction of religious & royal statues. * ban on clerical dress. * encouragement of the clergy to give up their vocations. 2.The Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris was turned into the “Temple of Reason.” 3.The public exercise of religion was banned.
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The “Temple of Reason” Come, holy Liberty, inhabit this temple, Become the goddess of the French people.
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The Festival of Supreme Being A new secular holiday.
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The Guillotine: An Enlightenment Tool? Oh, thou charming guillotine, You shorten kings and queens; By your influence divine, We have reconquered our rights. Come to aid of the Country And let your superb instrument Become forever permanent To destroy the impious sect. Sharpen your razor for Pitt and his agents Fill your divine sack with heads of tyrants.
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The “Monster” Guillotine The last guillotine execution in France was in 1939. The last guillotine execution in France was in 1939.
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Marie Antoinette as a Serpent
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Marie Antoinette on the Way to the Guillotine Marie Antoinette on the Way to the Guillotine
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Marie Antoinette Died in October, 1793
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Jean-Paul Marat (1744 – 1793)
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“The Death of Marat” by Jacques Louis David, 1793 David, Marat's colleague in the Convention, had visited him only the day before the murder, and he recalled the setting of the room vividly, the tub, the sheet, the green rug, the wooden packing case, and above all, the pen of the journalist. He saw in Marat a model of antique "virtue." The day after the murder, David was invited by the Convention to make arrangements for the funeral ceremony, and to paint Marat's portrait. He accepted with enthusiasm, but the decomposed state of the body made a true-to-life representation of the victim impossible. This circumstance, coupled with David's own emotional state, resulted in the creation of this idealized image.
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The Assassination of Marat by Charlotte Corday, 1793
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The Contrast: “British Liberty / French Liberty”
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The Contrast: “French Liberty / British Slavery”
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Backlash to the De-Christianization It alienated most of the population (especially in the rural areas). Robespierre never supported it. * he persuaded the Convention to reaffirm the principle of religious toleration. Decree on the “Liberty of Cults” was passed * December 6, 1793. * BUT, it had little practical effect!
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The Terror Intensified: March to July, 1794 ÔLaw of 22 Prairial [June 10, 1794]. * Trials were now limited to deciding only on liberty OR death, with defendants having no rights. * Were you an “enemy of the people?” (the law was so broadly written that almost anyone could fall within its definition!) Ô1,500 executed between June & July. Danton & the “Indulgents” Jacques Hébert & the Hérbetists Executed in April, 1794. Executed in March, 1794.
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The “Thermidorean Reaction,” 1794 July 26 Robespierre gives a speech illustrating new plots & conspiracies. * he alienated members of the CPS & CGS. * many felt threatened by his implications. July 27 the Convention arrests Robespierre. July 28 Robespierre is tried & guillotined!
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The Arrest of Robespierre
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The Revolution Consumes Its Own Children! Danton Awaits Execution, 1793 Robespierre Lies Wounded Before the Revolutionary Tribunal that will order him to be guillotined, 1794.
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Revolt of Prairial, Year III (1795)
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Constitution of the Year III (1795) Thermidorean Reaction. Conservative, monarchist victory. Elections are nullified. Martial law is imposed. New constitution creates separate bodies - Council of ancients, Council of 500. They in turn c reate the Directory 5-man oligarchy.[avoid a dictatorship]
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Characteristics of the Directory The Paris Commune was outlawed. The Law of 22 Prairial was revoked. People involved in the original Terror were now attacked. “White” Terror Inflation continues. Rule by rich bourgeois liberals. Self-indulgence frivolous culture; salons return; wild fashions. Political corruption. Revival of Catholicism.
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Political Instability: 1795-1796 April, 1795 Inflation; bread riots. October, 1795 Revolt of the right. * Vendée and Brittany revolted. * The military suppressed them.
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Coup De Fructidor Triumverate created Purge with military support New economic policies Metal based currency Taxes on luxury goods
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18 Brumaire (Nov. 9, 1799) Coup d’état by Napoleon. Approved by a plebiscite in December. Sieyes: Confidence from below; authority from above.
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