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It is not so good to be king anymore…. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it.

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Presentation on theme: "It is not so good to be king anymore…. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it."— Presentation transcript:

1 It is not so good to be king anymore…

2 It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity… -- Charles Dickens A Tale of Two Cities -- Charles Dickens A Tale of Two Cities

3 Europe on the Eve of the French Revolution

4 Causes of the French Revolution Debt Weak King Social Structure The Enlightenment and American Revolution Hunger

5 Debt Louis XIV- Wars and Versailles American Revolution Royal spending- Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette

6 a Urban Commoner’s Budget: – Food 80% – Rent 25% – Tithe 10% – Taxes 35% – Clothing 20% – TOTAL 170% a King’s Budget: – Interest 50% – Army 25% – Versailles 25% – Coronation 10% – Loans 25% – Admin. 25% – TOTAL 160% Financial Problems in France, 1789

7 French Budget, 1774

8 The French Urban Poor

9 It’s good to be the King 1774 Louis XVI- 19 yrs. Weak- many problems Wants to be an Absolute Monarch “After me comes the flood” Marie Antoinette- “Madam Deficit”

10 The French Monarchy: 1774 - 1793 Marie Antoinette & Louis XVI

11 Marie Antoinette and the Royal Children

12 Marie Antoinette’s “Peasant Cottage”

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14 The Necklace Scandal YCardinal Louis René Édouard de Rohan YThe Countess de LaMotte 1,600,000 livres [$100 million today]

15 Enlightenment and Revolution The Philosophes were mainly French or living in France Locke, Montesquieu, Voltaire, Rousseau American Revolution- Liberty, Brotherhood, Equality

16 1 st Estate: 10% vs. ½% 2 nd Estate: 35% vs. 11/2 % 3 rd Estate: 97% Bourgeois 7% The Old Regime

17 Where is the tax money?

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19 Lettres de Cachet YThe French king could warrant imprisonment or death in a signed letter under his seal.  A carte-blanche warrant. YCardinal Fleury issued 80,000 during the reign of Louis XV YEliminated in 1790.

20 Bankrupt By 1788 Tax Plan Estates General- May 1789

21 Old Regime Map, 1789

22 Commoners 3rd Estate Aristocracy 2nd Estate Clergy 1st Estate The Suggested Voting Pattern: Voting by Estates 1 1 1 Louis XIV insisted that the ancient distinction of the three orders be conserved in its entirety.

23 The Estates General Last meeting 1614 The Abbey Sieyes- “What is the 3 rd Estate” Order or Head? May 1789- Bread and rain

24 Commoners 3rd Estate Aristocracy 2nd Estate Clergy 1st Estate The Number of Representatives in the Estates General: Vote by Head! 300 648

25 Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes 1 st What is the Third Estate? Everything! 2 nd What has it been heretofore in the political order? Nothing! 3 rd What does it demand? To become something therein! Abbé Sieyès 1748-1836

26 Convening the Estates General May, 1789

27 The National Assembly June 17, 1789- National Assembly Tennis Court Oath- June 20 June 27, Louis orders 1 st and 2 nd Mercenaries

28 “ The Third Estate Awakens” YThe commoners finally presented their credentials not as delegates of the Third Estate, but as “representatives of the nation.” YThey proclaimed themselves the “National Assembly” of France.

29 “ The Tennis Court Oath” by Jacques Louis David June 20, 1789

30 The Bastille Bread shortages, inflation, unemployment July 14, 1789 Lafayette and the King

31 Storming the Bastille, July 14, 1789 YA rumor that the king was planning a military coup against the National Assembly. Y18 died. Y73 wounded. Y7 guards killed. YIt held 7 prisoners [5 ordinary criminals & 2 madmen].

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33 The Great Fear Duke of Orleans July and August Peasants attacked Declaration of the Rights of Man and August 4 Decrees

34 The Great Fear: Peasant Revolt (July 20, 1789)

35 The Path of the “Great Fear”

36 Night Session of August 4, 1789 Y Before the night was over:  The feudal regime in France had been abolished.  All Frenchmen were, at least in principle, subject to the same laws and the same taxes and eligible for the same offices. Equality & Meritocracy! Equality & Meritocracy!

37 National Constituent Assembly 1789 - 1791 August Decrees August 4-11, 1789 (A renunciation of aristocratic privileges!) Liberté! Egalité! Fraternité!

38 BUT..... Y Feudal dues were not renounced outright [this had been too strong a threat to the principle of private property!] Y Peasants would compensate their landlords through a series of direct payments for obligations from which they had supposedly been freed.  Therefore, the National Assembly made revolutionary gestures, but remained essentially moderate. Their Goal Their Goal Safeguard the right of private property!!

39 The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen August 26, 1789 VLiberty! VProperty! VResistance to oppression! VThomas Jefferson was in Paris at this time.

40 The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen Posed New Dilemmas 1.Did women have equal rights with men? 2.What about free blacks in the colonies? 3.How could slavery be justified if all men were born free? 4.Did religious toleration of Protestants and Jews include equal political rights?

41 Olympe de Gouges (1745-1793) Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Citizen (1791) VWomen played a vital role in the Revolution. VBut, The Declaration of the Rights of Man did NOT extend the rights and protections of citizenship to women.

42 Bread March Sept 15 – Tricolor trampled Oct 5- Bread March- 60,000

43 The Tricolor (1789) The WHITE of the Bourbons + the RED & BLUE of Paris. Citizen!

44 The Tricolor is the Fashion!

45 The “Liberty Cap”: Bonne Rouge

46 Revolutionary Playing Cards

47 March of the Women, October 5-6, 1789 We want the baker, the baker’s wife and the baker’s boy!

48 The “October Days” (1789) The king was thought to be surrounded by evil advisors at Versailles so he was forced to move to Paris and reside at the Tuileries Palace.

49 Planting the Tree of Liberty 1790

50 The Church And the Revolution The Church And the Revolution

51 How to Finance the New Govt.? 1. Confiscate Church Lands (1790) One of the most controversial decisions of the entire revolutionary period.

52 The Civil Constitution of the Clergy V Government run Churches. V The church was reorganized:  Parish priests  elected by the district assemblies.  Bishops  named by the department assemblies. Pope Pius VI [1775-1799]

53 July 12, 1790 Jurying vs. Non-Jurying [refractory] Clergy The oath of allegiance permanently divided the Catholic population

54 2. Print Assignats V Issued by the National Constituent Assembly. V Interest-bearing notes which had the church lands as security.

55 Depreciation of the Assignat V Whoever acquired them were entitled to certain privileges in the purchase of church land. V The state would retire the notes as the land was sold. V They began circulating as paper currency.  Government printed more  INFLATION [they lost 99% of their value ultimately].  Therefore, future governments paid off their creditors with cheap money.

56 Louis XVI “Accepts” the Constitution & the National Assembly. 1791

57 The French Constitution of 1791: A Bourgeois Government VThe king got the “suspensive” veto [which prevented the passage of laws for 4 years].  He could not pass laws.  His ministers were responsible for their own actions.  A permanent, elected, single chamber National Assembly.  Had the power to grant taxation.  An independent judiciary.

58 The French Constitution of 1791: A Bourgeois Government  “ Active” Citizen [who pays taxes amounting to 3 days labor] could vote vs. “Passive” Citizen.  1/3 of adult males were denied the franchise.  Domestic servants were also excluded. VA newly elected LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY. GOAL  Make sure that the country was not turned over to the mob!

59 Legislative Assembly Jacobins Radicals- Sans Culottes- The Mountain- the Left Moderate Conservatives- Girondists - Right

60 The Political Spectrum Jacobins Montagnards (“The Mountain”) Girondists Monarchíen (Royalists) 1790s: The Plain (swing votes) TODAY:

61 The Jacobins Jacobin Meeting House  They held their meetings in the library of a former Jacobin monastery in Paris.  Started as a debating society.  Membership mostly middle class.  Created a vast network of clubs.

62 The Sans-Culottes: The Parisian Working Class  Small shopkeepers.  Tradesmen.  Artisans. They shared many of the ideals of their middle class representatives in government!

63 Sans Culottes

64 83 Revolutionary Departments February 26, 1790

65 The Royal Family Attempts to Flee Y June, 1791  Helped by the Swedish Count Hans Axel von Fusen [Marie Antoinette’s lover ]. Y Headed toward the Luxembourg border. Y The King was recognized at Varennes, near the border

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67 Foreign Involvement Declaration of Pillnitz Europe’s Attitude

68 Sir Edmund Burke (1790): Reflections on the Revolution in France The conservative response to the French Revolution

69 The First Coalition & The Brunswick Manifesto (August 3, 1792) FRANCE 1792- 1797 AUSTRIA PRUSSIA BRITAIN SPAIN PIEDMONT Duke of Brunswick  if the Royal Family is harmed, Paris will be leveled!! This military crisis undermined the new Legislative Assembly.

70 French Soldiers VThe French armies were ill-prepared for the conflict. V½ of the officer corps had emigrated. VMany men disserted. VNew recruits were enthusiastic, but ill-trained. VFrench troops often broke ranks and fled in disorder.

71 French Expansion: 1791-1799


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