Destruction of the Symbols of the Monarchy,
Place de la Concorde, August JO, 1793, an oil painting on canvas by Pierre-Antoine Demachy; Musee Carnavalet,
Paris.
Hatred of the monarchy in France increased because of King Louis XVI's efforts to end the
revolution. Louis was executed on Jan. 21, 1793, and the revolution became
more extreme. About seven months later, a crowd in Paris burned a crown and a
throne that had belonged to the king.
The Death of Marat i1793), an oil painting on canvas by Jacques Louis David; The Royal
Museum of Fine Arts, Brussels, Belgium.
The death of
Marat spurred on the Reign of Terror. Charlotte Corday, a Girondist
sympathizer, fatally stabbed the Jacobin leader while he took a bath.
French Revolution brought about great changes in the society and government of France. The
revolution, which lasted from 1789 to 1799, also had far-reaching effects on
the rest of Europe. It introduced democratic ideals to France but did not make
the nation a democracy. However, it ended supreme rule by French kings and
strengthened the middle class. After the revolution began, no European kings,
nobles, or other privileged groups could ever again take their powers for
granted or ignore the ideals of liberty and equality.
The revolution began with a government
financial crisis but quickly became a movement of reform and violent change.
In one of the early events, a crowd in Paris captured the Bastille, a royal
fortress and prison, which had become a symbol of oppression. A series of
elected legislatures then took control of the government. King Louis XVI and
his wife, Marie Antoinette, were executed. Thousands of others met the same
fate in a period called the Reign of Terror. The revolution ended when Napoleon
Bonaparte, a French general, took over the government.
Background. Various social, political, and economic conditions led to the revolution
in France. These conditions included much dissatisfaction among the lower and
middle classes, interest in new ideas about government, and financial problems
caused by the costs of wars.
Legal divisions among social groups that
had existed for hundreds of years created much discontent. According to the
law, French society consisted of three groups called estates.
Members of the clergy made up the first estate, nobles the second, and the rest
of the people the third. The peasants, who earned very little, formed the
largest group in the third estate. The third estate also included the working
people of the cities and a large and prosperous middle class made up chiefly of
merchants, lawyers, and government officials.
The third estate resented certain
advantages of the first two estates. The clergy and nobles did not have to pay
most taxes. The third estate had to provide almost all the country's tax
revenue. Many members of the middle class were also troubled by their social
status. They were among the most economically important people in French
society but were not recognized as such because they belonged to the third
estate.
The new ideas about government challenged
France's absplute monarchy. Under this system, the king had almost
unlimited authority. Fie governed by divine right— that is, the
monarch's right to rule was thought to come from God. There were checks on the
king, but these came mainly from a few groups of aristocrats in the par-
lements (high courts). During the 1700s, French writers called philosophes
and philosophers from other countries raised new ideas about freedom. Some of
these
thinkers, including Jean Jacques Rousseau,
suggested that the right to govern came from the people.
The financial crisis developed because
France had gone deeply into debt to finance fighting in the Seven Years' War
(1756-1763) and the American Revolution (1775-1783). By 1788, the government
was almost bankrupt. The Parlement of Paris insisted that King Louis XVI could
borrow more money or raise taxes only by calling a meeting of the
Estates-Ceneral. This body, also called States-Ceneral, was made up of
representatives of the three estates, and had last met in 1614. Unwillingly,
the king called the meeting.
The revolution begins. The States-General opened on May 5,1789, at Versailles, near Paris. Most
members of the first two estates wanted each of the three estates to take up
matters and vote on them separately by estate. The third estate had as many
representatives as the other two estates combined. It insisted that all the estates
be merged into one national assembly and that each representative have one
vote. The third estate also wanted the States-General to write a constitution.
The king and the first two estates refused
the demands of the third estate. In June 1789, the representatives of the
third estate declared themselves the National Assembly of France. They
gathered at a tennis court and pledged not to disband until they had written a
constitution. This vow became known as the Oath of the Tennis Court. Louis XVI
then allowed the three estates to join together as the National Assembly. But
he began to gather troops around Paris to break up the Assembly.
Meanwhile, the masses of France also took
action. On July 14,1789, a huge crowd of Parisians rushed to the Bastille. They
believed they would find arms and ammunition there for use in defending
themselves against the king's army. The people captured the Bastille and began
to tear it down. At the same time, leaders in Paris formed a revolutionary city
government. Massive peasant uprisings against nobles also broke out in the
countryside. A few nobles decided to flee France, and many more followed
during the next five years. These people
were called emigres because
they emigrated. The uprisings in town and countryside saved the National Assembly
from being disbanded by the king.
The National Assembly. In August 1789, the Assembly adopted the Decrees of August 4 and the
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. The decrees abolished
some feudal dues that the peasants owed their landlords, the tax advantages of
the clergy and nobles, and regional privileges. The declaration guaranteed
the same basic rights to all citizens, including "liberty, property,
security, and resistance to oppression," as well as representative
government.
The Assembly later drafted a constitution
that made France a limited monarchy with a one-house legislature. France was
divided into 83 regions called departments, each with elected councils for
local government. But the right to vote and hold public office was limited to
citizens who paid a certain amount in taxes.
The Assembly seized the property of the
Roman Catholic Church. The church lands amounted to about a tenth of the
country's land. Much of the church land was sold to rich peasants and members
of the middle class. Money from the land sales was used to pay some of the
nation's huge debt. The Assembly then reorganized the Catholic Church in
France, required the election of priests and bishops by the voters, and closed
the Church's monasteries and convents. Complete religious tolerance was
extended to Protestants and Jews. The Assembly also reformed the court system
by requiring the election of judges. By September 1791, the National Assembly
believed that the revolution was over. It disbanded at the end of the month to
make way for the newly elected Legislative Assembly.
The Legislative Assembly. The new Assembly, made up mainly of representatives of the middle class,
opened on Oct. 1,1791. It soon faced several challenges. The government's
stability depended on cooperation between the king and the legislature. But
Louis XVI remained opposed to the revolution. He asked other rulers for help
in stopping it, and plotted with aristocrats and emigres to overthrow the new
government. In addition, public opinion became bitterly divided. The revolution's
religious policy angered many Catholics. Other people demanded stronger
measures against opponents of the revolution.
The new government also faced a foreign
threat. In April 1792, it went to war against Austria and Prussia. These
countries wished to restore the powers of the king and emigres. The foreign
armies defeated French forces in the early fighting and invaded France. Louis
XVI and his supporters clearly hoped for the victory of the invaders. As a
result, angry revolutionaries in Paris and other areas demanded that the king
be dethroned.
In August 1792, the people of Paris
imprisoned Louis XV! and his family. Louis's removal ended the constitutional
monarchy. The Assembly then called fora National Convention to be elected on
the basis of universal adult male suffrage, and for a new constitution.
Meanwhile, French armies suffered more
military defeats. Parisians feared that the invading armies would soon reach
the city. Parisians also feared an uprising by the large number of people in
the city's prisons. In the first week of September, small numbers of Parisians
took the law into their own hands and executed more than 1,000 prisoners. These
executions, called the September Massacres, turned many people in France and
Europe against the revolution. A victory by the French Army at Valmy on
September 20 helped end the crisis.
The National Convention. The king's removal led to a new stage in the revolution. The first stage
had been a liberal middle-class reform movement based on a constitutional
monarchy. The second stage was organized around principles of democracy. The
National Convention, chosen through an election open to nearly all adult
French males, opened on Sept. 21,1792, and declared France a republic. The
republic's official slogan was "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity."
Louis XVI was placed on trial for
betraying the country. The National Convention found him guilty of treason,
and a slim majority voted for the death penalty. The king was beheaded on the
guillotine on Jan. 21,1793.
The revolution gradually grew more
radical—that is, more open to extreme and violent change. Radical leaders came
into prominence. In the Convention, they were known as the Mountain because
they sat on the high benches at the rear of the hall. Leaders of the Mountain
were Maximilien Robespierre, Georges Jacques Danton, and Jean Paul Marat. Their
bitter opponents were known as the Gironde because several came from a
department of that name. The majority of the deputies in the Convention was
known as the Plain. The Mountain dominated a powerful political club called
the Jacobin Club.
Growing disputes between the Mountain and
the Gironde led to a struggle for power, and the Mountain won. In June 1793,
the Convention expelled and arrested the leading Girondists. In turn, the
Girondists' supporters rebelled against the Convention. Charlotte Corday, a
Girondist sympathizer, assassinated Jean Paul Marat in July 1793. In time, the
Convention's forces defeated the Girondists' supporters. The Jacobin leaders
created a new citizens' army to fight rebellion in France and a war against
other European countries. Compulsory military service provided the troops, and
rapid promotion of talented soldiers provided the leadership for this strong
army.
Terror and equality. The Jacobin government was both dictatorial and democratic. It was
dictatorial because it suspended civil rights and political freedom during the
emergency. The Convention's Committee of Public Safety took over actual rule of
France, controlling local governments, the armed forces, and other institutions.
The committee governed during the most
terrible period of the revolution. Its leaders included Robespierre, Lazare
Carnot, and Bertrand Barere. The Convention declared a policy of terror
against rebels, supporters of the king or the Gironde, and anyone else who
publicly disagreed with official policy.
In time, hundreds of thousands of suspects
filled the nation's jails. Courts handed down about 18,000 death sentences in
what was called the Reign of Terror. Paris became accustomed to the rattle of
two-wheeled carts called tumbrels as they carried people to the
guillotine. Victims of this period included Marie Antoinette, widow of Louis
XVI.
The Jacobins, however, also followed
democratic principles and extended the benefits of the revolution beyond the
middle class. Shopkeepers, peasants, and other workers actively participated in
political life for the first time. The Convention authorized public assistance
for the poor, free primary education for boys and girls, price controls to
protect consumers from rapid inflation, and taxes based on income. It also
called for the abolition of slavery in France's colonies. Most of these
reforms, however, were never fully carried out because of later changes in the
government.
The revolution ends. In time, the radicals began to struggle for power among themselves.
Robespierre succeeded in having Danton and other former leaders executed.
Many people in France wished to end the Reign of Terror, the Jacobin
dictatorship, and the democratic revolution. Robespierre's enemies in the
Convention finally attacked him as a tyrant on July 27 (9 Thermidor by the new
French calendar), 1794. He was executed the next day. The Reign of Terror ended
after Robespierre's death. Conservatives gained control of the Convention and
drove the Jacobins from power. Most of the democratic reforms of the past two
years were quickly abolished in what became known as the Thermidorian Reaction.
The Convention, which had adopted a
democratic constitution in 1793, replaced that document with a new one in 1795.
The government formed under this constitution was called the Directory,
referring to the five-man executive directory that governed along with a two-
house legislature. France was still a republic, but once again only citizens
who paid a certain amount in taxes could vote.
Meanwhile, France was winning victories on
the battlefield. French armies had pushed back the invaders and crossed into
Belgium, Germany, and Italy.
The Directory began meeting in October
1795. But it was troubled by war, economic problems, and opposition from
supporters of monarchy and former Jacobins. In October 1799, a number of
political leaders plotted to overthrow the Directory. They needed military
support and turned to Napoleon Bonaparte, a French general who had become a
hero in a military campaign in Italy in 1796 and 1797. Bonaparte seized control
of the government on Nov. 9 (18 Brumaire in the revolutionary calendar),
1799, ending the revolution.
The French Revolution brought France into
opposition with much of Europe. The monarchs who ruled the other countries
feared the spread of democratic ideals. The revolution left the French people
in extreme disagreement about the best form of government for their country.
By 1799, most were probably weary of political conflict altogether. But the
revolution created the long- lasting foundations for a unified state, a strong
central government, and a free society dominated by the middle class and the
landowners.
Related articles:
Biographies
Corday, Charlotte
Danton, Georges Jacques
Du Barry, Madame
Lafayette, Marquis de
Louis (XVI)
Marat, Jean Paul
Marie Antoinette
Mirabeau, Comte de
Napoleon I
Robespierre
Roland de la Platiere, M. J.
Sieyes, Emmanuel Joseph
Talleyrand
Background and causes
Bastille
Divine right of kings
Estates-General
Rights of Man, Declaration of the
Rousseau, Jean J.
Versailles
The revolution
Emigres
Girondiss
Guillotine
Jacobins
Marseillaise
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Swiss guard
Tricolor
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