1 / 24

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Day 1 of 3

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Day 1 of 3. TWO WALLPAPERS. French flag, known as “the Tricolor” Adopted in 1790 at the start of the Revolution Remains the French flag today. TWO WALLPAPERS. Fleur-de-lis Symbol of various monarchs, especially in France

kathryng
Télécharger la présentation

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Day 1 of 3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE FRENCH REVOLUTIONDay 1 of 3

  2. TWO WALLPAPERS • French flag, known as “the Tricolor” • Adopted in 1790 at the start of the Revolution • Remains the French flag today

  3. TWO WALLPAPERS • Fleur-de-lis • Symbol of various monarchs, especially in France • France settled Louisiana, so the symbol is often used in Louisiana & New Orleans culture

  4. ROMAN NUMERALS • Monarchs & popes often re-use names • Roman numerals used to number them • Current pope is Benedict XVI (16th) • France had 17 kings named Louis • In French, Louis is pronounced LU●ee • Louis #14-18 relevant to French Rev. • Called Louis XIV, XV, XVI, XVII, XVIII

  5. VOCABULARY

  6. VOCABULARY • Estates = French social classes • Not just “rich” or “poor” • Defined one’s legal rights and privileges • Clergy = all church officials • France was Roman Catholic • No separation of church and state • Officially employed by the king • Taille (TAH●yuh) = main tax in France

  7. VOCABULARY • Bourgeoisie (BURZH●WAH●ZEE) • Middle class of French society • Lawyers, public officials, doctors, writers, etc. • Maybe richer than nobles, but legally inferior • Estates-General • French congress-like legislature • Only called into session when King wanted it • Didn’t meet between 1614-1789

  8. BEFORE THE REVOLUTION1614 – 1789Absolute Monarchy

  9. LOUIS XIV • Ruled 1643-1715 • Model of Absolutism • “L’etat c’est moi” (“I am the state”) • The “Sun King” • Left huge debt from personal & military expenses

  10. LOUIS XVI • Ruled 1774-1793 • Grandson of Louis XV • Financially supported the American Rev. to enrage the British • Bankrupted France • Last absolute monarch of France

  11. MARIE ANTOINETTE • Austrian princess & wife of Louis XVI • Spent incredible amounts of money on personal luxuries • Commoners saw her as a symbol of royal apathy to their issues

  12. SOCIAL STRUCTURE Group Pop. Land Taxes 1st Estate 0.5% 10% 0% (Clergy) 2nd Estate 1.5% 25% 0% (Nobility) 3rd Estate 98% 65% 100% (others)

  13. FIRST ESTATE: CLERGY Cardinals & bishops = rich nobles • No complaints about Absolutism Local priests = poor commoners • Wanted king to be kinder to peasantry

  14. SECOND ESTATE: NOBLES • Educated & cultured • Believed Enlightenment principles • Favored limited monarchy, not Absolutism • Wanted a voice in government (taxation) • Wanted bourgeois to stay beneath them

  15. THIRD ESTATE: COMMONERS Bourgeoisie (20-25%) = rich • Educated & cultured • Believed Enlightenment principles • Favored limited monarchy, not Absolutism • Wanted a voice in government (taxation) • Wanted ability to ascend to become Nobles Peasants (75-80%) = poor • Uneducated & uncultured • Liked Absolutism /“If only the king knew!” • Wanted relief: food, land, socks, etc.

  16. LOUIS XVI’s PROBLEM • Spent lots of money on palaces & fashion • Let Marie Antoinette spend lots of money • Spent lots of money on foreign wars, including the American Revolution • Finished bankrupting the country • Needed higher taxes but Nobility resisted • Decided to call the Estates-General to give the people a voice, but get his way

  17. THE ESTATES-GENERAL • First Estate ≈ 300 delegates • Second Estate ≈ 300 delegates • Third Estate ≈ 600 delegates • Traditionally one vote per estate • 1st & 2nd estate outvote 3rd (2-1) • 3rd estate demands one vote per delegate • Debated the issue for six long weeks

  18. THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY June 17, 1789 Third Estate declared itself the National Assembly (replacing the Estates-General) Third Estate locked out of meeting hall Met at a nearby indoor tennis court Tennis Court Oath – vowed to continue meeting until they had a new constitution Mild rebellion / no overthrow of monarch

  19. WHERE WAS LOUIS?!?! Monarchs didn’t live in major cities Before the invention of plumbing, sewers, & trash collection, cities were unbearable Louis lived in the Palace of Versailles, about ten miles west of Paris This is why he seemed to be so blind to the problems of his people

  20. THE PALACE OF VERSAILLES

  21. STORMING THE BASTILLE From safety of Versailles, Louis prepared his army to attack the National Assembly June 14, 1789 – Parisians attack the Bastille, a royal prison/armory (weapons) Some royal soldiers join in the attack Warden killed, decapitated, and had his head carried around on a pike Revolts in Paris & throughout countryside

  22. BASTILLE DAY = JUNE 14

  23. THREAT OF INVASION European monarchs were intense rivals However, they also didn’t want their own people to get any ideas from the French Good chance that foreign kings would send armies to stop the French rebellion The National Assembly had to act fast to get people on its side, in case of invasion

  24. END OF THE ESTATES Abolished all legal privileges of the Clergy Abolished all legal privileges of the Nobles

More Related