1 / 57

Common Causes of Revolutions

Common Causes of Revolutions. A Study of Crane Brinton’s Theory. Brinton’s Theory. Historian Crane Brinton, after studying many different revolutions, came up with a theory on how revolutions have similar conditions in place prior to the revolution occurring.

moonb
Télécharger la présentation

Common Causes of Revolutions

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. Common Causes of Revolutions A Study of Crane Brinton’s Theory

  2. Brinton’s Theory Historian Crane Brinton, after studying many different revolutions, came up with a theory on how revolutions have similar conditions in place prior to the revolution occurring. He also examined the course revolutions take and came up with a series of steps that most revolutions follow.

  3. Brinton’s Theory Brinton concluded that countries that encounter revolution have similar conditions in place before revolt occurs The revolutionary “fever” begins with certain “symptoms” Lets look at the “symptoms” or factors/conditions that Crane Brinton believes countries on the cusp of revolution exhibit.

  4. Brinton’s Theory-Common Factors/Conditionsof Revolutions 1. People from all social classes are discontented 2. People feel restless and held down by unacceptable restrictions in society, religion, the economy or the government 3. The scholars and thinkers give up on the way their society operates 4. The government does not respond to the needs of its society 5. The government is unable to get enough support from any group to save itself 6. The government cannot organize its finances correctly and is either going bankrupt and/or trying to tax heavily and unjustly

  5. Anatomy of a Revolution Case Study: The French Revolution The French Revolution is a good case study of Crane Brinton’s theory. Let’s take in in-depth look at France before the Revolution. While you learn about France prior to Revolution, try to identify Brinton’s common factors/conditions. Ask yourself, does pre-revolutionary France contain all six conditions? Which ones are not present? After you view the case study on the French Revolution, you will be asked to identify the factors/conditions present, and those that are not. The following chart can be a great note taking format while you read about the French Revolution

  6. Case Study: French Revolution By the late eighteenth century, France was on the brink of revolution. The reasons had been building up over many years, and mainly concerned the great divide between the nobility and the clergy, and everybody else. Many scholars and thinkers from the Enlightenment had given up on French society. The French population was divided into three estates. This division perpetuated the looming revolution.

  7. The Three Estates THE FIRST AND SECOND ESTATE- Nobility and Clergy • Nobles had almost complete authority over peasants. • Nobles did not have to do military service. • Nobles were exempt from most taxes. • Nobles collected tolls from people using roads and markets. • Many nobles and clergy lived in great luxury in chateaux and palaces.

  8. THE THIRD ESTATE- Peasants • - Peasants were forced to do military service. • - Peasants could not hunt or fish on nobles’ estates. • Peasants had to pay taxes to their lord, the king and the Church • Peasants had to use the lord’s mill, oven, and winepress and • pay for them. • - Peasants made up 90% of the population. • The Kings, through their ministers and • local officials RULED ABSOLUTELY. • -This meant that they had complete • authority over France. • -The ‘parliament’ (Estates General) had • not been called since 1614!

  9. As if the system of estates in France wasn’t enough to cause resentment among the lower classes, towards the end of the 1700s, France was experiencing other problems too. Problem 1 – MONEY By 1787, the French government was bankrupt. It was 4000 million lives in debt. France had spent a lot of money fighting costly wars, but had nothing to show for it. Many people accused the royals, especially Queen Marie-Antoinette of spending too much money on luxuries. Others said that the tax system was corrupt and some tax-collectors did not hand all their taxes over to the government. In 1787 the King asked the nobility to help him reformthe tax system. As we already know, members of the first and second estate did not have to pay taxes. King Louis XVI wanted them to start paying some of them. It is not surprising that they refused to do so.

  10. Problem 2 – Bad harvest Most people in France depended heavily on agriculture and farming in the 1700s. In the years 1787 – 1789, terrible weather, heavy rain, hard winters and extremely hot summers led to three very bad harvests in France. This led to peasants and farmers having smaller incomes, while food prices rose sharply. The poor harvests also meant that many French farmers became unemployed. Many poorer people were starving, but could not afford food and could not find a job. Meanwhile, the nobility, the clergy and King Louis and his family continued to live in the lap of luxury in their palaces and chateaux.

  11. Problem 3 – Louis calls the Estates General. May – June 1789 In August 1788, King Louis XVI called the Estates General(a gathering of representatives from all three estates) for the first time since 1614. There were 1100 members, or deputies, divided into three orders. nobles, clergy, and the third estate (which represented millions of ordinary French people) only contained half the deputies The king hoped the Estates General would approve new taxes. The nobles and the clergy hoped they would control the affairs to continue their privileged lifestyles. The middle classes hoped for an English style democracy. The peasants hoped for solutions to their problems and were asked by their representatives to draw up lists of complaints The King summoned the Estates General to Versailles, where he had a body of troops. Some saw this as an attempt to frighten the representatives. He did not present them with any proposals for discussion, so they were left to think up their own ideas. Louis did not have control of the meeting.

  12. Problem 4 – The National Assembly, June 1789 The deputies of the third estate, having grown tired of the arguments over how each order should vote, declared themselves a ‘national assembly’. They represented 96% of the population and felt that they were the ‘true’ parliament. They wanted to draw up a constitutionshowing how France was to be governed • On June 20th, the members of this assembly met at the royal tennis court. They pledged an oath (The Tennis Court Oath) not to leave until the King agreed to meet their demands. • He gave way and deputies of the first and second estates became part of the National Assembly.

  13. Using the chart showing Brinton’s common factors/conditions, You will identify if each factor/condition was present in France before the revolution. Click in the “YES” column next to the conditions you think apply to the French Revolution. Click in the “NO” column for conditions/factors you do not think apply to the French Revolution. Test Your Knowledge

  14. CORRECT! People from all social classes are discontented The First Estate: The Clergy The Second Estate: The Nobility -Louis XVI wants them to start paying taxes, which they have never done before • Taxed heavily by the church, lords, and King • Forced to do military service • Lived life of poverty while nobility and clergy lived lives of luxury The Third Estate: 90% of the population

  15. Political corruption at local and national levels Harsh and restrictive laws Nobility held key positions in government Offices could be bought and sold Abuse of system by clergy Church owned 10% of French land Charged exorbitant rents and fees for land use Carte blanche – blank papers that were automatic authorization to do what they wanted People feel restless and held down by unacceptable restrictions in society, religion, the economy or the government

  16. The scholars and thinkers give up on the way their society operates Scholars and Enlightenment Thinkers Locke Rousseau Montesquieu

  17. The government does not respond to the needs of its society • Did not respond to needs of peasants • Most in poverty, yet still taxed heavily • Years of bad harvests lead to higher food prices, yet monarchs host parties and build palaces • Did not respond to Estates-General • Nobility wants more control • Third Estate wants more representation • Louis XVI locks the Third Estate out

  18. The government is unable to get enough support from any group to save itself • All Estates unhappy with Louis XVI and his lack of authority • First and Second Estates mad about taxes and his financial excesses • Third Estate will not be ignored

  19. The government cannot organize its finances correctly and is either going bankrupt and/or trying to tax heavily and unjustly • Monarchs spend regardless of financial situation • Endless wars are expensive • Seven Years War • American Revolution

  20. Great Job! Now let’s look at some other revolutions and see if you can apply Brinton’s theory to them as well! Your next task will be to read about what historians call the Atlantic Revolutions. They include the Haitian Revolution, the Venezuelan Revolution and the American Revolution.

  21. Atlantic Revolutions As you read about each of the revolutions, be sure to keep in mind Brinton’s theory about common factors/conditions that lead up to the revolution. Lets get started!

  22. The Haitian Revolution Atlantic Revolutions Your first reading will be on the Haitian Revolution. Click on the icon below to view the reading. Remember Brinton’s theory as you read!

  23. The Venezuelan Revolution Atlantic Revolutions Next, lets read about the Venezuelan Revolution. Again, remember to look for the common factors/conditions!

  24. The American Revolution Atlantic Revolutions The final revolution you will need to read about and identify the common factors/conditions from Brinton's theory is the American Revolution. Click on the icon below!

  25. SORRY! Are you sure this factor/condition was not present? Look over the information again!

  26. Atlantic Revolutions Good Job! You’re almost done! Now let’s test what you have learned about Crane Brinton’s theory about common factors/conditions that lead to revolution.

  27. The following table looks at the factors causing revolution as hypothesized by Crane Brinton. Read each factor and then decide whether each country had that factor/condition present prior to its revolution. Click on the appropriate box if you found that common factor/condition in the reading

  28. Click Here To Check Your Answers

  29. Correct! This factor/condition was present before revolution.

  30. The American Revolution The Venezuelan Revolution The Haitian Revolution SORRY! This was not a factor/condition that led to revolution. Click on the appropriate document below to review the reading

  31. What did you learn? Crane Brinton developed a theory about the common factors/conditions that are present countries on the brink of revolution. You tested his theory by looking at four different revolutions!

  32. What did you learn? The common factors/conditions are not present in ALL revolutions, however many of them are common. The common factors/conditions developed by Crane Brinton are……..

  33. 1. People from all social classes are discontented • 2. People feel restless and held down by unacceptable restrictions in society, religion, the economy or the government • 3. The scholars and thinkers give up on the way their society operates • 4. The government does not respond to the needs of its society • 5. The government is unable to get enough support from any group to save itself • 6. The government cannot organize its finances correctly and is either going bankrupt and/or trying to tax heavily and unjustly

  34. Congratulations!You have successfully completed this lesson References: Causes of French Revolution: Adapted from Miss Lavelle at www.SchoolHistory.co.uk Haitian, Venezuelan, and American Revolution Readings adapted from: World History for Us All Big Era 7 Panorama Unit http://worldhistoryforusall.sdsu.edu/

More Related