1 / 21

THE FRENCH REV O LUTION

THE FRENCH REV O LUTION. Four Phases of the French Revolution. LONG TERM CAUSES. SHORT TERM CAUSES. National Assembly (1791-1792 ) – p 78 . THIRD ESTATE WANTED TO CHANGE THE VOTING SYSTEM . Tennis Court Oath. Tennis Court Oath.

shino
Télécharger la présentation

THE FRENCH REV O LUTION

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 REVOLUTION

  2. Four Phases of the French Revolution

  3. LONG TERM CAUSES

  4. SHORT TERM CAUSES

  5. National Assembly (1791-1792) – p 78

  6. THIRD ESTATE WANTED TO CHANGE THE VOTING SYSTEM

  7. Tennis Court Oath

  8. Tennis Court Oath • Louis XVI did not actually want the written constitution he had agreed to and sent troops to close down the assembly. National Assembly (1789-1791) • The people (mobs) stormed the Bastille prison in response The Great Fear People in the countryside thought the nobles would burn their crops and starve them into submission. The peasants attacked the nobles and burned many of their chateauxs or castles.

  9. Main Achievements of the National Assembly • The 1791 Constitution in which the king would no longer be an absolute monarch, but subject to parliament in a constitutional monarchy • Political powers were divided (legislative, executive and judicial) and limited suffrage introduced. • The declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen: • Freedom of religion • Freedom of speech • “Liberty, equality, fraternity!” • Guaranteed property rights • Right to a fair trial

  10. This new government became known as the Legislative Assembly • Legislative Assembly (1791-1792) -p 79 • Democratic features • France became a limited monarchy • All laws were created by the Legislative Assembly • Feudalism was abolished • Undemocratic features • Voting was limited to taxpayers • Offices were reserved for property owners • Church lands were seized, divided, and sold to peasants • Church officials were elected by the people, with salaries paid by the government • (2/3 of Church officials fled the country rather than swear allegiance to this) • All special privileges of the First and Second Estates were abolished

  11. The new government, however, had many opponents both inside and outside of France. • Royal family looked to Austria (Ruled by Emperor Leopold, Marie Antoinette’s brother) for help • In June, 1791, they were caught trying to escape to Austria • Nobles who fled the revolution lived abroad as émigrés • They hoped that, with foreign help, the Old Regime could be restored in France • Church officials wanted Church lands, rights, and privileges restored • Some devout Catholic peasants also supported the Church Marie Antoinette • Other European monarchs were frightened the revolution would spread to their own countries. • France was invaded by Austria and Prussia.

  12. Two main political forces appeared: the Girondins and the Jacobins (also known as the Montagnard) • The Girondins were moderates and wanted to spread the revolution to other European countries (represented the provincial middle class and intellectuals). • The Jacobins were radicalsled by Marat, Danton, and Robespierre (represented the urban working classes and were supported by the sans-culottes of Paris). Robespierre • People suspected the king of wanting to lose the war against Austria so he could restore Absolute power • The Paris mobs attacked the Palace and demanded the king was removed and a Republic established. France was declared a republic and the new government was called the National Convention. sans-culottes

  13. January 21, 1793 King Louis XVI was tried and condemned to death by one vote (361-360) for: • Using force against the National Assembly • Secretly plotting to overthrow the Revolution • Attempting to escape from France • Bankrupting the country • The Convention (1792-1795) p 80 • Other European countries were horrified and Austria, England, Holland, Prussia, Sardinia and Spain formed a Coalition to invade France The war went badly for France and prices rose as a result. The sans-culottes rioted in Paris and in some regions peasants loyal to the king revolted against the moderate Girondin government, who were blamed for the problems. The Jacobins seized power through a parliamentary coup. The Committee of Public Safety was set up and came under the control of Maximilien Robespierre. The Jacobins Reign of Terror began (1793 - 1794). 

  14. The Reign of Terror Decree by Convention, April 1793 on the Committee of Public Safety. “The Committee shall talk in secret; it shall be responsible for watching over the work of the government…under the critical circumstances it is authorised to take measures to defend the revolution against internal and external enemies.” Committee of Public Safety.

  15. Between 3,000 and 15,000 people died on the guillotine during the Reign of Terror. 90% were members of the Third Estate, 7% the Second Estate and 3% the First Estate. Extract from a law introduced by the Committee for Public Safety, 17th September 1793, to deal with suspects brought to tribunals. “ Suspects shall be locked up…. The proof necessary to convict enemies…can be any kind of evidence….If proof already exists there need be no further witnesses….The penalty for all offences under the law of revolutionary tribunal is death.”

  16. Execution Records, 1793. 2. Marie Plaisant, seamstress, convicted of havingexclaimedthatshe was an aritocrat and that she did nots care a fig for thenation, condemnedto death and executedthe sameday. 1. Jean-BaptisteHenry, aged 18, journeyman Tailor, convicted of havingcut down a tree of liberty, executed 6th September, 1793. 3. Henriette Francoise Marboeuf, aged 55, convicted of having hoped for the arrival of the Austrians and Prussians and of keeping food for them, condemned to death and executed the same day. 4. Francois Bertrand, aged 37, publican, convicted of having provided the defenders of the country with sour wine, condemned and executed the same day. The Committee allowed revolutionary tribunals to convict people without hearing evidence. This was called the Law of Prairial. In September 1793, the Convention passed a law called the Law of Suspects. People could now be put in prison without trial.

  17. On July 27, 1794, Partly because of military successes in the wars with European states, the French people revolted against the excesses of the Reign of Terror in what became known as the Thermidorian Reaction. The moderate Girondinmembers were able to gain control of the convention and Robespierre was arrested and sentenced to death. He was guillotined on July 28, 1794. The Convention approved a new "Constitution of the Year III" on 17 August 1795; a plebiscite ratified it in September; and it took effect on September 26, 1795. The new constitution included a new structure of government Known as the Directory

  18. Government under the Directory

  19. The new régime met with opposition from remaining Jacobins and royalists. • The rule of the Directory was marked by corruption, financial difficulties, political purges, and a dependence on the army to maintain control. • The people of France grew poorer and more frustrated with their government. • Because of military successes, and maybe because of their frustration with the new government, the French had a focal point and a strong feeling of National Pride emerged. • Directory (1795-1799) – p80 • Victories in Italy and the defeat of the British in Egypt made Napoleon Bonaparte the most famous general in France. He He would come to power through a coup d’état, ending the ten-year period (1789-1799) known as the French Revolution.

More Related