The French Revolution and Napoleon (1789 * 1815)
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Transcript The French Revolution and Napoleon (1789 * 1815)
The French Revolution and
Napoleon (1789 – 1815)
The French Revolution Begins
The French Revolution Begins
Background to the Revolution
France’s Three Estates
Estates
First Estate – Clergy
• Divided:
Higher clergy
Parish priests
Second Estate – Nobles
• Played a crucial role in France
Held leading positions
Wealth (Nobles and Clergy)
Taille
Third Estate – Everyone else
• Peasants
• Middle class or Bourgeoisie
Unhappy
Nobles by appointment
Louis XVI
• Urban craftspeople, shopkeepers, and workers
The French Revolution Begins
Financial Crisis
Collapse
Had
of the French budget
been growing for 50 years:
Bad
harvests
Slowdown in manufacturing
Kings
Americans
Louis XVI
Estates-General
1614
The French Revolution Begins
From Estates-General to National Assembly
Louis XVI
Versailles
First two Estates
Third Estate
• Constitutional government
Problems from the start:
Voting
• The king
June 17, 1789
• National assembly and a constitution
The French Revolution Begins
Three
days later the Deputies of the 3rd Estate
Tennis
Court Oath
Louis XVI
July 14, 1789
• Parisians
• Bastille
• French Guard
• Louis XVI
• Paris
Revolts will begin to break out all over France
The Great Fear
• Peasant
The French Revolution Begins
End of the Old Regime
Declaration of the Rights of Man
The National Assembly
August 14, 1789
August 26, 1789
Declaration of the Rights of Man
and Citizen
Enlightenment
•
•
•
•
•
ideals:
All men were free and
equal before the law
Appointment to public office
Exempt from taxation
Freedom of speech and press
Should these rights include women?
The French Revolution Begins
Olympe de Gouges
“The Declaration of the Rights of Women and the
Female Citizen”
The King Concedes
October 5, 1789
Parisian women
National Assemblies decrees
The king
October 6, 1789
the king and his family will
return to Paris
Prisoners in Paris
The French Revolution Begins
Church Reform
New
Revolutionary Government
Sell off church lands
Under the control of the state
Civil Constitution of the Clergy
Catholics were anti-revolution
New Constitution and New Fears
Constitution
of 1791
Limited Monarchy
Legislative Body
• “Active Citizens”
• “Passive citizens”
Local governments
The French Revolution Begins
1791
Louis
XVI
June 1791
The king and
his family
• Varennes
October 1791
Louis XVI
The French Revolution Begins
War with Austria
European leaders
Austria and Prussia
Legislative Assembly
Rise of the Paris Commune
Spring of 1792
August 1792
Paris radicals
Commune
Members of the Paris Commune
King
Legislative Assembly
National Convention
Universal Male Suffrage
San-culottes
Radical Revolution and Reaction
Radical Revolution and Reaction
The Move to Radicalism
Louis XVI
Unrest
August 1792
The Minister of Justice Georges Danton
National Convention
September Massacres
Jean-Paul Marat
•
•
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Friend of the People
Jacobin condemned the Girondins
Drinker of Blood
Charlotte Corday, a Girondin
Jacques- Louis David “The Death of Marat”
The First Republic
September 1792
• National Convention
Newly elected National Convention
• Ruling body of France
• September 21, 1792 - The French Republic
Radical Revolution and Reaction
The Fate of the King
Political clubs
• Girondins
• The Mountain
Jacobins Club
• Louis XVI
• January 1793
• Guillotine
Crisis and Response
Disputes
The Paris Commune
Riots
Coalition of forces
• Austria, Prussia, Spain, Portugal, Britain, and the Dutch Republic
Committee of Public Safety
• George Danton and Maximilian Robespierre
Radical Revolution and Reaction
The Reign of Terror
Crushing Rebellion
1793- 1794 – Committee on Public Safety
• Reign of Terror
• Maximilian Robespierre
Revolutionary
Courts
• Guillotine
Marie Antoinette
Olympe de Gouges
Revolutionary Armies
• Grapeshot
• Nantes
Radical Revolution and Reaction
“Show them no mercy”
The Republic of Virtue
Maximilian Robespierre
• Titles changed
• Women
• Good citizens
• Law abolishing slavery
• Control inflation
Women
• 1793 - Revolutionary Republican Women
De-Christianization
• Adopted a new calendar
September 22, 1792
12 months
Months were given new names
• Example: Vendemiarie – September
• Huge impact on religion
Radical Revolution and Reaction
A Nation in Arms
Rise of the Revolutionary Army
1794
People’s Army
End of the Terror
Summer of 1794 - Robespierre
June 1794 – Law of 22 Prairial
July 28, 1794
The Directory
National Convention
Committee on Public Safety
Churches
New constitution
The constitution of 1795
Bicameral legislature
Lower House – Council of 500
Upper House – Council of Elders
Electors – qualified voters
Committee of 5 – called the Directory
• The Directory – 1795 – 1799
1799 – Napoleon Bonaparte toppled the Directory in a Coup d’état
The Age of Napoleon
The Age of Napoleon
The Rise of Napoleon
Early Life
A child of the revolution
Born 1769 in Corsica
Commissioned as a lieutenant in the French Army
Military Successes
1792 - Captain
1794 - Brigadier General
1796 - French armies in Italy
Speed, surprise, and decisive action
Northern Italy
1797
Invasion of Britain
Egypt
British Navy
The Age of Napoleon
Consul and Emperor
1799 – Coup d’état
The Consulate
First Counsel
1802 – Consul for Life
1804 – Emperor
Napoleon’s Domestic Policies
Peace with the Church
Gains of the revolution
Catholic Church
A man of the enlightenment
1801 – agreement with the Pope
Codification of Laws
Over 300 different legal systems
Napoleon will make one legal system:
Seven Law codes were created
Civil Code – Napoleonic Code – 1804
• The principles that the revolutionaries
• Women and children
• “Less equal to men”
Property
Court
Divorce proceedings
The Age of Napoleon
A New Bureaucracy
Strong centralized administration
Bureaucracy of capable officials
Middle Class
Aristocracy based on meritorious service
New nobles
Preserver of the Revolution?
All citizens were equal before the law and the opening of government careers
On the other hand:
• Liberty
• Anne-Louise-Germaine de Stael
Napoleon’s Empire
Building the Empire
European Coalition – Russia, Great Britain, and Austria
1803 - Britain
Austria, Russia, Sweden, and Prussia
Ulm, Austerlitz, Jena, and Eylau from 1805 to 1807
From 1807 to 1812 Napoleon will be the master of Europe
Empire was composed of three parts:
• The French Empire
• Dependent States
• Allied States
The Age of Napoleon
Spreading the Principles of the Revolution
Legal equality, religious toleration, and economic freedom
Equality – of opportunity and before the law
Britain’s Resistance
Sea power
1805 –Trafalgar
Continental system
Weakening the British economically
Will fail
1810
Nationalism
The sense of unique identity of a people based on language, religion, and
national symbols
The Germanies, Spain, Poland, and Italy arousing new ideas of
nationalism in two ways:
United in their hatred of the invaders
The power and strength of national feeling
The Age of Napoleon
The Fall of Napoleon
Disaster in Russia
1812 – Russia
Continental system
June 1812 – the Grand Army
“Scorched Earth Policy”
Battle of Borodino
Moscow
“the Great Retreat”
March of 1814
Napoleon
Island of Elba
Louis XVIII
The Final Defeat
Napoleon - escape from Elba
Louis XVIII
“ Soldiers of the 5th regiment, I am your emperor…. If there is a man among you (who) would
kill his emperor, here I am!”
“ Vive, l’Empereur”
March 20, 1815
Russia, Great Britain, Austria, and Prussia
At Waterloo – Belgium – June 18, 1815 - Duke of Wellington
St. Helena
1821