French-RevolutionpptFinal

Download Report

Transcript French-RevolutionpptFinal

The French Revolution:
Ancien Regime & the Reign of Terror
1787 - 1799
1
‘Ancien Regime’
•
Known as the ‘Old Regime’ (order), it
existed throughout much of Europe during
18th Century.
•
In this society, division between three groups
(estates) was clear and unbalanced: the
largest group (peasants & bourgeoisie) paid
most of the taxes of France, yet had very
little power.
•
The ‘Estates-General’ (picture), was a
meeting between all three sections of French
society:
- 1st Estate (Clergy)
- 2nd Estate (Nobility)
- 3rd Estate (Bourgeoisie & Peasants)
•
2
Eventually, tensions rose when increased
taxes and food shortages caused French
peasants to revolt.
Absolutism
‘Divine Right to Rule’
The belief that kings were chosen
by God to rule over their people and
states.
3
The
Estates-General
•
The ‘Estates-General’ was a meeting
held between all three groups of society.
•
Each group only had one vote, regardless
of the difference in size of the groups.
•
Therefore, it was easy for the 1st & 2nd
Estates to out-vote the 3rd Estate
•
- 1st Estate (Clergy)
- 2nd Estate (Nobility)
- 3rd Estate (Bourgeoisie & Peasants)
4
Royal Palace at Versailles
5
King Louis XVI
- Married Marie Antoinette
- Indecisive
- Disinterested in state affairs
(preferred his own personal
interests)
6
1st Estate:
(Catholic Clergy - 140,000)
- 1% of population
- owned up to 20% of land
- paid no taxes
- collected the tithe
- controlled education
- held privileged positions
2nd Estate:
(Nobility - 400,000)
3rd Estate:
(Farmers, peasants, labourers, doctors,
lawyers - 25,000,000)
- paid the Tithe (Church
tax)
- paid Taille (land tax)
- Did all the work
- No benefits
- Unprivileged
-2% of population
-Owned up to 25% of land
-paid no taxes
-Held privileged positions
7
France aids Americans in their
War of Independence
France joins war in 1777
8
Cost of War
Estates-General Meeting
•
•
•
•
9
By 1789, France’s involvement in
the American War of
Independence had almost
bankrupted the state.
King Louis XVI decided to call a
meeting of the Estates-General to
raise taxes to pay this debt.
This meeting would provoke
serious divisions between the 3rd
Estate and the 1st & 2nd Estates.
The Third Estate wanted each
member of each Estate to get one
vote each, rather than one vote
only for each Estate.
1st Estate
(308 members - 1 vote)
2nd Estate
(285 members - 1 vote)
3rd Estate
(621 members - 1 vote)
“not to separate, and to
reassemble wherever
circumstances require,
until the constitution of
the Kingdom is
established”
When the 3rd Estate was locked out of the EstatesGeneral meeting, they moved to the royal tennis court.
Here, they all swore an oath to remain united until a
democratic constitution was created for France.
*576 of 577 members present swore the oath.
Tennis Court Oath
20th June 1789
10
The National
Constituent Assembly
13th June – 9th July 1789
•
King Louis XVI now saw that the selfproclaimed ‘National Assembly’ was a
serious threat to his rule, so he ordered
the 1st & 2nd Estates to join the 3rd
Estate in the National Assembly so
that he appeared to remain in control.
11
Fall of the Bastille
14th July 1789
•
On 14th July 1789, a mob grew outside the
Bastille Prison in Paris. The Bastille was
infamous as a place where dissidents were
imprisoned, but it also usually held a large
store of weapons, ammunitions and food.
•
Food shortages and high prices were
common at this time. The self-styled
militia of Paris the ‘National Guard’ –
attacked the prison and killed the governor.
•
This was in direct response to the King
stationing huge numbers of soldiers in
Paris. The mob went looking for weapons
& gunpowder to defend the National
Assembly from the King’s soldiers. King
Louis relented and called off his soldiers.
12
“So, is there a rebellion?”
- King Louis XVI
“No, Sire, a revolution!”
- Duke de La Rochefoucauld
13
Declaration of the Rights of
Man & of the Citizen
26th August 1789
National Assembly cancelled the
tithe tax and abolished the privileges
of the nobility. The Declaration of
the Rights of Man & of the Citizen
declared:
•All
men are born free and equal
(‘universality’)
•People
have rights to liberty, property
& security
•Every
citizen is equal before the law
•Freedom
of Speech was guaranteed for
all citizens.
•Slavery
14
was abolished
King Louis, Marie Antoinette and the Princess Royal all
attempted to escape as tensions rose in France.
They were attempting to reach Montédy near the Belgian
border (part of the Austrian Empire at this time)
Flight to Montédy
20th June, 1791
15
Dressed as servants, the King and his family
were recognised at Verennes
Capture at Varennes
21st June 1791
16
Historic marker of the place where
King Louis & his family were captured
17
Republicanism Erupts
Benevolent King
Flight to Varennes
Traitor to the Revolution!
King Louis XVI and his family brought back
to Paris under guard and imprisoned in the
Palace of Tuileries.
Now considered a traitor, many felt the need
to establish a complete republic, without a
monarchy.
18
France declares war on Prussia & Austria on 20th April 1792.
Prussia & Austria now attack France, threatening to destroy Paris
if the King was harmed in any way.
The French eventually drove the Prussians and Austrians back.
Revolutionary France under attack
1792
19
10th August 1792: Storming the Palace of Tuileries
As France fought off the Prussian & Austrian armies, many people in France saw their
attack as proof of King Louis’ treason to his own people.
The ‘National Guard’ revolutionaries attacked the Palace of Tuileries and arrested the
King.
The King was now tried for treason to the French Republic
20
The National Assembly:
– The Convention –
declares France a Republic
&
abolishes the Monarchy
21st September 1792
King Louis XVI was beheaded by
guillotine on 21st January 1793.
Marie Antoinette was also later
guillotined.
The execution of the King rallied other
European countries against France:
Britain, Spain, Holland, Austria & Prussia
all declared war on the First French
Republic.
21
“Terror is only justice:
prompt, severe and inflexible”
- Maximilien Robespierre
The Reign of Terror
1793 - 1794
22
The Reign of Terror:
Committee of Public Safety
•
Committee of Public Safety formed in early
1793.
•
Made up of twelve men, lead by Maximilien
Robespierre.
•
Under Robespierre’s leadership, a large army
was created and successfully defended
France from other European nations.
•
Everyone came under suspicion, with the
Committee trying tens of thousands and
executing 40,000 people as enemies of the
revolution.
•
Ultimately, Robespierre wanted to continue
with the trials & executions (even after the
danger to France had subsided) and so was
arrested himself and executed by guillotine.
23
Napoleon Bonaparte:
Emperor of France
1769 - 1821
•
A French army general, Napoleon
Bonaparte, made himself ruler of
France.
•
In 1804, he was crowned as the
Emperor of France.
•
As Emperor, Napoleon had many
of the powers of the old Kings of
France.
•
The French Revolution had finally
ended after war, social upheaval,
widespread societal suspicion and
mass executions.
24
France dominates Europe
Napoleonic Europe
1804 - 1815
25