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Chapter 21 Part 2 The French Revolution

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Chapter 21 Part 2. The French Revolution. July 5, 1788. The King called for a meeting of the Estates General for the following spring The king asked that all parties study the tax situation and make proposals to fix the economy and pay off debt. The Estates General May, 1789. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 21 Part 2

Chapter 21Part 2

The French Revolution

Page 2: Chapter 21 Part 2

July 5, 1788 The King called for a meeting of the

Estates General for the following spring

The king asked that all parties study the tax situation and make proposals to fix the economy and pay off debt.

Page 3: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Estates General May, 1789

Had only met twice before: 1302 (its inception) & 1614 (called by Marie de Medici while regent for her son, Louis XIII for support against pretenders)

Much excitement throughout France

Page 4: Chapter 21 Part 2

Cahiers de doleances The king requested that each estate

come up with a list of suggestions and grievances to be presented to the king

Page 5: Chapter 21 Part 2

Common Agreements of All Three Estates

France should have a constitutional monarchy

Individual liberties must be guaranteed by law

Position of Parish Clergy had to be improved

Abolition of internal trade barriers

Page 6: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Main Divisive Issue: How the Three Estates should vote

Traditionally, each estate had one vote (and Clergy and Nobility voted together…so, THEY were exempt of taxes and the Third Estate carried the burden)

Page 7: Chapter 21 Part 2

Louis XVI Doubled the # of the representatives of

the third estate as a gesture to its size BUT…still had only one vote among the Estates General

Representatives of each estate were elected

Almost all male commoners 25 or older could vote

Most reps were well-educated and prosperous members of the middle class

No peasant or artisan delegates

Page 8: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Paris Parlement Ruled that voting in the Estates

General would follow the tradition of each estate voting separately and each estate having one vote

Was not acceptable to the Third estate

Page 9: Chapter 21 Part 2

Abbe Sieyes The most influential writer of the

Third Estate Wrote What is the Third Estate? Claimed that the Third Estate should

have the power in France That the Nobility should be

abolished Said that the Third Estate

represented the majority of French society

Cited Rousseau’s Social Contract

Page 10: Chapter 21 Part 2

May 5, 1789 Each estate was ordered to meet and

vote separately

The Third Estate insisted that they meet and all vote together

Led to a six-week deadlock

By this time some parish priests joined with the Third Estate

Page 11: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Age of Montesquieu June 17, 1789 The Third Estate

declared itself the true National Assembly of France

Then Louis XVI locked them out of their meeting place

The Third Estate met in an indoor tennis court

Page 12: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Tennis Court Oath

The Third Estate swore an oath to continue to meet until it gave France a constitution

So…the Third Estate assumed sovereign power on behalf of the nation

Louis XVI called for 18,000 troops (from Paris to come to Versailles)

Page 13: Chapter 21 Part 2

More Defections from the First and Second Estates

Caused Louis XVI to recognize the National Assembly (June 27) after dissolving the Estates General

The National Assembly was dominated by the bourgeoisie

Now the king was allied with the nobility against the Third Estate and the Third Estate feared the nobles more than ever

Page 14: Chapter 21 Part 2

July 14, 1789The Storming of the

Bastille Revolutionaries in Paris began to

respond to food shortages and soaring (25%) bread prices

Also unemployment

Also fear of military repression (the 18,000 troops called to Versailles were mobilizing in Paris and Paris mobs believed the troops were getting ready to move against them

Page 15: Chapter 21 Part 2

A Very Real Fear Of subjugation by aristocratic

landowners and grain speculators

Grain prices were so high that there was no $ left to purchase manufactured goods

Caused industrial collapse 150,000 of 600,000 workers in Paris

were out of work

Page 16: Chapter 21 Part 2

Workers and tradesmen Began to arm themselves in

response to the troop mobilization

July 14th an angry mob stormed the Bastille in search of gunpowder and weapons

The heads of the mayor and Prison’s governor were put on pikes and paraded through the streets

Page 17: Chapter 21 Part 2

Marquis de Lafayette Was appointed commander of the

city’s armed forces by the mob

Paris was lost to the king

So…the storming of the Bastille saved the National Assembly (from the 18,000 troops)

Page 18: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Great Fear (1789) The spirit of the rebellion in Paris

spread to the countryside and sparked much violence

Peasants attacked manor houses trying to destroy legal records of their feudal obligations

Middle-class landowners were also attacked

Page 19: Chapter 21 Part 2

A National Guard Militia Was created by the middle class to

protect their property

Page 20: Chapter 21 Part 2

August 4, 1789 The National Assembly voted to abolish

feudalism in France and declared equality of taxation for all classes

This was an attempt to stop the violence Amounted to a peaceful social revolution Ended existing serfdom, exclusive

hunting rights for nobles, fees for justice, village monopolies, the corvee, and other dues

Page 21: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Peasants Realized great benefits

Page 22: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Constitution Ending feudalism was one of the two

great social changes of the Revolution as feudal society was gone

The other was the abolition of guilds (later)

Page 23: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen

(8-26-89) Was influenced by American

constitutional ideas Guaranteed due process of law; a

citizen was innocent until proven guilty

Sovereignty of the people

Page 24: Chapter 21 Part 2

Enlightenment Philosophy of the Constitution

“Men are born and remain free and equal in their rights.”

Natural rights are liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression (Locke)

Law is expressed by the General Will (Rousseau)

Freedom of expression and religion

Page 25: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Constitution Liberty was defined as freedom to do

anything not injurious to others, which was to be determined only by law

Taxes to be raised only with common consent

All public servants were accountable for their conduct while in office

Page 26: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Constitution Separation of powers through

separate branches

Confiscation of property from private citizens had to be done with fair compensation

“Citizen” applied to all French people regardless of class

Page 27: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Question of the Monarch’s Power

Was responsible for the unraveling of the National Assembly’s unity

This happened AFTER the adoption of the Declaration of the Rights of Man

Page 28: Chapter 21 Part 2

Womendid not share equal rights

Women could not vote or hold office Males had the advantage in family

law, property rights and education

Very few believed in gender equality Condorcet was one who DID support

gender equality

Page 29: Chapter 21 Part 2

Olympe de Gouges Wrote Rights of Women (1791)

She followed the 17 articles of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen and applied each to women

She also supported a woman’s right to divorce, to control property in marriage, equal access to education and civilian careers and public employment

Page 30: Chapter 21 Part 2

Mary Wollstonecraft (English)

1792 wrote Vindication of the Rights of Women

Her ideas were similar to those of Gouges

Madame de Stael: ran a salon, read and wrote widely

Deplored the subordination of women to men and the fact that the Revolution did nothing to change it

Page 31: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Women’s March to Versailles

October 1789

Due to shortages of Bread

Jean-Paul Marat incited 7,000 women with the Paris National Guard marched 12 miles from Paris to Versailles and demanded that the King address their economic problems

Page 32: Chapter 21 Part 2

Part of the problem Was that the price of bread was so high it

resulted in a reduced demand for garments which devastated women in the French putting-out system…unemployment was very high

Marie Antoinette also played a part

Women invaded the royal apartments at Versailles and slaughtered body guards while searching for the royal family

Page 33: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Women’s March to Versailles

The King and Queen were forced to move to the Tuleries (royal palace) in Paris

Louis XVI signed decrees guaranteeing that bread in Paris would be sold at reasonable prices

The National Assembly also moved to Paris and, like the King, was intimidated by the Parisians

Page 34: Chapter 21 Part 2

The King AND the National Assembly

Made certain that bread was available for reasonable cost

Many of the more conservative members of the Assembly began to drop out of the government as they were disillusioned by mob violence

Page 35: Chapter 21 Part 2

Secularization of Religion

Church property was confiscated and sold to peasants….the money was used to pay off the National Debt

BUT the schools and religious orders who had their land taken now had no way to pay for feeding the poor in their parishes

Page 36: Chapter 21 Part 2

1790 The Civil Constitution of the Clergy

Created a national church with 83 bishops and dioceses

Was the biggest mistake of the National Assembly

Convents and monasteries were abolished

All clergymen were to be paid by the state and elected (based on citizenship and property qualifications)

Page 37: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Civil Constitution of the Clergy

Clergy were elected by everyone (males)…Protestants, Jews, agnostics, etc.

Clergy was forbidden to accept the authority of the Pope

The Clergy was forced to take an oath of loyalty to the state (new government) since the Pope had condemned the Revolution

Page 38: Chapter 21 Part 2

Result France was deeply divided over religion

The Pope condemned the act as a way to undermine the Church

½ of the French Priests refused to take the oath

They were called The Refractory Clergy and were supported by the King, aristocrats, peasants and working class (and they were jailed)

Page 39: Chapter 21 Part 2

Government Reform France became a Constitutional

Monarchy with a unicameral legislative assembly

The Middle Class controlled the government through an indirect method of voting ( property qualifications for voting = middle class voters)

½ of all males over 25 were eligible to vote

The Nobility was abolished

Page 40: Chapter 21 Part 2

Government Reform The National Assembly divided

France into 83 departments governed by elected officials

Replaced the old provincial boundary lines

A new system of law courts gave France a uniform administrative structure (83 dioceses, departments, and judicial districts)

Page 41: Chapter 21 Part 2

Government Reform Weakness: Local communities

enforced national law at their own discretion…proved to be ruinous

Page 42: Chapter 21 Part 2

Economic Reform Tended to favor the middle class

rather than the lowest classes

The Metric System replaced a sloppy system of weights and measures

La Chapelier Law: outlawed strikes, workers coalitions and assemblies of workers

Page 43: Chapter 21 Part 2

Economic Reform Assignats: became the new paper

currency

Former Church property was used to guarantee the value of the Assignats

Much of the land was sold to peasants and $ was used to pay the national debt

Eventually assignats became worthless

Page 44: Chapter 21 Part 2

The Flight to Varennes June 1791 The Royals tried to

escape France Louis was trying to avoid being

forced to support the new constitution

Louis intended to raise a counter-revolutionary army with émigré noblemen and get help from foreign powers (Austrian HRE , Leopold II, was Marie Antoinette's brother)

Page 45: Chapter 21 Part 2

They were captured And forced to return to Paris

Became true prisoners of the Paris mob

King was forced to accept the constitutional monarchy