Reading #1: Old Regime Phase The French Revolution (Red Book
... Reading #3: Graphic Organizer #1: Moderates & Extremists struggle (638 - 639) Topic: Extremists take Control of government Members of the National Conv. ...
... Reading #3: Graphic Organizer #1: Moderates & Extremists struggle (638 - 639) Topic: Extremists take Control of government Members of the National Conv. ...
French Revolution PP
... The Napoléonic Era Napoléon gave himself unlimited power-Dictator 1799-1814 Napoleonic Era or Age of Napoleon He wrote a new constitution and put it to the people to vote, which was approved by the people After victories over Austria, Russia, and Great Britain, the French people voted to becom ...
... The Napoléonic Era Napoléon gave himself unlimited power-Dictator 1799-1814 Napoleonic Era or Age of Napoleon He wrote a new constitution and put it to the people to vote, which was approved by the people After victories over Austria, Russia, and Great Britain, the French people voted to becom ...
McKay Ch19 Study Guide 11e - District 196 e
... The French and American revolutions were the most important political events of the eighteenth century. They were also a dramatic conclusion to the Enlightenment, and both revolutions, taken together, form a major turning point in human history. This chapter explains what these great revolutions wer ...
... The French and American revolutions were the most important political events of the eighteenth century. They were also a dramatic conclusion to the Enlightenment, and both revolutions, taken together, form a major turning point in human history. This chapter explains what these great revolutions wer ...
Napoleon Bonaparte and the Congress of Vienna
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
Essential Question
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
Napoleon Bonaparte and the Congress of Vienna
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
Warm-Up Question
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
Slide 1
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
How did Napoleon come to power in France?
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
... When Louis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, many European nations attacked France to keep revolutionary ideas from spreading ...
ch.18 ppt - wilsonworldhistory1213
... • Who: the Committee of Public Safety, Robespierre • What: Revolutionary courts conducted hasty trials & executed those who were suspect of resisting the revolution • Where: France • When: Sept 1793-July 1794 • Why: 300,000 ppl were arrested, 17,000 were executed by the Guillotine; many were victims ...
... • Who: the Committee of Public Safety, Robespierre • What: Revolutionary courts conducted hasty trials & executed those who were suspect of resisting the revolution • Where: France • When: Sept 1793-July 1794 • Why: 300,000 ppl were arrested, 17,000 were executed by the Guillotine; many were victims ...
The Age of Napoleon
... was educated in French military schools. Napoleon was a radical Jacobin – meaning that he believed in the radical ideals of the French Revolution. The revolutionary government used Napoleon and his military expertise to battle the Austrians (and other Europeans) who were attacking France in orde ...
... was educated in French military schools. Napoleon was a radical Jacobin – meaning that he believed in the radical ideals of the French Revolution. The revolutionary government used Napoleon and his military expertise to battle the Austrians (and other Europeans) who were attacking France in orde ...
French Revolution
... sans-culottes to attack the palace. The royal family sought protection from the Legislative Assembly. • Violence in the streets increased and an uprising in September left thousands dead. Jean-Paul Marat published a radical journal defending the massacres. ...
... sans-culottes to attack the palace. The royal family sought protection from the Legislative Assembly. • Violence in the streets increased and an uprising in September left thousands dead. Jean-Paul Marat published a radical journal defending the massacres. ...
Mid-Term Exam Study Guide Intro Unit 1. Caveat 2. Homo Sapiens 3
... 43. How did the events of the French Revolution lead to the destruction of the Church’s political power in France? Be specific. ...
... 43. How did the events of the French Revolution lead to the destruction of the Church’s political power in France? Be specific. ...
The French Revolution and Napoleon,1789–1815
... 1700s, France was considered the most advanced country of Europe. It was the center of the Enlightenment. It had a large population and a prosperous foreign trade. France’s culture was widely praised and emulated by the rest of the world. However, the appearance of success was deceiving. There was g ...
... 1700s, France was considered the most advanced country of Europe. It was the center of the Enlightenment. It had a large population and a prosperous foreign trade. France’s culture was widely praised and emulated by the rest of the world. However, the appearance of success was deceiving. There was g ...
causes of the french revolution
... erosion of his powers which now saw him termed not ‘King of France’, but ‘King of the French’. The Left agitated in response for a republic, and radicals, like the incorruptible Maximilien Robespierre, denigrated a system that had not introduced universal male suffrage. The radicals even started in- ...
... erosion of his powers which now saw him termed not ‘King of France’, but ‘King of the French’. The Left agitated in response for a republic, and radicals, like the incorruptible Maximilien Robespierre, denigrated a system that had not introduced universal male suffrage. The radicals even started in- ...
auguste comte and sociology
... on September 5, 1857 in Paris, France. He was buried in the Pere Lachaise Cemetry, Paris. Best known for: 1) Founder of positivism; 2) Coined the term sociology; 3) His emphasis on systematic observation and social order [5]. And now his apartment, where he lived from 1841 to 1857, has been preserve ...
... on September 5, 1857 in Paris, France. He was buried in the Pere Lachaise Cemetry, Paris. Best known for: 1) Founder of positivism; 2) Coined the term sociology; 3) His emphasis on systematic observation and social order [5]. And now his apartment, where he lived from 1841 to 1857, has been preserve ...
Paris Commune of 1871
... give the vacant throne to King Wilhelm I of Prussia’s nephew, even though the Spanish throne had previously been occupied by the descendent of the French line, the Bourbons. On the 2nd of July 1870, the French Ambassador to Prussia asked the King to sign a document renouncing his claim to the Sp ...
... give the vacant throne to King Wilhelm I of Prussia’s nephew, even though the Spanish throne had previously been occupied by the descendent of the French line, the Bourbons. On the 2nd of July 1870, the French Ambassador to Prussia asked the King to sign a document renouncing his claim to the Sp ...
Age of Absolutism - Manhasset Schools
... government service, Louis used them to wait on him hand and foot. Although the nobles would normally be angry at their power being limited, they remained happy because Louis provided them with a beautiful home, protection, and a huge tax break. As you will see, this tax break would lead to a bigger ...
... government service, Louis used them to wait on him hand and foot. Although the nobles would normally be angry at their power being limited, they remained happy because Louis provided them with a beautiful home, protection, and a huge tax break. As you will see, this tax break would lead to a bigger ...
causes of the french revolution
... catalyst for this being war with Revolutionary France’s many foreign enemies and counter-revolution in the Vendee. The search for internal enemies after attacks by the Prussians resulted in the truly barbaric massacres of September 1792, in which the prisons were emptied of ‘traitors’. Louis’ fate w ...
... catalyst for this being war with Revolutionary France’s many foreign enemies and counter-revolution in the Vendee. The search for internal enemies after attacks by the Prussians resulted in the truly barbaric massacres of September 1792, in which the prisons were emptied of ‘traitors’. Louis’ fate w ...
Enlightenment and French Revolution
... “They have killed our King; chased away our priests; sold the goods of our Church; eaten everything we have; and now they want to take our bodies. No, they shall not have them!” ...
... “They have killed our King; chased away our priests; sold the goods of our Church; eaten everything we have; and now they want to take our bodies. No, they shall not have them!” ...
19 The French Revolution and Napoleon 1789–1815
... each estate had met and voted separately. Each group had one vote. Under this system, the First and Second estates always outvoted the Third Estate two to one. This time, the Third Estate wanted all three estates to meet in a single body, with votes counted “by head.” After weeks of stalemate, deleg ...
... each estate had met and voted separately. Each group had one vote. Under this system, the First and Second estates always outvoted the Third Estate two to one. This time, the Third Estate wanted all three estates to meet in a single body, with votes counted “by head.” After weeks of stalemate, deleg ...
Notes Combined - Binghamton City School District
... Robespierre gains control – seek to destroy all remnants of monarchy o Sought to eliminate “enemies of the Revolution” within France o “Committee of Public Safety” tried and executed “enemies” Revolutionary leaders who challenged Robespierre’s leadership were targeted, tried and executed Soon, ...
... Robespierre gains control – seek to destroy all remnants of monarchy o Sought to eliminate “enemies of the Revolution” within France o “Committee of Public Safety” tried and executed “enemies” Revolutionary leaders who challenged Robespierre’s leadership were targeted, tried and executed Soon, ...
The French Revolution
... The French Revolution • 800 Parisians gather outside the medieval prison – The Bastille • They demanded the weapons and gunpowder inside • The leader of the Bastille had his troops open fire on the crowd • The mob broke through and killed the leader and five of his men – they released several priso ...
... The French Revolution • 800 Parisians gather outside the medieval prison – The Bastille • They demanded the weapons and gunpowder inside • The leader of the Bastille had his troops open fire on the crowd • The mob broke through and killed the leader and five of his men – they released several priso ...
Modern World History
... Citizenship with voting rights was granted only to free-born males Patricians- aristocratic landowners who held the power- and Plebeians- common farmers, artisans, and merchants- fought for political power Twelve Tables 451 B.C.: a group of ten officials wrote down Rome’s laws, carved onto 12 tablet ...
... Citizenship with voting rights was granted only to free-born males Patricians- aristocratic landowners who held the power- and Plebeians- common farmers, artisans, and merchants- fought for political power Twelve Tables 451 B.C.: a group of ten officials wrote down Rome’s laws, carved onto 12 tablet ...
Vincent-Marie Viénot, Count of Vaublanc
Vincent-Marie Viénot, Count of Vaublanc (2 March 1756 – 21 August 1845) was a French royalist politician, writer and artist. He was a deputy for the Seine-et-Marne département in the French Legislative Assembly, served as President of the same body, and from 26 September 1815 to 7 May 1816, he was the French Minister of the Interior.His political career had him rubbing shoulders with Louis XVI, Napoleon Bonaparte, the Count of Artois (the future Charles X of France), and finally Louis XVIII. He was banished and recalled four times by different regimes, never arrested, succeeding each time in regaining official favour. In a long and eventful career, he was successively a monarchist deputy during the Revolution and under the Directoire, an exile during the Terror, a deputy under Napoleon, Minister of the Interior to Louis XVIII and eventually, at the end of his political career, a simple ultra-royalist deputy. He is remembered now for the fiery eloquence of his speeches, and for his controversial reorganisation of the Académie française in 1816 while Minister of the Interior. He strongly favoured the motion for the enfranchisement of the slaves in the French colonies in America.