Chapter 18—The French Revolution Outline
... ! The crowd stormed the fortress and released seven prisoners who were being held there and they also killed several troops and the commander of the Bastille. o July 15, 1789 ! The militia of Paris, ...
... ! The crowd stormed the fortress and released seven prisoners who were being held there and they also killed several troops and the commander of the Bastille. o July 15, 1789 ! The militia of Paris, ...
LA SEGUNDA GUERRA MUNDIAL Y LA NUEVA SITUACIÓN
... B- The political crisis • Both the clergy (the First Estate) and the nobility (the Second Estate) had 300 representatives in the Estates General, and each group had one vote. • In contrast, the middle class and peasantry (the Third Estate) had 600 representatives and only ...
... B- The political crisis • Both the clergy (the First Estate) and the nobility (the Second Estate) had 300 representatives in the Estates General, and each group had one vote. • In contrast, the middle class and peasantry (the Third Estate) had 600 representatives and only ...
Powerpoint Notes
... out a coup d'état, or “blow of state”, by dissolving the power of the weakened Directory through his (and his wife Josephine’s) influence in the national legislature At age 30, Napoleon assumed dictatorial powers as the first consul of the French Republic Napoleon goes on to defeat the British, Russ ...
... out a coup d'état, or “blow of state”, by dissolving the power of the weakened Directory through his (and his wife Josephine’s) influence in the national legislature At age 30, Napoleon assumed dictatorial powers as the first consul of the French Republic Napoleon goes on to defeat the British, Russ ...
Quiz - Wsfcs
... Storming of the Bastille What was the Great Fear? How did the popular uprisings, such as the one depicted in this painting, contribute to this national crisis? Why did French commoners storm the Bastille? Why was this attack more a symbolic act than a real achievement against an oppressive governmen ...
... Storming of the Bastille What was the Great Fear? How did the popular uprisings, such as the one depicted in this painting, contribute to this national crisis? Why did French commoners storm the Bastille? Why was this attack more a symbolic act than a real achievement against an oppressive governmen ...
File
... The crowd stormed the fortress and released seven prisoners who were being held there and they also killed several troops and the commander of the Bastille. o July 15, 1789 The militia of Paris, renamed the National Guard, was led by Marquis de Lafayette, a hero of the American Revolution and a ...
... The crowd stormed the fortress and released seven prisoners who were being held there and they also killed several troops and the commander of the Bastille. o July 15, 1789 The militia of Paris, renamed the National Guard, was led by Marquis de Lafayette, a hero of the American Revolution and a ...
chapter 59 : the french revolution and the napoleonic era
... deputies from the three estates dictated by the protocol of an earlier era, there was an immediate hint that less had, in fact, been achieved. When Louis XVI and Barentin (the Keeper of the Seals) addressed the deputies on May 6, the Third Estate discovered that royal decree granting double represe ...
... deputies from the three estates dictated by the protocol of an earlier era, there was an immediate hint that less had, in fact, been achieved. When Louis XVI and Barentin (the Keeper of the Seals) addressed the deputies on May 6, the Third Estate discovered that royal decree granting double represe ...
02 - SCERT Kerala
... Safety was constituted. When Robespierre took over as its head, the revolutionary government lost its popular character. It led to a Reign of Terror in France. The revolutionaries and people who opposed Robespierre were guillotined. At last the enraged people put Robespierre to the guillotine and br ...
... Safety was constituted. When Robespierre took over as its head, the revolutionary government lost its popular character. It led to a Reign of Terror in France. The revolutionaries and people who opposed Robespierre were guillotined. At last the enraged people put Robespierre to the guillotine and br ...
Causes of the French Revolution
... • PowerPoint Notes on Absolutism • Spain, France, England, Austria, Prussia, ...
... • PowerPoint Notes on Absolutism • Spain, France, England, Austria, Prussia, ...
Chapter 24 The French Revolution Shatters the Church of the Old
... house in its dungeons many patriots -- virtuous defenders of an oppressed people. Inside was Governor de Launay with a garrison of 110 soldiers. As the crowd grew, it began pushing toward the outer gate. Some in the crowd climbed up and cut the chains of the drawbridge, allowing access to the outer ...
... house in its dungeons many patriots -- virtuous defenders of an oppressed people. Inside was Governor de Launay with a garrison of 110 soldiers. As the crowd grew, it began pushing toward the outer gate. Some in the crowd climbed up and cut the chains of the drawbridge, allowing access to the outer ...
The French Revolution
... place, only to find the doors locked. • They then moved to a nearby tennis court and swore to meet there until they had a new constitution – Tennis Court Oath ...
... place, only to find the doors locked. • They then moved to a nearby tennis court and swore to meet there until they had a new constitution – Tennis Court Oath ...
ch.18 ppt - wilsonworldhistory1213
... Marie Antoinette • Who: wife of King Louis XVI, queen of France • What: she lived a life of great pleasure & extravagance • When: • Why: her extravagant living = put France in debt = the French disliked her; in the Women’s March to Versailles- the women captured Marie & took her to Paris- she was e ...
... Marie Antoinette • Who: wife of King Louis XVI, queen of France • What: she lived a life of great pleasure & extravagance • When: • Why: her extravagant living = put France in debt = the French disliked her; in the Women’s March to Versailles- the women captured Marie & took her to Paris- she was e ...
Jeopardy - JDaley.net
... This group of nobles left France after the Fall of the Bastille. They greatly affected politics in France still however from their new countries. ...
... This group of nobles left France after the Fall of the Bastille. They greatly affected politics in France still however from their new countries. ...
Franz II - Die Welt der Habsburger
... Franz II (I) is described by the historian Adam Wandruszka as having been a ‘narrow-minded, dry, reserved and in no respect particularly talented individual.’ The explanation for his character can be seen in terms of the excessive education and tuition that he as future ruler received from his uncle ...
... Franz II (I) is described by the historian Adam Wandruszka as having been a ‘narrow-minded, dry, reserved and in no respect particularly talented individual.’ The explanation for his character can be seen in terms of the excessive education and tuition that he as future ruler received from his uncle ...
The French Revolution - Mr. Zittle`s Classroom
... In a revolution, this stage would be the first to involve direct action resulting from the social, political, intellectual, or economic causes of the incubation stage. This stage might involve the publication of works calling for a change, street level riots by the common people, or more direct atte ...
... In a revolution, this stage would be the first to involve direct action resulting from the social, political, intellectual, or economic causes of the incubation stage. This stage might involve the publication of works calling for a change, street level riots by the common people, or more direct atte ...
Age of Revolutions - East Irondequoit Central School District
... 2. The National Assembly a. The Third Estate formed the National Assembly and vowed that they would remain united until they had a constitution that would limit the power of the king and give more rights to the common people b. Most French citizens supported the aims of the National Assembly. c. Th ...
... 2. The National Assembly a. The Third Estate formed the National Assembly and vowed that they would remain united until they had a constitution that would limit the power of the king and give more rights to the common people b. Most French citizens supported the aims of the National Assembly. c. Th ...
This vast continent which the seas surround will soon
... • 3rd Estate feel left out of process – Member’s views based on Enlightenment – Bourgeoisie wanted all three estates to vote together – Each delegate from each estate had a vote – 3rd estate had more delegates (thus more power) ...
... • 3rd Estate feel left out of process – Member’s views based on Enlightenment – Bourgeoisie wanted all three estates to vote together – Each delegate from each estate had a vote – 3rd estate had more delegates (thus more power) ...
Coursework Book
... worse clad than if with no clothes at all; as to shoes and stockings, they are luxuries. A beautiful girl of six or seven years playing with a stick, and smiling under such a bundle of rags as made my heart ache to see her. They did not beg, and when I gave them anything seemed more surprised than o ...
... worse clad than if with no clothes at all; as to shoes and stockings, they are luxuries. A beautiful girl of six or seven years playing with a stick, and smiling under such a bundle of rags as made my heart ache to see her. They did not beg, and when I gave them anything seemed more surprised than o ...
French Revolution (1789
... 2. The Old Regime was gone; society would be based on freedom & equality. *Just about all adult males could vote. ...
... 2. The Old Regime was gone; society would be based on freedom & equality. *Just about all adult males could vote. ...
The French Revolution- Origins
... They must be able to produce a framework and a coalition for a new government. The degree of the opposition can't be too great The problems that caused the revolution to occur must be resolved. ...
... They must be able to produce a framework and a coalition for a new government. The degree of the opposition can't be too great The problems that caused the revolution to occur must be resolved. ...
French Revolution Notes
... Abbe Sieyes, put forth a resolution calling for a National Assembly, which would represent the will of the people. On June 20, the members of the Third-Estate arrived to find they were locked out of their meeting hall. In defiance, they met on the indoor tennis court at Versailles. They vowed not to ...
... Abbe Sieyes, put forth a resolution calling for a National Assembly, which would represent the will of the people. On June 20, the members of the Third-Estate arrived to find they were locked out of their meeting hall. In defiance, they met on the indoor tennis court at Versailles. They vowed not to ...
Europe
... • Act of Settlement: Kept Catholics from English throne • Significance: England would still have a king BUT the real power is with Parliament ...
... • Act of Settlement: Kept Catholics from English throne • Significance: England would still have a king BUT the real power is with Parliament ...
FrenchRevolution.292.. - Walter S. Zapotoczny Jr.
... the expenditures. This was not due to national poverty but to the tax exemptions and tax evasions of the privileged classes and the complications in the fiscal system, or lack of it. Much of what taxpayers paid never made it into the hands of the Treasury. The most important tax, the taille, was gen ...
... the expenditures. This was not due to national poverty but to the tax exemptions and tax evasions of the privileged classes and the complications in the fiscal system, or lack of it. Much of what taxpayers paid never made it into the hands of the Treasury. The most important tax, the taille, was gen ...
Revolutionary ideas, leaders, movements and events
... 20 June- the deputies of the new National Assembly- arrived at the Estates General to find that they had been locked out . They marched out of the Palace of Versailles and to a local tennis court, big enough to hold them all. It was there that the deputies swore the Tennis Court Oath- under Bailly’s ...
... 20 June- the deputies of the new National Assembly- arrived at the Estates General to find that they had been locked out . They marched out of the Palace of Versailles and to a local tennis court, big enough to hold them all. It was there that the deputies swore the Tennis Court Oath- under Bailly’s ...
The Fall of the Bastille: The Voice and Power of Paris
... alternative was given, but the thought that the king was siding with the nobility brought the commoners to an act that was clearly illegal in the eyes of the monarchy. After being spurned by Louis XVI, the Third Estate called for a "last invitation" to have the fellow groups join them and on June 12 ...
... alternative was given, but the thought that the king was siding with the nobility brought the commoners to an act that was clearly illegal in the eyes of the monarchy. After being spurned by Louis XVI, the Third Estate called for a "last invitation" to have the fellow groups join them and on June 12 ...
The Fall of the Bastille: The Voice and Power of Paris
... alternative was given, but the thought that the king was siding with the nobility brought the commoners to an act that was clearly illegal in the eyes of the monarchy. After being spurned by Louis XVI, the Third Estate called for a "last invitation" to have the fellow groups join them and on June 12 ...
... alternative was given, but the thought that the king was siding with the nobility brought the commoners to an act that was clearly illegal in the eyes of the monarchy. After being spurned by Louis XVI, the Third Estate called for a "last invitation" to have the fellow groups join them and on June 12 ...
Germaine de Staël
Anne Louise Germaine de Staël-Holstein (French: [stal]; 22 April 1766 – 14 July 1817), commonly known as Madame de Staël, was a French woman of letters of Swiss origin whose lifetime overlapped with the events of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era. She was one of Napoleon's principal opponents. Celebrated for her conversational eloquence, she participated actively in the political and intellectual life of her times. Her works, both critical and fictional, made their mark on the history of European Romanticism.