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The American Revolution’s Influence On Others… The U.S. Constitution created the most liberal government of its time. Other nations would copy the ideas in this document. The success of the American Revolution would inspire major global changes as other peoples challenged the power of absolute monarchs. The French Revolution …A major transformation of the society and political system of France, lasting from 1789 to 1799. During the course of the Revolution, France was temporarily transformed from an absolute monarchy, where the king monopolized power, to a republic of theoretically free and equal citizens. Citation: www.encarta.com The effects of the French Revolution were widespread, both inside and outside of France, and the Revolution ranks as one of the most important events in the history of Europe. Europe, 1789 What advice would you give to someone in France who is helping start a revolution? What is something you would like to say to or ask of King Louis XVI? Was it time for a revolution in France? Explain. Do we need a new government in the United States? Explain. How did the Third Estate act on their anger and frustrations? Predict what YOU think will happen to the King & Queen of France… What should now happen to King Louis XVI & Queen Marie Antoinette? King & Queen are now held as prisoners Third Estate has now formed the National Assembly What should happen next? How did the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen affect people’s lives in France? What is one freedom YOU believe is absolutely indispensable (that you cannot do without)? Vocab. Section aristocracy~ upper class governing body usually made up of people (aristocrats) who inherit power despotism~ when a ruler has unlimited or absolute power incorruptible~to not become corrupted (changed in a bad way) Vocab. Section deficit~ lack of something; not enough Kingdom (controlled by a king) 5 Causes of the French Revolution ABSOLUTE MONARCHY: People in France were being denied basic rights & say in government. SOCIAL INEQUALITY: The Third Estate—made up of the middle class, poor workers, and rural peasants—grew increasingly discontent. King Louis XVI Marie Antoinette Pope Pius VI At the outbreak of the French Revolution, Pius VI witnessed the suppression of the old Gallican Church, the confiscation of pontifical and ecclesiastical possessions in France, and an effigy of himself burnt by the Parisians at the Palais Royal. Does France Need a New Government? Is it Time for a Revolution? First Estate (Pope, priest) Second Estate (King, Queen, two nobles) Third Estate (peasants, shopkeepers, doctors, lawyers, etc.) 1. SPEAK OUT! Work with your Estate to state your position on the two questions above. 2. The Pope will be the mediator in a debate between the peoples. Does France Need a New Government? Is it Time for a Revolution? [role play the storming of the Bastille] Citation for previous slide: http://hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bkhan/i mages/can... ECONOMIC INJUSTICES: Government spent more money than it earned & this debt added to the tax burden of the Third Estate. Bad harvests in 1789 caused food prices to rise and hungry peasants & city dwellers began to riot, demanding bread. ENLIGHTENMENT: New ideas from this period led many French to question the traditional hierarchy of society. ENGLISH & AMERICAN EXAMPLES: The Glorious Revolution & the American Revolution provided inspiration for how existing authority could be challenged. CITATION for following slides: “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity: Exploring the French Revolution” …a collaboration of the Center for History and New Media (George Mason University) and American Social History Project (City University of New York), supported by grants from the Florence Gould Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities Divi—split In– to not Indivisible– to not separate; to stay together as one Riot! This image chronicles a riot. Many believe it was caused by artisans who attacked the Reveillon wallpaper shop and factory because they believed that the owner was about to lower wages. Over two days, more than 6,000 attacked the place. On 28 April troops were called and fired on the crowd. July 14, 1789 [Do Not Write] Throughout the next three days, crowds gathered to protest the high bread prices; royal troops sent to quell any disturbance instead fraternized with the demonstrators. On 14 July they allowed—even helped—a group looking for arms with which to take over the city search the royal veterans' hospital, but without success. At the same time, another crowd was swarming around the Bastille, a medieval royal fortress that loomed above the workers' neighborhoods at the eastern edge of the city. Lightly armed, but still impregnable to the thronging crowd, the Bastille could have held out longer, but when the threat to their position seemed to be increasing, its defenders did not really have the stomach for a fight and lowered the drawbridge, allowing the crowd into the courtyard. As a result of a miscommunication, the troops fired a volley into the crowd trapped within the outer walls, setting off a pitched battle that culminated in the commander's surrender, capture, and rapid beheading. Storming the Bastille S July 14, 1789 Seizure of the Bastille: Working-class people stormed a prison called the Bastille on this date. Fighting broke out throughout the city of Paris and the countryside. In a period known as the Great Fear, peasants attacked nobles and destroyed they’re homes. The Third Estate declared itself the National Assembly and vowed to write a new constitution for France. The National Assembly abolished the privileges of the First and Second Estates and adopted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen. This Declaration was based partly on the Declaration of Independence & contained many Enlightenment ideas: ~All men have natural rights ~All male citizens are equal under the law ~Freedom of religion ~Taxes according to what people can afford to pay A Limited Monarchy By 1791, the National Assembly had written a new constitution, declaring that the government should protect people’s natural rights and putting the Church under state control. In 1792, France then decided to spread its revolution by declaring war on Austria, Prussia, Britain, & several other states. The wars went badly for France & in 1792 radicals took control of the Assembly & ended the monarchy, declaring France a republic*. *a state in which the supreme power rests in the body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised by representatives chosen directly or indirectly by them “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” …the slogan of the new leaders of the French republic. In 1793 they executed King Louis XVI & his wife Marie Antoinette. [caption for previous slide] The guillotine was first introduced as a humane, efficient, and above all modern form of execution in April 1792; during the radical phase of the Republic, it would become the symbol of the Terror. This engraving suggests the guillotine is providing "good support for liberty." [caption for previous slide] As 80,000 crowded into the square to watch the execution of Louis XVI, they cannot have been unaware that the guillotine sat where a statue of Louis XV had been. Here Sanson, the executioner, snatches the detached head of Louis XVI to show to the crowd. He leans forward with approving eagerness. If the head of the King was the most recognizable old regime symbol, then the demise of that symbolic system becomes now complete. Waving on a pike, facing the King, is a Phrygian cap, now no longer placed on his head, as in other prints. In this way the engraver indicates a final severance of a complicated compromise. Maximilien Robespierre: He was one of the most controversial figures in the French Revolution. In the cause of fostering democracy, Robespierre helped bring about the Reign of Terror in which thousands were executed by the guillotine. He eventually met the same fate. Reign of Terror [Focus only what is italicized] Citation: Dr. Kaiser, Professor of History, University of Arkansas A new democratic constitution was drawn up but never implemented: In Robespierre’s view, constitutional government would have to wait until fear and repression had eliminated the enemies of the Revolution. The Jacobins* operated through the existing convention and agencies responsible to it. They used the Committee of Public Safety, composed of 12 men led by Robespierre, to provide executive oversight; the Committee of General Security, to oversee the police; and the Revolutionary Tribunal to try political cases. *By now revolutionaries had split into different factions, representing moderate & radical elements. [Copy only what’s italicized] On September 5 it (the temporary government) approved the Reign of Terror, a policy through which the state used violence to crush resistance to the government. On September 9 the convention established sans-culotte paramilitary forces, the socalled revolutionary armies, to force farmers to surrender grain demanded by the government. On September 17 the Law of Suspects was passed, which authorized the charging of counter-revolutionaries with vaguely defined “crimes against liberty.” On September 29 the convention extended price-fixing from grain and bread to other essential goods and fixed wages. On December 4 the national government resumed oversight of local administration. On February 4, 1794, it abolished slavery in the colonies. The most notable achievement of the Reign of Terror was to save the revolutionary government from military defeat. The Jacobins expanded the size of the army and replaced many aristocratic officers, who had deserted and fled abroad, with younger soldiers who had demonstrated their ability and patriotism. The revolutionary army threw back the Austrians, Prussians, English, and Spanish during the fall of 1793 and expelled the Austrians from Belgium by the summer of 1794. [focus on what is underlined] …about 250,000 people were arrested; 17,000 were tried and guillotined, many with little if any means to defend themselves; another 12,000 were executed without trial; and thousands more died in jail. Clergy and nobles composed only 15 percent of the Reign of Terror’s approximately 40,000 victims. The rest were peasants and bourgeois who had fought against the Revolution or had said or done something to offend the new order. The Reign of Terror executed not only figures from the Old Regime, like the former queen Marie-Antoinette, but also many revolutionary leaders. Some victims of the Reign of Terror, like Georges Danton, seemed too moderate to Robespierre and his colleagues, while others, like the sans-culotte leader Jacques René Hébert, seemed too extreme. Democracy or Dictatorship? The Reign of Terror was the most radical phase of the Revolution, and it remains the most controversial. Some have seen the Reign of Terror as a major advance toward modern democracy, while others call it a step toward modern dictatorship. Napoleon Bonaparte: Napoleon was the greatest military genius of the 19th century. He conquered most of Western Europe and Egypt for France, while instituting reforms in these new territories aimed at guaranteeing civil liberties and improving the quality of life. He crowned himself emperor of France in 1804 and introduced reforms intended to unify the revolutionfractured nation. Many of Napoleon’s reforms are still in effect today. Napoleon’s Major Achievements He controlled prices, supported new industry, and built roads and canals. He established a government-supervised public school system. The Napoleonic Code: a legal code that included many Enlightenment ideas, such as the legal equality of citizens & religious toleration. AIM: Does General Napoleon Bonaparte deserve his great fame? Est-général Napoléon Bonaparte mériter sa grande renommée? ¿Tiene General Napoleón Bonaparte se merece su fama tan grande? Agree or Disagree & WHY: “I would/will join the U.S. military.” AIM: Was Napoleon’s impact on the world more positive or negative? DO NOW: What is a question you would ask General Napoleon? megalomaniac Napoleon’s Empire at its Greatest Extent From 1804-1814, Napoleon ruled an empire and conquered much of Europe. He often replaced monarchs of defeated nations with friends and relatives. Britain & Russia remained out of Napoleon’s reach. [Do Not Write] Reminders of him dot Paris—the most obvious being the Arc de Triomphe, the centerpiece of the city, which was built to commemorate his victories. Washington Square Park; Greenwich Village, NYC Napoleon’s Fall: 3 Major Causes 1. Most people in conquered states looked on Napoleon’s armies as foreign oppressors, leading to nationalism & revolt against French rule. 2. Napoleon’s invasion of Russia in 1812 left French troops hungry & cold as the Russians burned crops and villages as they retreated. 3. An alliance of Russia-Britain-AustriaPrussia defeated Napoleon & forced him to step down in 1814. Napoleon returned to power in 1815, but the British & Prussians defeated him at the decisive Battle of Waterloo, ending his reign for good. 2 Major Effects of the French Revolution 1. Democratic Ideals: Ideals of democracy were spread throughout Europe, as more and more people wanted liberty and equality from absolute monarchs. 2. Nationalism: Feelings of national pride were inspired, which replaced earlier loyalty to local authority and the monarch. Nationalistic feelings spread and Napoleon’s conquests had a part in the eventual unification of both Italy & Germany. Napoleon’s weakening of Spain led to the Latin American independence movements.