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Transcript
America Secedes from the Empire
I.
II.
Congress Drafts George Washington
a. 2nd Continental Congress
i. In Philadelphia, on May 10, 1775, all 13 colonies met at the 2nd
Continental Congress. It served as our first government and met
for 5 years until the Articles of Confederation took place
ii. There was still no well-defined sentiment for independence –
merely a desire to continue fighting in the hope that the king and
Parliament would consent to a redress of grievances
iii. At the 2nd Continental Congress, they
1. Raised an army and navy
2. Bought supplies
3. Made treaties
4. Drafted the Olive Branch Petition (July 1775)
5. Drafted the Articles of Confederation
6. Drafted the Declaration of Independence
7. Selected George Washington to head the army
b. George Washington
i. This choice was made with considerable misgivings:
1. He had never risen above the rank of a colonel in the militia
2. His largest command had numbered only 1,200 men
3. Lost more battles than he won
ii. However, the Virginian was gifted:
1. Outstanding powers of leadership and immense strength of
character
2. Radiated patience, courage, self-discipline, and a sense of
justice
3. He was a great moral force rather than a military mind – a
symbol and rallying point
4. People trusted him and he insisted on serving without pay
iii. His selection was political:
1. Americans in other sections of the country, already jealous,
were beginning to distrust the large New England army
being collected around Boston
2. It was natural to pick a commander from VA, the largest
and most populous of the colonies
3. As a man of wealth, Washington could not be accused of
being a fortune-seeker
4. As an aristocrat, he could be counted on by his peers to
check “the excesses of the masses”
Bunker Hill (1775) and Hessian Hirelings
a. No Independence Yet
i. Although the Americans were fighting the British, many were
affirming their loyalty to the king and hoping to patch things up
III.
ii. The war was fought for 14 months, from April 1775 – July 1776,
before the fateful plunge into independence was taken
b. Battle of Bunker Hill
i. The British had captured Boston
ii. In June 1775, a tiny American force under Ethan Allen and
Benedict Arnold seized a hill, now known as Bunker Hill (actually
Breed’s Hill), from the British
iii. Sharpshooting Americans number 1,500 turned back two frontal
assaults from 3,000 British soldiers
iv. They held the British off until they ran out of ammunition and was
overrun
v. America’s strong defense led to strengthened morale and many
British dead
c. Colonies In Rebellion
i. After Bunker Hill, the Continental Congress adopted the Olive
Branch Petition, professing American loyalty to the crown and
begging the king to prevent further hostilities
ii. However, following Bunker Hill, King George III would not hear
any more pleas for reconciliation
iii. In August 1775, he formally proclaimed the colonies in rebellion
1. Now the skirmishes were treason, a crime by hanging
d. Hessians Hired By King George III
i. Six German princes who needed the money for debts, supplied
Germans to fight in the war
ii. Because most of these soldiers-for-hire came from the German
principality of Hesse, the Americans called all of them Hessians
The Abortive Conquest of Canada (1775)
a. Why Take Canada?
i. Americans believed that the French were ready to rebel against the
British. However, the French were treated well in the Quebec Act
ii. A successful attack would add a 14th colony. However, this
contradicted the claim of the colonists that they were merely
fighting defensively for a redress of grievances. This would be
offensive warfare
iii. It would deprive Britain of a valuable base for striking at the
colonies
b. The Attack Begins
i. October 1775 – Attack on Canada begins
ii. General Richard Montgomery captures Montreal
iii. He was later joined at Quebec by the bedraggled army of General
Benedict Arnold, whose men had been reduced to eating dogs and
shoe leather during their grueling march through the Maine woods
iv. December 1775 – The assault on Quebec fails. Montgomery dies
and Arnold is shot in the leg
c. Fighting in Early 1776
i. January 1776 – British set fire to Norfolk, VA
IV.
V.
ii. February 1776 – Colonists won a battle at Moore’s Creek Bridge
in NC
iii. March 1776 – British were forced to evacuate Boston (Evacuation
Day is still celebrated in Boston)
iv. June 1776 – Colonists won a battle against an invading British
fleet at Charleston harbor
Thomas Paine Preaches Common Sense (1776)
a. Why Did Americans Continue to Deny Any Intention of Independence?
i. Loyalty to the empire was deeply ingrained
ii. Most Americans continued to consider themselves a part of a
transatlantic community in which the mother country of Britain
played a leading role
iii. Colonial unity was poor
iv. Open rebellion was dangerous, especially against formidable
Britain (you might be hung, drawn, and quartered)
b. Recognizing the Need For Independence
i. Americans were shocked into recognizing the need for
independence by British actions:
1. British burning Falmouth, MA, and Norfolk, VA
2. Hiring of the Hessians
c. Common Sense
i. Publication of this pamphlet came in 1776
ii. It was one of the most influential pamphlets ever written
iii. Its author was Thomas Paine, who had come over to America from
Britain a year earlier
iv. Within a few months he reached the a total of 120,000 copies
v. Paine flatly branded the indecisiveness of colonists as “common
sense”
1. Nowhere in the physical universe did the smaller heavenly
body control the larger one. So why should the tiny island
of Britain control the vast continent of America?
2. The king was referred to as “the Royal Brute of Great
Britain”
3. Rejected monarchy and embraced an independent republic
vi. The publication weakened resistance in the Continental Congress
toward independence
Paine and the Idea of “Republicanism”
a. Republicanism
i. Paine advocated a republic, where power flowed from the people
themselves, not from a corrupt and despotic monarch
ii. He believed that everyone in government should derive their
authority from popular consent
iii. Political philosophers had advanced the idea since the days of
classical Greece and Rome. The ideas were revived in the
Renaissance in 17th century England
iv. Republicanism particularly appealed to:
VI.
1. British politicians critical of excessive power in the hands
of the king and his advisers
2. American colonists, who interpreted the vengeful royal acts
of the previous decade as part of a monarchical conspiracy
to strip them of their liberties as British subjects
b. Republicanism in the Colonies
i. Many settlers had practiced a kind of republicanism in their
democratic town meetings and annual elections in New England
ii. The popularly elected committees of correspondence during 1774
and 1775 had also demonstrated the feasibility of republican
government
c. Citizen “Virtue”
i. Most Americans considered citizen “virtue” fundamental to any
successful republican government
ii. Because political power no longer rested with the central, allpowerful authority of the king, individuals in a republic needed to
sacrifice their personal self-interest to the public good – John
Locke (Social Contract Theory)
iii. The good of “the people” mattered more than the private rights and
interests of individuals
d. Other Approaches to Republicanism
i. Some favored a republic ruled by a “natural aristocracy” of talent.
There would be no hereditary aristocracy, but a social hierarchy
ii. These people feared the lower class and that they would embrace a
kind of runaway republicanism that amounted to a radical leveling
of all society
Jefferson’s Explanation of Independence
a. Richard Henry Lee
i. June 7, 1776 – Lee (from VA) motioned for the independence of
the colonies
ii. Shortly after Lee made his motion, Congress appointed a
committee to prepare a more formal statement of separation. In the
committee were:
1. Thomas Jefferson – a young VA lawyer who was the
brilliant writer of the Declaration of Independence
2. Benjamin Franklin
3. John Adams
4. Robert Livingston
5. Roger Sherman
iii. Two other committees were formed:
1. Draft the Articles of Confederation
2. Enlist the help of the French and other foreign countries
iv. July 2, 1776 – Lee’s Resolutions were adopted
v. John Adams believed that ever thereafter, July 2nd would be
celebrated annually with fireworks
b. Declaration of Independence
VII.
i. Gave his appeal universality by invoking the “natural rights” of
humankind – not just British rights. He argued that because the
king had flouted these rights, the colonists were justified in cutting
their connection
ii. Set forth a long list of the tyrannous misdeeds of George III
1. Imposing taxes without consent
2. Dispensing with trial by jury
3. Abolishing valued laws
4. Establishing a military dictatorship
5. Maintaining standing armies in peacetime
6. Cutting off trade
7. Burning towns
8. Hiring mercenaries
9. Inciting hostility among the Indians
iii. Lacked provisions condemning the slave trade that earlier drafts
had contained
c. Immediate and Long-Term Impact of the Declaration of Independence
i. Served as an appeal to enlist more colonists to the American cause
and rally resistance
ii. Served as an invitation for assistance from foreign nations
iii. Affirmation that “all men are created equal” would haunt him and
his fellow citizens for generations (slavery & women)
iv. The Declaration was a source of inspiration to countless
revolutionary movements against arbitrary authority (i.e. – The
French Revolution would take place 13 years later)
Patriots and Loyalists
a. Parties in the War
i. Loyalists – Colonists loyal to the king
1. Redcoats – Professional British army
2. Tories – After the dominant political party in Britain
ii. Patriots – American rebels
1. Whigs – After the opposition party in Britain
b. Contending for Supporters
i. Both sides not only contended with each other, but they also
contended for the support of the colonists
ii. Many colonists were apathetic or neutral. The American
Revolution was a minority movement
iii. The rebel army was a remarkably effective agent of Revolutionary
ideas. They convinced many colonists, even those indifferent to
independence, that the British army was an unreliable friend and
that they had better throw in their lot with the Patriot cause. They
also mercilessly harassed Loyalists
c. Loyalists
i. Families often split over the issue of independence
VIII.
IX.
1. Benjamin Franklin supported the Patriot side, whereas his
illegitimate son, William Franklin (the last royal governor
of New Jersey), upheld the Loyalist cause
ii. The British in the New World were taught to be loyal to the crown
iii. Many people who were well off and were satisfied with their lot
believed that any violent change would only be for the worse
iv. Loyalists were also more numerous among the older generation.
Patrick Henry (Give me liberty or give me death), Samuel Adams,
Thomas Jefferson, Richard Henry Lee were all young
v. Loyalists also included the king’s officers, Anglican clergy, and a
large portion of their congregations – all of whom had long been
taught submission to the king
vi. Loyalists were least numerous in New England, where selfgovernment was especially strong and mercantilism was especially
weak. The king’s followers were strong in aristocratic New York
City and Charleston, and also in Quaker Pennsylvania and New
Jersey (where General Washington felt that he was fighting in “the
enemy’s country”)
The Loyalist Exodus
a. Harsh Treatment of Loyalists
i. After the Declaration of Independence, which officially separated
Loyalists from Patriots, harsh harassment occurred to the Loyalists.
They regarded them as traitors
1. Tarring and feathering
2. Riding astride fence rails
3. Imprisoned
4. Hanged
ii. There was no reign of terror like that of France or Russia’s
revolutions
1. The colonists reflected Anglo-Saxon regard for order
2. The leading Loyalists were prudent enough to flee to the
British lines
b. Loyalists Flee
i. 80,000 Loyalists were driven out, but several hundred thousand of
the mild Loyalists stayed
ii. The estates of many of the fugitives were confiscated and sold to
help finance the war
c. Loyalist Volunteers
i. 50,000 Loyalists were volunteers
1. Served as spies
2. Incited the Indians so that Patriot soldiers would stay at
home to protect their families
ii. The British didn’t make full use of them in fighting
General Washington at Bay (1776)
a. New York and the Battle of Long Island
X.
i. Once Boston was evacuated in March 1776, the British choose
friendly New York as a base of operations
ii. Washington’s 1,800 troops met 3,500 British troops and were
routed at the Battle of Long Island
iii. Washington escaped to Manhattan Island and retreated west,
crossing the Hudson River to New Jersey and finally reaching the
Delaware River
iv. The British General William Howe did not speedily crush the
demoralized American forces. He was the commander responsible
for the horrible slaughter at Bunker Hill. He may not have
attacked because:
1. The country was rough
2. Supplies were slow in coming
3. He didn’t want to fight during the cold winter months
b. New Jersey Campaign
i. On December 26, 1776, Washington recrossed the Delaware River
to Trenton, NJ
ii. He surprised and captured 1,000 Hessians who were sleeping off
the effects of their Christmas celebration
iii. A week later, he inflicted a defeat on a small British detachment at
Princeton
iv. These were two great victories
Burgoyne’s Blundering Invasion
a. British Attempt to Capture the Hudson River
i. If successful, the British would sever New England from the rest of
the States and paralyze the American cause
ii. The main invading force was led by British General Johnny
Burgoyne
iii. Here was the British plan:
1. Burgoyne would push down the Lake Champlain route
from Canada
2. General Howe’s troops could move up to meet him at
Albany if needed
3. A smaller force led by Colonel Barry St. Leger would come
in from the west by way of Lake Ontario and the Mohawk
Valley
b. General Burgoyne’s Invasion Attempt #1 (1776)
i. After his repulse at Quebec in 1775, General Benedict Arnold
retreated to the Lake Chaplain area. This was a critical lake for the
transport of supplies to Canada, so the British couldn’t move
farther south until it was taken
ii. While the British stopped to construct a sizable fleet, the tireless
Arnold assembled and fitted out every floatable vessel. His tiny
flotilla was finally destroyed after desperate fighting, but the extra
time this took caused the British to stop their pursuit because
winter was coming
XI.
iii. The British were forced to retire to Canada and General Burgoyne
had to start anew the following year
iv. General Burgoyne was held up by:
1. The wives of his officers
2. They needed to cut a path through the forest; there was no
road
v. If Arnold had not contributed his daring and skill, the British
invaders of 1776 almost certainly would have recaptured Fort
Ticonderoga and the Hudson River the next year
c. General Howe’s Plans For Philadelphia
i. Meanwhile, instead of going to Albany, Howe embarked with the
main British army for an attack on Philadelphia, the rebel capital
ii. He wanted to force an engagement with Washington’s army,
destroy it, and leave the path wide open for Burgoyne
iii. He wrongly assumed that he would have time to still assist
Burgoyne if needed
d. Battle of Philadelphia (1777)
i. Washington transferred his army to the vicinity of Philadelphia in
1777
ii. He was defeated in two battles, at Brandywine Creek and
Germantown
iii. Pleasure-loving General Howe then settled down comfortably in
the lively capital, leaving Burgoyne by himself (Franklin – He
didn’t capture Philly, Philly captured him)
iv. Washington retired to winter quarters at Valley Forge, a strong,
hilly position some 20 miles NW of Philadelphia. There his
frostbitten and hungry men were short of about everything except
misery
e. General Burgoyne’s Invasion Attempt #2 (1777)
i. Burgoyne had begun to bog down north of Albany, while
American militiamen swarmed about him
ii. Americans drove back St. Leger’s force at Oriskany
iii. Unable to advance or retreat, Burgoyne was forced to surrender his
entire command at Saratoga on October 1777 to the American
general Horatio Gates (Arnold had gone to Quebec again)
f. Results of the Battle of Saratoga (October 1777)
i. It was the turning point of the war
ii. It revived the faltering colonial cause
iii. Demonstrated that the British could more easily hold the cities, but
that they would have trouble subduing the countrysides
iv. It made possible the urgently needed foreign aid from France,
which began after this battle
America is Allied With France
a. Why France?
i. France was eager for revenge against Britain for the Seven Years’
War
b.
c.
d.
e.
ii. They believed that if Britain were stripped of their North American
colonies, Britain would cease to be a major power
iii. America badly needed help in the struggle to defeat the British
Why Not France?
i. The rebellious Americans also harbored revolutionary ideas about
international affairs. John Adams, as well as others, wanted:
1. No political connections
2. No military connections
3. Only commercial connections with foreign countries
ii. They also wanted:
1. Free trade
2. Freedom of the seas
3. End to colonialism
4. End to mercantilism
iii. This all represented the emerging school of thought from the
Enlightenment. They believed that history had reached a
momentous turning point when military conflict would be
abandoned and the bonds of mutual commercial interest would
guarantee peaceful relations. Critics believed this was a hopelessly
naïve and impractically utopian dream
Benjamin Franklin in France
i. Benjamin Franklin was sent to France in 1776 to negotiate the
alliance with the French and the eventual treaty of peace
ii. He was determined that his very appearance should achieve the
diplomatic revolution the Americans hoped to achieve
1. Instead of the customary ceremonial sword, he used a plain,
white walking stick
2. Instead of fancy robes and wigs, he sported homespun
garments and a simple fur cap
3. Parisians adored hum as a specimen of a new democratic
order
The British Offer Home Rule (1777)
i. After the British defeat at Saratoga in 1777, Parliament passed a
measure that offered the Americans home rule within the empire
ii. Franklin played skillfully on French fears of Anglo-American
reconciliation
iii. On February 6, 1778, France signed a treaty of alliance with the
Americans:
1. Both sides would wage war until the United States had
fully secured its freedom AND
2. Both agreed to terms with the common enemy
Immediate Results of the Treaty (1778)
i. The treaty constituted an official recognition of America’s
independence
ii. It lent powerful military might to the Patriot cause
iii. The Revolutionary War became a world war
XII.
XIII.
The Colonial War Becomes a World War
a. Countries Entering the War
i. 1778 – France enters the war
ii. 1779 – Spain and Holland enter the war
b. France’s Help
i. After receiving secret French aid before 1778, from 1778-1783,
France supplied America with:
1. Guns
2. Money
3. Equipment
4. ½ of America’s armed forces
5. All of the new nation’s naval strength
ii. The British had been able to count on blockading the colonial coast
and commanding the seas. Now the French had powerful fleets in
American waters, chiefly to protect their own valuable West Indies
islands, but in a position to jeopardize Britain’s blockade and lines
of supply
iii. The British, therefore, decided to evacuate Philadelphia and
concentrate their strength in New York City
c. Monmouth, New Jersey (June 1778)
i. In June 1778, the withdrawing redcoats were attacked by General
Washington at Monmouth, New Jersey on a blistering hot day
ii. Many men collapsed or died from sunstroke
iii. Results:
1. The battle was indecisive
2. The British escaped to New York, but 1/3 of their Hessians
deserted
3. Except for Yorktown, Washington remained in the New
York area fighting the British
Blow and Counterblow
a. Arrival of French Troops
i. In the summer of 1780, a powerful French army of 6,000 regular
troops commanded by Rochambeau arrived in Newport, RI
ii. The Americans were somewhat suspicious of their former enemies.
Several flare-ups, involving minor bloodshed, occurred between
the new allies
iii. No real military advantage came immediately from this French
reinforcement, although preparations were made for a FrancoAmerican attack on NY
b. General Benedict Arnold
i. Later in 1780, improving American morale was staggered when
General Benedict Arnold turned traitor
ii. He believed that his valuable services were not fully appreciated,
so he plotted with the British to sell out the key stronghold of West
Point, a fort along the Hudson River, for 6,300 pounds and an
officer’s commission
c. War in the Carolinas
i. The British devised a plan to roll up the colonies, beginning with
the South, where the Loyalists were numerous
1. 1778-1779 – Georgia fell
2. 1780 – Charleston, SC fell (led by Cornwallis)
ii. The tide turned in South Carolina in late 1780 and early 1781,
when American riflemen wiped out a British detachment at King’s
Mountain and then defeated a smaller force at Cowpens
d. General Nathaniel Greene
i. Raised a Quaker
ii. In the Carolina campaign, he distinguished himself by his strategy
of delay. He would stand, then retreat, exhausting his foe
iii. This strategy worked, as he eventually succeeded in clearing most
of Georgia and South Carolina of British troops
XIV. The Land Frontier and the Sea Frontier
a. Native Americans in the War
i. Indian allies of Britain hoped to protect their land. Many believed
that a British victory would restrain American expansion into the
West
1. They were egged on by British agents branded as “hair
buyers” because they allegedly paid bounties for American
scalps
ii. 1777 – Bloody year on the frontier
1. Joined the Americans –
a. Oneidas
b. Tuscaroras
2. Joined the British –
a. Senecas
b. Mohawks
c. Cayugas
d. Onondagas
b. People Still Moving West During the War
i. People still moved west during the war
1. Lexington, Kentucky – named after the battle
2. Louisville, Kentucky – named after America’s new ally,
Louis XVI
c. George Rogers Clark
i. The British only held scattered posts that they had captured from
the French in Illinois
ii. Clark and 175 men decided to float down the Ohio River and
capture forts Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes
iii. Some argue that his exploits forced the British to cede the region
north of the Ohio River to the United States at the peace table in
Paris
d. America’s Navy
XV.
i. The navy consisted of only a handful of nondescript ships,
commanded by daring officers, including John Paul Jones
1. His raids on the British debilitated their ability to receive
supplies
2. Stated, “Surrender? I have not yet begun to fight.”
ii. This tiny naval force never made a real dent in Britain’s fleets
iii. It’s main contribution was in destroying British merchant shipping
e. Privateers
i. These were more numerous and damaging than the American
navy. 1,000 ships with 70,000 men
ii. These craft were privately owned armed ships – legalized pirates –
specifically authorized by Congress to prey on enemy shipping
iii. They captured about 600 British ships, while British warships
captured about as many American merchantmen and privateers
Yorktown and the End of the War
a. Dark Days – 1780-1781
i. Inflation of currency continued at a fast pace
ii. The government was nearly bankrupt
iii. They declared that it would repay many of its debts at the rate of
only 2.5 cents on the dollar
iv. The sense of unity was withering
v. Mutinous sentiments infected the army
b. General Cornwallis in Yorktown
i. General Charles Cornwallis was a member of Parliament and
military leader (he even opposed the tax measures that led to the
American Revolution)
ii. After futile operations in VA, he fell back to the Chesapeake Bay
at Yorktown to await seaborne supplies and reinforcements
iii. He assumed Britain would continue to control the sea, but for a
few weeks, British naval superiority slipped
c. Battle of Yorktown (1781)
i. French Admiral de Grasse, operating with a powerful fleet in the
West Indies, advised the Americans that he was free to join with
them in an assault on Cornwallis at Yorktown
ii. General Washington made a swift march of more than 300 miles to
the Chesapeake from the New York area
iii. Accompanied by Rochambeau’s French army, Washington
surrounded the British by land, while de Grasse blockaded them by
sea after beating off the British fleet
iv. Cornwallis surrendered his entire force of 7,000 men on October
19, 1781
d. The End?
i. Although some British thought the war was over, including Prime
Minister Lord North, George III planned to continue the struggle
ii. Britain still had 54,000 troops in North America, including 32,000
in the United States
iii. Washington returned with his army to New York to keep an eye on
the 10,000 British who were stationed there
iv. Fighting continued for more than a year after Yorktown
XVI. Peace at Paris
a. British Faltering
i. After Yorktown, many Britons were weary of war and ready to end
it
ii. They had suffered heavy setbacks in India and in the West Indies
iii. The Rock of Gibraltar was close to falling
iv. Lord North’s ministry collapsed in March 1782, and a Whig
ministry that was favorable to the Americans replaced it
b. Peace Negotiations
i. Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and John Jay were the American
peace negotiators
ii. The three had explicit instructions from Congress to make no
separate peace and to consult with their French allies at all stages
of the negotiations. However, all three knew that the order was
written by Congress under pressure from France
iii. France was in a bad position because it had induced Spain into the
war on its side
1. In part by promising to deliver British-held Gibraltar.
However, the rock was withstanding combined assaults
from the French and Spanish
2. Spain also coveted the immense trans-Allegheny area, on
which American pioneers were already settling
iv. France wanted to keep the United States east of the Allegheny
Mountains
1. They hoped that America would be weaker this way, so
that France could promoted their interests and policies
c. Separate Peace With Britain
i. John Jay thought that France couldn’t satisfy the conflicting
ambitions of both Americans and Spaniards
ii. He thought he saw signs indicating that France was about to betray
America’s trans-Appalachian interests to satisfy Spain
iii. He therefore secretly made a preliminary peace with Britain in
1782
d. Treaty of Paris of 1783
i. British Concessions
1. Formally recognized the independence of the United States
2. They granted land to the Mississippi River to the west, to
the Great Lakes to the north, and to Spanish Florida to the
south
3. Americans were to retain a share in the priceless fisheries
of Newfoundland
ii. American Concessions
1. Loyalists were not to be further persecuted
2. Congress was to recommend to the State legislatures that
confiscated Loyalist property was to be restored
3. The States vowed to put no lawful obstacles in the
collection of debts long owed to British creditors
iii. The assurances regarding both Loyalists and debts were not carried
out in the manner hoped for by London
XVII. A New Nation Legitimized
a. Why Were the British So Forgiving?
i. Britain was trying to seduce America from its French alliance
ii. The shaky Whig ministry, hanging on by its fingernails for only a
few months, was more friendly to the Americans than were the
Tories. They were determined to salve recent wounds, reopen old
trade channels, and prevent future wars over the coveted transAppalachian region
b. Separate Peace?
i. The French formally approved the terms of peace, though they
were disturbed by the lone-wolf course of its American ally
ii. France was relieved by the end of the war:
1. It was costly
2. Freed themselves from its embarrassing promises to Spain
c. Summary of Aftermath
i. America – Only country that gained from the war
ii. British – Battered, beaten, and spent a lot of money
iii. France – Savored sweet revenge, but plunged down the slope to
bankruptcy and revolution