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Name_______________________________ Date________________________________ Interactive Slide Lecture Guide Thought Questions: 1. What is the “POPULAR VOTE?” 2. How might people feel when they realize the popular vote does not matter? Slide #1: The Palace of Versailles Versailles is located 11 miles ________________ of Paris. Everything about the palace was _____________. Louis the 14th required hundreds of nobles to live with him in the splendid palace he built. It increased his power because it made the _______________ completely dependent on him The palace faced a huge royal courtyard dominated by a statue of Louis XIV. The palace itself stretched for a distance of over ___________ (equal to five football fields). Some people recorded that food made in the kitchen was often cold by the time it reached the king. Versailles was like a small __________________ because of its great size. The palace was filled with riche furnishings and decorations that clearly showed Louis’ wealth and power to everyone who came to the palace. In 1994 dollars, the palace was worth an estimated ____________________. In 2003 dollars, it was worth an estimated $2.5 billion. Versailles had 36,000 laborers (workers who sole purpose was to ________________ the king.) The estate had _______________ acres of gardens, lawns, and woods and with in the gardens were 1,400 ________________________. Slide #2 and #3: Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette Many problems were facing France in the 1770’s and 1780’s. One of the biggest problems was that France’s government sank deeply into _____________. The King, Louis the 16th, failed to solve France’s financial crisis. Louis XVI became King in 1774 when his father died of ___________________. He lived in the legacy of Louis the 14th. He married Marie Antoinette when he was 15 and she was 14. He and his wife, Marie Antoinette, were extravagant __________________ of France’s money. He also inherited considerable debt from ___________________________. He doubled France’s debt by borrowing heavily to help American _________________________ in their war against Great Britain (France’s chief rival). Louis was an all-around ___________ leader. He was indecisive and let matters drift (he didn’t care). He paid little attention to his government advisors and had little __________________ for the details of governing. Louis’ tutors (teachers) made little effort to prepare him for his role as ______________. He was bored by state affairs and preferred to spend his time _________________ and working with his hands- lock-making, metalworking, and bricklaying. Despite his shortcomings, he was well-intentioned but lacked the ability to make good and effective __________________. Marie Antoinette only added to Louis’ ___________________. She interfered in the government and frequently offered Louis poor advice. She was a member of the _____________ royal family (France’s long-time enemy) which made her unpopular from the moment she stepped foot in France. Many accused her of being an Austrian spy. Her behavior only made her ______________________ worse. She spent extravagant amounts of money on gowns, shoes, jewels, gambling, and gifts that she became known as “Madame Deficit.” But she was pretty, light-hearted, and charming. She referred to Louis as “____________________________” and sometimes set the clock forward an hour just to be rid of his presence. In constant need of entertainment, Marie Antoinette spend hours ___________________________. One year she lost the equivalent of $ _______ million by gambling in card games. Slide #4: A Peasant Carrying the Nobility and Clergy The Old Order = The Old ________________ People in France were divided into three large _____________ classes, also known as ESTATES. But the real divide was between the privileged estates and the Third estate. People were not treated __________________ in France. The First Estate was comprised of Roman Catholic _______________. They owned 10 % of the land and contributed 2% to government taxes. The Second Estate was made up of wealthy ____________. They comprised 2% of the population but owned 20% of the land. The 1st and 2nd Estates scorned Enlightenment ___________________. The Third Estate was 97% of the population. Within the 3rd estate was: Bourgeoisie (middle class)- well _______________ and believed in Enlightenment ideas. Workers (poorest group)- received low wages and were often out of work. They often went ______________. Some attacked bread carts and shops to steal what they needed. Peasants- 80% of the population. Half of their ____________ went to taxes. Members of the Third Estate were fed up and ________________. They began listening to enlightenment ideas. They faced the heavy burden of ________________, the cost of living was rising sharply, bad weather caused widespread __________________________, there was a severe shortage of grain, and the price of _____________ doubled. Many people faced ________________________. Slide #5: Meeting of the Estates General Rather than cutting expenses, Louis put off dealing with the emergency until there was practically no money ___________. His solution was to _______________ taxes on the nobility. However, the second estate was outraged and forced him to call a meeting of Estates ______________- an assembly of representatives from all three estates- to approve the new tax. The meeting, the first in ______ years, was held on May 5, 1789 at the Palace of Versailles. Throughout history, the clergy and nobility had always _____________________ the Estates General and expected to do so once again in 1789. Under medieval rules, each estate’s delegates met in a separate hall to vote, and each estate then could cast one vote. The two privileged estates could always _________________ the Third Estate. The meeting began with arguments over how to count the votes. The members of the Third Estate ___________ that everyone meet together and that each delegate gets one vote. This would give the ___________________ to the Third Estate, and therefore to the majority of France’s population (the Third Estate had more delegates that the other two combined). The king sided with the ____________ and ordered the Estates-General to follow the medieval rules. But the Third Estate became more and more ______________ to wield power. Finally, a member of the ___________ who was sympathetic to the Third Estate gave a dramatic speech. He suggested the Third Estate delegates name themselves the ____________________ ASSEMBLY and pass laws and reforms in the name of the French people. After a long night of excited debate, the 3rd Estate agreed to the idea by an overwhelming _______________. On June 17, 1789, they voted to establish the National Assembly. They ended absolute monarchy and began a representative government. This was the first deliberate act of revolution. Thought Question: 1. If you were given a blank slate to form a new government, what would be the most important principles, freedoms, and/or clauses you would include? Slide #6: The National Assembly and the Tennis Court Oath Three days after the vote to form the National Assembly, the delegates found themselves _________ out of their meeting room. So they broke down a door to an indoor tennis court, and pledged to stay in the court until they had drawn up a new _______________________ for France. This pledge became known as the Tennis Court Oath. Soon after, nobles and members of the clergy who had favored reform joined the Third Estate delegates. In response to these events, Louis stationed his mercenary army of ____________ guards around Versailles. He also reluctantly gives into their demands. Slide #7: The Storming of the Bastille In Paris, ______________ flew! Some people suggested that Louis was intent on using military force to dismiss the National Assembly. Others charged that foreign troops were coming to Paris to _____________ French citizens. People began to gather weapons in order to defend the city against _______________ (by the King’s Swiss army). On July 14, 1789, a mob searching for gunpowder and weapons stormed the Bastille, a Paris ____________ (The mob thought there would be more gunpowder and weapons there). The officer of the Bastille refused to give in to the angry mob and then __________ his weapon into the crowd. The mob overwhelmed the guard and seized control of the prison. The angry attackers hacked the prison commanders and several guards to death. They then paraded around the streets with the dead men’s heads on pikes. _______ people died in the attack. The fall of the Bastille became a great __________________ act of revolution. Ever since, July 14- Bastille Day- has been a French national holiday, similar to the Fourth of July in the United States. Slide #8: The Great Fear and the March on Versailles Before long, ________________ spread from Paris to the countryside. Wild rumors circulated that nobles were hiring outlaws to _________________ the peasants. A wave of senseless panic called the ________________ rolled through France. Peasants soon became outlaws themselves. Armed with pitchforks and other farm tools, they broke into ____________ farm houses and destroyed old legal papers that bound them to the land. Sometimes, they burned down the house. In October 1789, thousands of Parisian women rioted over the rising price of ______________. Carrying knives, axes, and other weapons, the women ____________ on Versailles. First they demanded the National Assembly take action to provide bread. Then they turned their anger on the _________ and ____________. They broke into the palace, killing some of the guards. They women demanded Louis and Marie Antoinette go to Paris. After some time, Louis ____________. They royal family and their servants left Versailles never again to return. Their ________ signaled the change of power and radical reform about to overtake France. Slide #9: The Assembly Reforms France While mobs were controlling the ______________ of Paris and peasants were wreaking havoc in the countryside, the National Assembly was working hard to create a new government for France. August 4, 1789- motivated more by fear than __________, members of the clergy and nobility joined other members of the National Assembly in _____________ away the old feudal privileges of the 1st and 2nd Estates. Commoners were equal to the nobles and clergy. By morning, the Old Regime was dead. Three weeks later- August 27, 1789- the National Assembly voted to _______ the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. This document: -reflected the influence of the _______ Dec. of Ind. -guaranteed equal justice, freedom of _______, and freedom of religion -revolutionary leaders adopt the slogan, “Liberty, ______________, Fraternity” as the revolutionary expression. In 1790, the National Assembly focused on the church. They took over church land and church officials had to be _____________. Proceeds from the sale of lands helped pay off France’s debt. Irony- millions of devout ______________ were alarmed by the actions of the assembly and stopped supporting the ______________. This drove a wedge between the bourgeoisie and the peasants. For two years, the assembly argued over a new constitution. In September 1791, the new constitution was completed (which Louis reluctantly approved). They created a _____________ constitutional monarchy which stripped the king of much of his power. He kept ______________ power to enforce laws, but couldn’t make laws. The new law-making body, the Legislative Assembly, was put into place to create laws and approve war. Louis ____________ his fate as the monarch. Some of his advisors warned him that he and his family were in danger. Many nobles who supported the monarchy fled France. In June of 1791, the ______________ family tried to escape to Austria. They got close to the border, but they were caught and returned to Paris. This increased the influence of his _____________ enemies and sealed his fate. On August 27, 1789, the National Assembly of France adopted a revolutionary document, the Declaration of the Rights of Man of the Citizen. As you read this portion of the document, consider the rights it guaranteed French citizens. The representatives of the French people, organized as the National Assembly, believing that the ignorance, neglect, or contempt of the rights of man are the sole cause of public calamities and of the corruption of governments, have determined to set forth in a solemn declaration the natural, unalienable, ad sacred rights of man, in order that this declaration, being constantly before all the members of the social body, shall remind them continually of their rights and duties… Therefore the National Assembly recognizes and proclaims, in the presence and under the auspices of the Supreme Being, the following right of man and of the citizen: 1. Men are born and remain free and equal in rights. Social distinctions may be founded only upon the general good. 2. The aim of all political association is the preservation of the natural and imprescriptible rights of man. These rights are liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression. 3. Liberty consists in the freedom to do everything which injures no one else; hence the exercise of the natural rights of each man has no limits except those which assure to the other members of the society the enjoyment of the same rights. These limits can only be determined by law. 4. Law can only prohibit such actions as are hurtful to society… 5. Law is the expression of the general will. Every citizen has a right to participate personally, or through his representative, in its foundation. It must be the same for all, whether it protects or punishes. 6. No person shall be accused, arrested, or imprisoned except in the cases and according to the forms prescribed by law… But any citizen summoned or arrested in virtue of the law shall submit without delay, and resistance constitutes an offense. 7. The law shall provide for such punishments only as are strictly and obviously necessary, and no one shall suffer punishment except it be legally inflicted in virtue of a law passed and promulgated before the commission of the offense. 8. As all persons are held innocent until they shall have been declared guilty, if arrest shall be deemed indispensable, all harshness not essential to the securing of the prisoner’s person shall be severely repressed by law. 9. No one shall be disquieted on account of his opinions, including his religious views, provided their manifestation does not disturb the public order established by law. 10. The free communication of ideas and opinions is one of the most precious of the rights of man. Every citizen may, accordingly, speak, write, and print with freedom, but shall be responsible for such abuses of this freedom as shall be defined by law… 11. A common contribution is essential for the maintenance of the public forces and for the cost of administration. This should be equitably distributed among all citizens in proportion to their means… 12. Since property is an inviolable and sacred right no one shall be deprived thereof except where public necessity, legally determined, shall clearly demand it and then only on condition that the owner shall have been previously and equitably indemnified. Thought Question: 1. Is capital punishment (death penalty) a necessary evil? Why/why not? Slide #10: Old Problems, New Divisions Old problems __________________ despite the new government. There were still food shortages and government debt. Soon there were angry ___________ for more liberty, more equality and more bread that turned the revolution’s leaders against one another. The question of how to answer the _______ problems caused the Legislative Assembly to split into three general groups; each of which sat in different parts of the meeting hall. (see below) These groups disagreed but were not ________. Groups forming outside of the Legislative Assembly were more extreme: Emigres- extreme ___________- were nobles and others who fled France and wanted to completely undo the revolution and return to the _______________. Sans Culottes- extreme ___________- Parisian workers and shop keepers who wanted even more change. Sans Culottes means “without fancy breeches.” Although they did not have a role in the Assembly, they began to exert their power in the streets of France. The terms we use today to describe where people stand politically are derived from the factions that developed in the Legislative Assembly in 1791. Radicals 1. 2. 3. Sat on left side of the hall; were called “left-wing.” Opposed the King and the idea of a Monarch Wanted sweeping changes in government and proposed common people have full power in a republic Moderates 1. 2. Sat in the center of the hall and were called centrists. Wanted some changes in government, but not as many as the radicals. Conservatives 1. 2. 3. Sat on the right side of the hall; were called “right-wing,” and were said to be on the right. Upheld the idea of a limited monarchy. Wanted few changes in government. Slide #11: War and Extreme Measures While the revolution was occurring within ______, the nation faced an external threat as well. In 1792, European ___________ and nobles around Europe feared the changes in France. Nearby nations did not want their people ____________ to revolt against them. Austria and Prussia suggested the Legislative Assembly should ___________ the Monarch. The Assembly responded by declaring war. The war began badly- Prussian forces were advancing on __________. A Prussian commander threatened to destroy Paris if a member of the royal family was harmed. This enraged Parisians. On August 10, 1792, 20,000 men and women invaded the palace where the royal family was staying. The mob _________________ the royal guards and imprisoned (in a stone tower) Louis, Marie Antoinette and their children. September massacres- rumors were again flying! Angry and ______________ citizens take matters into their own hands. They raided prisons. During the raid, they murdered over 1,000 prisoners, all of which who were king’s supporters, nobles, priests, and royalists. Parisian mobs, through _________, were gaining control and threatening the effectiveness and success of the fledgling government (Legislative Assembly). Slide #12: Parisian Radicals and the National Convention In the Year of Our Lord, Seventeen hundred and ninety-one Dear Louis-Charles, Noble Baron de Breteuil, This new Constitution of 1791 is absurd and detestable. Though I have signed it, I regret it. I have contacted the Royal Court in Austria and plan to flee there when possible. From there, perhaps I can organize support for the return of the monarchy. God bless you in these times of shame. Respectfully, Louis XVI, King of France Under _______________ from radicals in the streets and among its members, the Legislative Assembly set aside the Constitution of 1791. It declared the king ______________, dissolved the Legislative Assembly and called for the election of a new ___________________. The new governing body was established on Sept. 21, 1792. It was called the NATIONAL CONVENTION. The leaders declared France a _______________. A radical, political organization/club called the Jacobins was mostly responsible for all of the changes. The first thing they did was __________________ Louis the 16th role from that of a king to a common citizen and prisoner. Guided by the radical Jacobins, the National Convention tried Louis XVI for treason. They charged him with conspiring with the _______________ (see letter above) to restore his authority. The Convention found him guilty and by a very close vote, sentenced him to death. January 21, 1793- the former king walked with calm dignity up the steps of the scaffold to be beheaded by a machine called the guillotine. Some doctors believed that a victims head retained its hearing and eye sight for up to 15 minutes after the blade’s deadly blow. All remains were eventually gathered and buried in simple graves. If you think the guillotine was a cruel from of capital punishment, think again. Dr. Joseph Ignace Guillotin proposed a machine that satisfied many needs- it was efficient, humane, and democratic. A physician and member of the National Assembly, Guillotin claimed that those executed with the device “wouldn’t even feel the slightest pain.” Prior to the guillotine’s introduction in 1792, many French criminals had suffered through horrible punishments in public places. Although public punishments continued to attract large crowds, not all spectators were pleased with the new machine. Some witnesses felt that death by the guillotine occurred much too quickly to be enjoyed by the audience. Criminals in 17th-18th century France sometimes faced one or more of the following fatal penalties: Burning Strangulation Being broken on a wheel Hanging Dismemberment Beheading Being pulled apart by horses Women knitters, or tricoteuses, were regular spectators at executions and knitted stockings for soldiers as they sat near the base of the scaffolding. Once the executioner cranked the blade to the top, a mechanism released it. The sharp weighted blade fell, severing the victim’s head from his or her body. More than 2,100 people were executed during the last 132 days of the Reign of Terror. The pie graph below shows the breakdown of beheadings by class: Before each execution, bound victims traveled from the prison to the scaffold in horse-drawn carts during a 1 ½ hour procession through city streets. First Estate Second Estate Third Estate Sentenced to death by the National Convention, Louis XVI was executed on January 21, 1793. This is an eye witness account of the King’s final hours. On January 20, 1793, the National Convention condemned Louis XVI to death, his execution scheduled for the next day. Louis spent that evening saying goodbye to his wife and children. The following day dawned cold and wet. Louis arose at five. At eight o'clock a guard of 1,200 horsemen arrived to escort the former king on a two-hour carriage ride to his place of execution. Accompanying Louis, at his invitation, was a priest, Henry Essex Edgeworth, an Englishman living in France. Edgeworth recorded the event and we join his narrative as he and the fated King enter the carriage to begin their journey: "The King, finding himself seated in the carriage, where he could neither speak to me nor be spoken to without witness, kept a profound silence. I presented him with my breviary, the only book I had with me, and he seemed to accept it with pleasure: he appeared anxious that I should point out to him the psalms that were most suited to his situation, and he recited them attentively with me. The gendarmes, without speaking, seemed astonished and confounded at the tranquil piety of their monarch, to whom they doubtless never had before approached so near. The procession lasted almost two hours; the streets were lined with citizens, all armed, some with pikes and some with guns, and the carriage was surrounded by a body of troops, formed of the most desperate people of Paris. As another precaution, they had placed before the horses a number of drums, intended to drown any noise or murmur in favour of the King; but how could they be heard? Nobody appeared either at the doors or windows, and in the street nothing was to be seen, but armed citizens - citizens, all rushing towards the commission of a crime, which perhaps they detested in their hearts. The carriage proceeded thus in silence to the Place de Louis XV, and stopped in the middle of a large space that had been left round the scaffold: this space was surrounded with cannon, and beyond, an armed multitude extended as far as the eye could reach. As soon as the King perceived that the carriage stopped, he turned and whispered to me, 'We are arrived, if I mistake not.' My silence answered that we were. One of the guards came to open the carriage door, and the gendarmes would have jumped out, but the King stopped them, and leaning his arm on my knee, 'Gentlemen,' said he, with the tone of majesty, 'I recommend to you this good man; take care that after my death no insult be offered to him - I charge you to prevent it.'… As soon as the King had left the carriage, three guards surrounded him, and would have taken off his clothes, but he repulsed them with haughtiness- he undressed himself, untied his neckcloth, opened his shirt, and arranged it himself. The guards, whom the determined countenance of the King had for a moment disconcerted, seemed to recover their audacity. They surrounded him again, and would have seized his hands. 'What are you attempting?' said the King, drawing back his hands. 'To bind you,' answered the wretches. 'To bind me,' said the King, with an indignant air. 'No! I shall never consent to that: do what you have been ordered, but you shall never bind me. . .' The path leading to the scaffold was extremely rough and difficult to pass; the King was obliged to lean on my arm, and from the slowness with which he proceeded, I feared for a moment that his courage might fail; but what was my astonishment, when arrived at the last step, I felt that he suddenly let go my arm, and I saw him cross with a firm foot the breadth of the whole scaffold; silence, by his look alone, fifteen or twenty drums that were placed opposite to me; and in a voice so loud, that it must have been heard it the Pont Tournant, I heard him pronounce distinctly these memorable words: 'I die innocent of all the crimes laid to my charge; I Pardon those who have occasioned my death; and I pray to God that the blood you are going to shed may never be visited on France.' He was proceeding, when a man on horseback, in the national uniform, and with a ferocious cry, ordered the drums to beat. Many voices were at the same time heard encouraging the executioners. They seemed reanimated themselves, in seizing with violence the most virtuous of Kings, they dragged him under the axe of the guillotine, which with one stroke severed his head from his body. All this passed in a moment. The youngest of the guards, who seemed about eighteen, immediately seized the head, and showed it to the people as he walked round the scaffold; he accompanied this monstrous ceremony with the most atrocious and indecent gestures. At first an awful silence prevailed; at length some cries of 'Vive la Republique!' were heard. By degrees the voices multiplied and in less than ten minutes this cry, a thousand times repeated became the universal shout of the multitude, and every hat was in the air." Slide #13: Robespierre and the Reign of Terror External problems persisted: France was still facing the problems of war. Austria and Prussia were joined by ________________, Holland, and Spain. Forced to contend with so many enemies, France suffered a string of ______________. The Jacobins had thousands of enemies within France as well. Such as: Peasants who were horrified by the King’s ________________, Priests who would not accept government control, and rival leaders who were stirring up rebellion. Controlling all of these enemies became a central issue. Maximilien Robespierre ____________ gained power in 1793. He Set out to build a “republic of virtue” by wiping out every trace of France’s past (monarchy and nobility). For example: Decks of cared with _________, ____________ and Jacks were changed to figures representing revolutionary ideals. Changed the calendar to be based on reason (12 months with 30 days and renamed each month) Calendar had no Sundays because radicals considered religion _________________ and dangerous. Closed all churched in Paris Summer of 1793-Robespierre created the Committee on Public Safety For the next year, Robespierre ruled like a _______________. This period of rule became known as the Reign of Terror. Under Robespierre’s leadership, “enemies” of the revolution were often Tried in the morning and guillotined in the _______________. Some Crimes were: saying “down with the Republic,” owning a _________ with the King’s seal on it, and cutting down a tree planted in the name of liberty (18 yr. old boy). His most famous victim was __________________________. He also killed many leaders of the revolution whose only crime was being less radical than he. In two years, ________________ French men and women were sentenced to death. 85% were peasants or urban poor; the common people whom the revolution was supposed to benefit. Slide #14: The End of Terror and the Directory In July of 1794, _______________ for their own safety, members of the National Convention turned on Robespierre. The Reign of Terror ended on July 28, 1794 when Robespierre met his own ____________ in the guillotine. Public opinion shifted dramatically as people had grown ________ of the high prices of bread, salt, and other necessities of life. In 1795, _________________ leaders drafted a new plan of government, the third since 1789 (beginning of the revolution). Power was handed over to the ____________ middle class. They created a TWO-house legislature and an executive body of five men called the Directory. These five men were moderates and they ruled for ________ years. But some of them were _____________ and made themselves rich at the country’s expense. They did, however, give a troubled country a brief period of order. They also found the right general to command France’s army! Thought Question: 1. Would you trade your civil liberties (freedoms) if it guaranteed you law, order, and stability? Why or why not? Slide #15: Napoleon Gains Power He was a _______________ man, only 5’3”, but is recognized in history as one of the greatest military geniuses of all time. In only ______ years, (1795-99), he rose from a relatively obscure position as ______________ in the French army to become master of France. In October 1795, fate handed the young officer a chance for ___________. He successfully defended the delegates of the National Convention from royalist rebels. Napoleon Bonaparte became the hero of the __________ and was hailed in Paris as _____________ of the revolution. In 1796, the Directory appointed Napoleon to lead the French army against ___________. He swept through the Alps and won a series of remarkable victories. He kept stories of his ______________ out of public scrutiny and therefore remained a __________ for the French people. November 9, 1799- his friends urged him to ____________ power. So he led a COUP D’ETAT (military _____________ of the government) of the Directory. His troops drove out most of the members of the legislature (which was already ___________). Those who remained voted to _______________ the Directory. Soon Napoleon assumed dictator powers as the First Consul of France. Slide #16: Napoleon Crowns Himself the Emperor of France At first, Napoleon pretended to be the ________________________ elected leader of the free republic. In 1800, a PLEBISCITE, or ________ of the people, was held to approve a new constitution. Desperate for strong leadership and STABILITY and ORDER, the people overwhelmingly voted in _____________ of the new constitution. This gave Napoleon all of the real power. France was given _________ and ______________! And Napoleon kept many of the changes of the revolution. 1. He got the economy back on stable ground 2. He reduced government corruption 3. He provided government with _____________ officials by setting up LYCEES, or government run public ______________. 4. He restored the power of the _________________. He signed a CONCORDANT (__________________) with the Pope where Government would recognize the power of the church so long as the Church did not interfere with ________________ affairs. Therefore Napoleon gains the support of the church and the French people. 5. His greatest work was his comprehensive set of ____________, known as the NAPOLEONIC CODE. It was a uniform set of laws and eliminated many ________________. However, it did limit liberty and promoted order and authority over individual rights. EFFECTS OF NAPOLEON’S RULE IN FRANCE The Economy Goals of the Revolution Napoleon’s Actions Results 1. Equal taxation 2. Lower inflation 1. Set up fairer tax code 2. Set up national bank 3. Stabilized currency 4. Gave loans to businesses 1. Equal taxation 2. Stable economy Government and Society Religion 1. Less gov’t corruption 2. Equal opportunity in government 1. Appointed officials by merit 2. Fired corrupt officials 3. Created lycees 4. Created code of laws 1. Less powerful Catholic Church 2. Religious tolerance 1. Recognized Catholicism as “faith of Frenchmen” 2. Signed concordant with the Pope 3. Did not give back seized church lands 1. Religious tolerance 2. Government control of church lands 3. Government recognition of church influence 1. Honest, competent officials 2. Equal opportunity in government 3. Public education In 1804, Napoleon decided to make himself _______________, and the French voters supported him. He dressed in a splendid robe of ____________ velvet and walked down the long aisle of Notre Dame Cathedral. The _________ waited for him with a glittering crown. As thousands watched, Napoleon took the crown and put it on his own head. This gesture signaled that he was more powerful than the ______________. But Napoleon was content just being ____________ of France. He wanted to control the rest of _____________ and to reassert French power in the Americas. After all, he was a _________________ leader at heart. Slide #17: Napoleon Creates an Empire Napoleon failed to keep the ________ world territories under French control. In 1801, a slave revolt in Saint Domingue (Haiti) led by Toussaint L’Ouverture successfully defeated French forces. It was the only successful slave revolt in history. Haiti won its independence. After that ______________, Napoleon decided to cut his losses in the Americas and he sold the Louisiana Territory in _________ to Thomas Jefferson for $15 million. So he turned his sights on conquering ____________ and was very successful. He created the largest European empire since the ______________. He just could not defeat the British _________. Those nations not under his control could easily be manipulated by threat of military action. The French empire was huge but _________________. He was only able to maintain it for five years, from 1807- 1812. Then it quickly fell to pieces. Slide #18: The Empire Collapses His own personality caused his _________________. He loved power and his need for more led to serious misjudgments and his ultimate ___________. He made three costly mistakes: 1. Continental System- a _________________ of Britain which was meant to destroy its economy. But the blockade was not tight enough so it didn’t work. In return, Britain blockaded France with their powerful navy and was successful. This hurt Napoleon more than it helped him. 2. Peninsular War of 1808- _______________ ignored the Continental System so Napoleon sent an army through Spain. Spanish towns _______. In response, Napoleon deposed the Spanish king And put his brother in power. This __________ the Spanish people. So bands of Spanish peasant fighters, known as guerillas, fought the French army. Their ___________ was to ambush and then hide. Napoleon lost _________________ men in this war. 3. Invasion of Russia in 1812- This was his third and most _____________ mistake. Russia refused to stop selling grain to Britain so Napoleon invaded Russia. Napoleon pushed in and Russian troops retreated back. As the ______________ advanced, the Russian practiced a scorched-earth _______________. As they retreated, they burned ____________ and slaughtered live stock leaving the enemy, the French, nothing to eat. The French advanced on ________________ only to see the Russians had burned their city (rather than surrender their holy city). After a month, Napoleon decided to return to France. But the harsh Russian ____________ staggered Napoleon’s army. His soldiers suffered from wounds, exhaustion, hunger and __________________. Some soldiers feet were so frozen that they sounded like wooden clogs on the ground. The temperature was 30 degrees below zero. It was so cold that birds fell _____________ from the sky. All the while, Russian raiders mercilessly attacked Napoleon’s army. The ______________ from Moscow devastated Napoleon’s grand army. By the time he got back to France, he only had 10,000 soldiers left to fight. By then, Britain, Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Sweden all _______________ forces against him. All of the main powers of Europe were against him. Napoleon tried to fight on, but couldn’t with his ill-equipped and untrained army. In April of 1814, he surrendered and gave up his throne. The victors gave him a small _____________ (pay) and ________________ (banished) him to Elba, a tiny island in the Mediterranean Sea. Louis XVIII (18th), the brother of Louis XVI (16th) assumed the French _______________. (Louis XVII (17th), the executed King’s son died in prison in 1795.) The new king quickly became ___________________, as many thought he would reverse the progress of the revolution. Napoleon escaped from Elba in 1815. French people joyously welcomed him and he was again _____________ of France. He returned to France for One Hundred Days. But the European ____________ quickly organized to fight him. They met in Waterloo in Belgium. Napoleon ______________. He was shipped off by the British to St. Helena, a remote island in the south ______________ Ocean. He lived in lonely _____________ for six years where he wrote his memoirs. He died in 1821 of stomach cancer. Slide #19: The Congress of Vienna and the Legacy of the Revolution The Congress of Vienna was a meeting of all the great European leaders who were looking to restore order and stability to Europe after the ______________ of Napoleon. It was scheduled to last four weeks and it ended up taking eight months. The main goal of the meeting was to RESTORE THE BALANCE OF _________________ in Europe so that no one nation would become too strong (like France Just had done). The leader of the meeting was Klemens Von Metternich of Austria. He outlined three goals of the Congress: 1. Prevent future _____________ aggression 2. Restore the balance of power 3. Restore Europe’s _____________ families to the thrones they held before Napoleon’s conquests. Therefore Louis XVIII was put back in power in France under a constitutional monarchy. The Congress was a political ________________ in many ways: The settlements were fair and there were no real grudges It did not plant any seeds for future wars For the first time in a long while, _____________ of an entire continent were _________________. It created a time of _______________ in Europe for nearly forty years. The Legacy of the Revolution: The Congress of Vienna was a ___________________ for conservatives. But there were still irreversible political changes in France and England. Conservative monarchs could not turn back the hands of time. The French Revolution gave ________________ its first experiment in democratic government. Although the experiment _______________, it set new political ideas in motion. The French Revolution also ______________ the Latin American Revolutions. More and more, people saw __________________ as the nest way to ensure equality and justice for all. A new era had begun!