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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
Introduction
• Exploded in 1789.
• Began with Estates General in
1789 and ended with formation
of the French Consulate in 1799.
• Provided fundamental social
ideas such as Liberty, Equality
and Fraternity.
Society
Before French Revolution,
society is divided into three
estates:
• First Estate - Clergy
• Second Estate - Nobility
• Third Estate - Commoners
• King was considered part
of no estate.
Causes Of Outbreak:
Political
• Louis XV was the great-grandson of Louis XIV
and the third son of the Duke of Burgundy
(1682–1712)
• His wife Marie Adélaïde of Savoy, the eldest
daughter of Victor Amadeus II, Duke of Savoy.
• He was born in the Palace of Versailles on 15
February 1710.
• His grandson Louis XVI succeeded him in
1774.
• Marie Antoinette, his wife who believed in the
Divine Right of Kingship theory influenced him
Economic
• France was financially unstable due to the
Seven Years War and American War of
Independence.
• The Royalty and Nobility lead a luxurious
lifestyle while the common people were
paying for the war.
• Finance ministers who suggested reduction
of royal expenditure were dismissed.
• Due to fiscal deficit, all three Estates were
forced to pay tax.
Social
• The condition was worsened due to
bad harvest.
• Hunger riots began.
• In 1777 there were 11 lakh
professional beggars.
• The Clergy and Nobility despite being
minorities were enjoying feudal rights.
• The rising middle class (bourgeoise)
and peasants formed the Third Estate.
Inspirations from
French
Philosophers
• Voltaire launched a crusade
against superstition and attacked
traditional beliefs.
• He wrote many essays, poems
and dramas creating awareness
among the masses.
• He advocated the supremacy of
reason.
• He stood for religious toleration
Inspirations from
French
Philosophers
• Jean-Jacques Rousseau, born in
Geneva in 1712, was one of the 18th
century's most important political
thinkers.
• Rousseau's theories of sovereignty and
law had a direct influence on French
revolutionaries such as Robespierre.
• They were blamed for some of the
worst excesses of the Terror in France.
Inspirations from
French
Philosophers
• Montesquieu wrote that the
main purpose of government is
to maintain law and order,
political liberty, and the property
of the individual.
• He opposed the absolute
monarchy of his home country
and favored the English system as
the best model of government.
American War of
Independence
• The Americans' victory over the British
inspired the French Revolution.
• The French people saw that a revolt
could be successful, even against a major
military power.
• America provide a model of
constitutionalism by which the French
established a constitutional government
in 1791.
• Lafayette who participated in the
American War, came back with ideas
which played a major role French
Revolution.
National
Assembly
• On 17 June, the Third
Estate began to call
themselves the National
Assembly.
• Their leader was Mirabeau.
• They created the influential
document The Declaration Of
Rights Of Man.
• It stated that all men had
equal rights under the law.
Tennis Court
Oath
• On 20 June 1789, 576 of the 577
members of the Third Estate took
an oath in a tennis court,
• It occurred after the King had
dismissed them from the meeting
of the Estates General.
Fall of Bastille
• Rumors of the King ordering Swiss
troops to move into their city proved
the people.
• On 14 July 1789 nearly 7000 men
and women stormed and destroyed
the prison Bastille and set the
prisoners free.
• This day is celebrated as National
Day of France.
March to
Versailles
• On 4 October 1789, a crowd of
women, marched towards
Versailles demanding bread .
• When they arrived wet due to
the rain, they demanded to see
the baker, his wife, and son.
• The King met with some of the
women and agreed to distribute
all the bread in Versailles to the
crowd.
Flight to Varennes
• The King and his family escaped from
Paris due to his unstable condition.
• He got disguised and went to
Varennes.
• But he was recognized and bought
back to Paris.
• Since then, he was treated as a
prisoner.
Girondins and
Jacobins
• Girondins:
~ Moderate liberals who
wanted the King as a limited
Monarch.
~Constitutional Monarchy
• Jacobins:
~The people who wanted a
republican country.
Constitution of
1791
• The French constitution was
created by the National Assembly
during the French Revolution.
• The legislature had 750
members, who owned a certain
amount of property.
• The common people rivaled the
constitution, as the Paris
Commune.
• The constitution lasted less than
a year.
Emigres and the
Revolutionary War
• Emigres, are the Frenchmen who
fled France during the French
Revolution of 1789.
• From their places of exile, many
Emigres plotted against the
Revolutionary government, seeking
foreign help to restore the old
regime.
• Marat was a journalist and politician
during the French Revolution.
• He was a vigorous defender and the
leader of the sans-culottes . (A group
of Jacobins)
Guillotine
• Is an apparatus designed for
efficiently carrying out executions by
beheading.
• It was last used in the 1970s.
• Angled blade was reportedly ordered
by King Louis XVI of France.
• The guillotine became known among
the revolutionaries as the 'National
Razor'.
Secular
Calendar
Months:
• Autumn:
• Vendémiaire (vintage), starting 22, 23, or 24
September
• Brumaire (mist), starting 22, 23, or 24 October
• Frimaire (frost), starting 21, 22, or 23 November
• Winter:
• Nivôse (snowy), starting 21, 22, or 23 December
• Pluviôse (rainy), starting 20, 21, or 22 January
• Ventôse (windy), starting 19, 20, or 21 February
• Spring:
• Germinal (germination), starting 20 or 21 March
• Floréal (flower), starting 20 or 21 April
• Prairial (meadow), starting 20 or 21 May
• Summer:
• Messidor (harvest), starting 19 or 20 June
• Thermidor (summer heat), starting 19 or 20 July
• Fructidor (fruit), starting 18 or 19 August
National Convention
and the Reign of Terror
June 1793-July 1794
• TERROR IS NOTHING MORE THAN
JUSTICE: PROMPT, SEVERE, INFLEXIBLE.
– Maximilien Robespierre
• After the death of King Louis 1793 the
Reign of Terror slowly began.
• The Revolutionary Tribunal ordered
the execution of 2,400 people in Paris
by July 1794.
• Across France 30,000 people lost their
lives.
Festival Of Reason
• Jacques Hébert founded the “worship of reason”
this rejected any form of deity.
• The official nationwide Fête de la Raison,
supervised by Hébert 10 November 1793) came
to epitomize the new republican way of religion.
• Churches across France were transformed into
modern Temples of Reason.
• The largest ceremony of all was at the cathedral
of Notre Dame in Paris.
National Convention
and the Reign of Terror
June 1793-July 1794
• TERROR IS NOTHING MORE THAN
JUSTICE: PROMPT, SEVERE, INFLEXIBLE.
– Maximilien Robespierre
• After the death of King Louis 1793 the
Reign of Terror slowly began.
• The Revolutionary Tribunal ordered
the execution of 2,400 people in Paris
by July 1794.
• Across France 30,000 people lost their
lives.
National Convention
and the Reign of Terror
June 1793-July 1794
• The people readily accepted the
coup d'état (French for "blow of
state“) of Napoleon Bonaparte in
1799.
• The rise of Napoleon marked the
end of the revolution.
• He was the first Consul, who later
crowned himself as the emperor
of France.
Impact of French
Revolution
• The French Revolution had a great and far-
reaching impact that probably transformed the
world more than any other revolution.
• The people of France rose up in defiance of
unequal and suppressive values that had existed
for centuries.
• The French Revolution spread the principles of
liberty and equality, which are held by many
nation individuals today.
• The power of nationalism was first experienced
during the French Revolution, and it is still
powerful in existing nations and emerging
nations today.
Thank You

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The French Revolution.pptx

  • 2. Introduction • Exploded in 1789. • Began with Estates General in 1789 and ended with formation of the French Consulate in 1799. • Provided fundamental social ideas such as Liberty, Equality and Fraternity.
  • 3. Society Before French Revolution, society is divided into three estates: • First Estate - Clergy • Second Estate - Nobility • Third Estate - Commoners • King was considered part of no estate.
  • 4. Causes Of Outbreak: Political • Louis XV was the great-grandson of Louis XIV and the third son of the Duke of Burgundy (1682–1712) • His wife Marie Adélaïde of Savoy, the eldest daughter of Victor Amadeus II, Duke of Savoy. • He was born in the Palace of Versailles on 15 February 1710. • His grandson Louis XVI succeeded him in 1774. • Marie Antoinette, his wife who believed in the Divine Right of Kingship theory influenced him
  • 5. Economic • France was financially unstable due to the Seven Years War and American War of Independence. • The Royalty and Nobility lead a luxurious lifestyle while the common people were paying for the war. • Finance ministers who suggested reduction of royal expenditure were dismissed. • Due to fiscal deficit, all three Estates were forced to pay tax.
  • 6. Social • The condition was worsened due to bad harvest. • Hunger riots began. • In 1777 there were 11 lakh professional beggars. • The Clergy and Nobility despite being minorities were enjoying feudal rights. • The rising middle class (bourgeoise) and peasants formed the Third Estate.
  • 7. Inspirations from French Philosophers • Voltaire launched a crusade against superstition and attacked traditional beliefs. • He wrote many essays, poems and dramas creating awareness among the masses. • He advocated the supremacy of reason. • He stood for religious toleration
  • 8. Inspirations from French Philosophers • Jean-Jacques Rousseau, born in Geneva in 1712, was one of the 18th century's most important political thinkers. • Rousseau's theories of sovereignty and law had a direct influence on French revolutionaries such as Robespierre. • They were blamed for some of the worst excesses of the Terror in France.
  • 9. Inspirations from French Philosophers • Montesquieu wrote that the main purpose of government is to maintain law and order, political liberty, and the property of the individual. • He opposed the absolute monarchy of his home country and favored the English system as the best model of government.
  • 10. American War of Independence • The Americans' victory over the British inspired the French Revolution. • The French people saw that a revolt could be successful, even against a major military power. • America provide a model of constitutionalism by which the French established a constitutional government in 1791. • Lafayette who participated in the American War, came back with ideas which played a major role French Revolution.
  • 11. National Assembly • On 17 June, the Third Estate began to call themselves the National Assembly. • Their leader was Mirabeau. • They created the influential document The Declaration Of Rights Of Man. • It stated that all men had equal rights under the law.
  • 12. Tennis Court Oath • On 20 June 1789, 576 of the 577 members of the Third Estate took an oath in a tennis court, • It occurred after the King had dismissed them from the meeting of the Estates General.
  • 13. Fall of Bastille • Rumors of the King ordering Swiss troops to move into their city proved the people. • On 14 July 1789 nearly 7000 men and women stormed and destroyed the prison Bastille and set the prisoners free. • This day is celebrated as National Day of France.
  • 14. March to Versailles • On 4 October 1789, a crowd of women, marched towards Versailles demanding bread . • When they arrived wet due to the rain, they demanded to see the baker, his wife, and son. • The King met with some of the women and agreed to distribute all the bread in Versailles to the crowd.
  • 15. Flight to Varennes • The King and his family escaped from Paris due to his unstable condition. • He got disguised and went to Varennes. • But he was recognized and bought back to Paris. • Since then, he was treated as a prisoner.
  • 16. Girondins and Jacobins • Girondins: ~ Moderate liberals who wanted the King as a limited Monarch. ~Constitutional Monarchy • Jacobins: ~The people who wanted a republican country.
  • 17. Constitution of 1791 • The French constitution was created by the National Assembly during the French Revolution. • The legislature had 750 members, who owned a certain amount of property. • The common people rivaled the constitution, as the Paris Commune. • The constitution lasted less than a year.
  • 18. Emigres and the Revolutionary War • Emigres, are the Frenchmen who fled France during the French Revolution of 1789. • From their places of exile, many Emigres plotted against the Revolutionary government, seeking foreign help to restore the old regime. • Marat was a journalist and politician during the French Revolution. • He was a vigorous defender and the leader of the sans-culottes . (A group of Jacobins)
  • 19. Guillotine • Is an apparatus designed for efficiently carrying out executions by beheading. • It was last used in the 1970s. • Angled blade was reportedly ordered by King Louis XVI of France. • The guillotine became known among the revolutionaries as the 'National Razor'.
  • 20. Secular Calendar Months: • Autumn: • Vendémiaire (vintage), starting 22, 23, or 24 September • Brumaire (mist), starting 22, 23, or 24 October • Frimaire (frost), starting 21, 22, or 23 November • Winter: • Nivôse (snowy), starting 21, 22, or 23 December • Pluviôse (rainy), starting 20, 21, or 22 January • Ventôse (windy), starting 19, 20, or 21 February • Spring: • Germinal (germination), starting 20 or 21 March • Floréal (flower), starting 20 or 21 April • Prairial (meadow), starting 20 or 21 May • Summer: • Messidor (harvest), starting 19 or 20 June • Thermidor (summer heat), starting 19 or 20 July • Fructidor (fruit), starting 18 or 19 August
  • 21. National Convention and the Reign of Terror June 1793-July 1794 • TERROR IS NOTHING MORE THAN JUSTICE: PROMPT, SEVERE, INFLEXIBLE. – Maximilien Robespierre • After the death of King Louis 1793 the Reign of Terror slowly began. • The Revolutionary Tribunal ordered the execution of 2,400 people in Paris by July 1794. • Across France 30,000 people lost their lives.
  • 22. Festival Of Reason • Jacques Hébert founded the “worship of reason” this rejected any form of deity. • The official nationwide Fête de la Raison, supervised by Hébert 10 November 1793) came to epitomize the new republican way of religion. • Churches across France were transformed into modern Temples of Reason. • The largest ceremony of all was at the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris.
  • 23. National Convention and the Reign of Terror June 1793-July 1794 • TERROR IS NOTHING MORE THAN JUSTICE: PROMPT, SEVERE, INFLEXIBLE. – Maximilien Robespierre • After the death of King Louis 1793 the Reign of Terror slowly began. • The Revolutionary Tribunal ordered the execution of 2,400 people in Paris by July 1794. • Across France 30,000 people lost their lives.
  • 24. National Convention and the Reign of Terror June 1793-July 1794 • The people readily accepted the coup d'état (French for "blow of state“) of Napoleon Bonaparte in 1799. • The rise of Napoleon marked the end of the revolution. • He was the first Consul, who later crowned himself as the emperor of France.
  • 25. Impact of French Revolution • The French Revolution had a great and far- reaching impact that probably transformed the world more than any other revolution. • The people of France rose up in defiance of unequal and suppressive values that had existed for centuries. • The French Revolution spread the principles of liberty and equality, which are held by many nation individuals today. • The power of nationalism was first experienced during the French Revolution, and it is still powerful in existing nations and emerging nations today.