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Bell Ringer 2/20/2013 Why is it important to pick your battles?

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Bell Ringer 2/20/2013. Why is it important to pick your battles?. The French Revolution!. http://www.history.com/topics/french-revolution/videos#the-french-revolution. Louis’ Caution Creates Panic!. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

Why is it important to pick your battles?

Page 2: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

The French Revolution!

Page 4: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

Louis’ Caution Creates Panic!When King Louis XVI heard about the forming

of the National Assembly, he stationed his mercenary army of Swiss guards around

Versailles. The gossip began.

Page 5: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

I hear he is planning to

use the military to dismiss the

National Assembly!

I hear he is using the foreign troops to go

to Paris and massacre French citizens!!!!

Page 6: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

Storming the Bastille!

Page 7: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

The Storming of the BastilleIn response to the rumors, people start to gather weapons

to defend the city. On July 14, a mob searching for gunpowder and guns took

over the Bastille (a Paris prison). The mob overwhelmed the guards and took control of the building! The mob

hacked the prison commander and some of the guards to death and paraded with their heads through the city!

Page 8: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

The fall of the Bastille became a great symbolic act of

revolution to the French.

This is why July 14th is now a national holiday for the

French, similar to our 4th of July.

Page 9: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

A Great FearRumor Has It…

Rumor spread that the nobles were hiring outlaws to terrorize the peasants…in response, the peasants picked up their

pitchforks and broke into the noble’s homes and destroyed old papers that bound them to pay feudal dues. Some, simply skipped the paper shredding and burned their

houses down.

Page 10: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

In October 1789, some peasant women took control and rioted over the rising price of bread. They marched to

Versailles and first demanded the National Assembly give them bread and then turned their anger on the King and Queen. They broke into the palace, attacked guards and

demanded the King and Queen return to Paris.

A Great Fear

Page 11: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

This signals a change in power and radical reforms are about to take over France

The King and Queen leave.

Page 12: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

A Late Night MeetingThe night of August 4, 1789 many noblemen make

grand speeches about how much they believed in liberty and equality.

They were more motivated by FEAR than by idealism. They joined the National Assembly and erased the

feudal privileges of the First and Second Estate.

Thus- making the commoners equal to the noble and clergy.

Page 13: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

THE OLD REGIME WAS DEAD

Page 14: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

The Rights of Man and of the Citizen

3 weeks later the National Assembly adopted a statement of revolutionary ideas: The Rights

of Man and of the Citizen. The document guaranteed that all citizens had

equal justice, freedom of speech, and freedom of religion. It also said that all men had a right to liberty, property, security, and

resistance to oppression.

Page 15: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

The revolutionary leaders adopted the expression:

“LIBERTY, EQUALITY, FRATERNITY”

This did not however apply to everyone, women were still left out of this equation.

Page 16: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

A State-Controlled ChurchThe National Assembly focused first on the Church, and took away their lands and declared that Church officials

and priests would now be elected and paid as state officials.

The Church lost their land and their political independence.

In part the National Assembly did this to make money to pay off France’s debt.

Page 17: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

This move alarmed many peasants, who were devout Catholics.

They believed the pope should rule over a church independent of the state.

From this time on, many peasants opposed the assembly’s radical reforms.

Page 18: Bell Ringer 2/20/2013

Louis XVI Tries to Escape!Louis XVI watched all of this occur and began to fear

that he and his family were in danger. In June 1791, the royal family tried to escape to the

Austrian Netherlands, but near the border they were captured and returned to Paris.

This attempted escape, DID NOT please the radicals.