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The French Revolution Unfolds

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Page 1: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

The French Revolution Unfolds

Page 2: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly.

• Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.

Objectives

Page 3: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

Essential Question

What political and social reforms did the National Assembly institute in the first stage of the French Revolution?

Page 4: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

National Assembly

• France became a constitutional monarchy

Reign of Terror

• A radical phase with escalating violence

• End of the monarchy

Directory

• A period of reaction against extremism

Age of Napoleon

• Consolidation of many changes• A period of war throughout Europe

Historians have divided the period of the French Revolution into 4 different phases.

Page 5: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

Timeline of EventsSummer 1788 – Louis XVI calls for a meeting

of the Estates-General in May of 1789 to help solve the problems facing France

May 1789 – Estates-General Meets◦ Arguments ensue about how the estates should

voteJune 1789 – Third Estate takes daring step

and calls themselves the National Assembly and take the Tennis Court Oath◦ Royal troops surround Paris◦ Reform-minded clergy and nobles join the National

AssemblyJuly 14, 1789 – Storming of the Bastille

Page 6: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• Rumors were rampant and created panic.

• Known as the “Great Fear,” peasants believed government troops were seizing their crops.

• Thought nobles were trying to reinstate medieval dues, peasants panicked and set fire to old manor records.

The political crisis of 1789 in France coincided with the worst famine in memory.

Political Crisis Leads to Revolt

Page 7: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

Between June and the beginning of August there were riots in the countryside. Peasants burned their nobles' chateaux, monasteries and buildings which housed public records. They particularly targeted documents which contained records of their feudal obligations. It was called "The Great Fear" and spread quickly throughout France.  

Page 8: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

National Guard

• Moderate • Led by the Marquis de Lafayette • A mainly middle-class militia

Paris Commune

• Radical • Replaced the royalist government of

Paris• Mobilized violent action for

the revolution

In Paris, the revolutionary center of France, several factions competed for power.

Page 9: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• Nobles …

• gave up old manorial dues and exclusive hunting rights.

• ended their special legal status and their exemptions from paying taxes.

• All males citizens were equal before the law.

On August 4, 1789, the National Assembly voted to end the privileges of the nobility.

The National Assembly Acts

Page 10: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• Free and equal rights for all men

• Natural rights for all men

• Equality before the law for all men

• Freedom of religion for all citizens

• Taxes levied fairly for all citizens

Modeled after the American Declaration of Independence, it announced

At the end of August, 1789, the National Assembly issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen.

Page 11: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

Women such as Olympe de Gouges called for equal citizenship for women.

Louis XVI did not want to accept the reforms of the National Assembly.

The Declaration of the Rights of Man did not please everyone.

Page 12: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS OF MAN

ACTIVITY

Page 13: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• They were angry about the famine and resented Queen Marie Antoinette, who lived a life of luxury

• They demanded to see the king.

• The women brought the king and queen to Paris, where they lived as virtual prisoners.

Some 6,000 women marched on Versailles on October 5, 1789.

Page 14: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

On October 4, 1789, a crowd of women demanding bread for their families gathered other discontented Parisians, including some men, and marched toward Versailles, arriving soaking wet from the rain. They demanded to see "the Baker," "the Baker's wife," and "the Baker's boy". The King agreed to meet with some of the women and promised to distribute all the bread in Versailles to the crowd. The arrival of the National Guard on the scene determined to take the King back to Paris complicated things for the King.

Some of the crowd got into the Queen's quarters and Marie Antoinette barely escaped by way of a secret passage (still partly intact at the Palace at Versailles) to the King's room. He agreed to address the people from his balcony. "My friends," he said, "I will go to Paris with my wife and my children." It was a fatal mistake. It was the last time the King saw Versailles.

Page 15: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

This move was condemned by the pope, many bishops and priests, and large numbers of French peasants.

To pay off the huge government debts, they placed the Church under state control and sold the lands and churches owned by the Roman Catholic Church. Bishops and priests were

elected and became salaried officials.

The National Assembly Presses Onward

Page 16: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

Moderate reformers considered that the Constitution of 1791 completed the French Revolution.

The new Legislative Assembly had the power to

• Make laws

• Collect taxes

• Decide on issues of war and peace

The National Assembly produced the Constitution of 1791. This set up a limited monarchy.

Page 17: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

At the time of the creation of the Constitution of 1791, Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette attempted to escape France.

To many, this attempt meant that Louis was a traitor to the revolution.

The emperor of Austria and king of Prussia signed the Declaration of Pilnitz supporting Louis and threatening to intervene to protect Louis XVI and his family.

As French émigrés spread fear of revolution in other nations, France prepared for war.

Page 18: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

POLITICAL CARTOONPAGE 222

Page 19: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• Sans-culottes demanded a republic and an end to monarchy.

• Jacobins gained the upper hand in the Legislative Assembly and declared war on Austria, Prussia, Britain, and other states.

• Fighting began in 1792 and lasted on and off until 1815.

The sans-culottes and the Jacobins pushed the revolution to more radical action.

Radicals Take Over

Page 20: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

USING THE POLITICAL SPECTRUM WHO WOULD YOU HAVE BEEN DURING THIS TIME PERIOD IN FRANCE?

Page 21: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• factions – dissenting groups of people

• Marquis de Lafayette – the leader of the National Guard, a largely middle-class militia; fought alongside George Washington in the American Revolution

• Olympe de Gouges – a journalist who believed that the Declaration of the Rights of Man should grant equal citizenship to women

• Marie Antoinette – Austrian-born queen of France; Louis XVI’s wife

Terms and People

Page 22: The French Revolution Unfolds. Summarize the reforms enacted by the National Assembly. Identify the basic principles of the Declaration of the Rights

• émigré – a person who flees his or her country for political reasons

• sans-culottes – working-class men and women who made the French Revolution more radical

• republic – system of government in which officials are chosen by the people

• Jacobins – members of a revolutionary political club made during the French Revolution

Terms and People (continued)