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FRENCH REVOLUTION
Kirori Mal College
Delhi School of Social Work
FRENCH SOCIETY
(18th Century)
❖ King of the France : Louis King XVI
❖ Dynasty - Bourbon family
❖ Ascended the throne of France in 1774
❖ At the age of 20 he married Austrian Princess
Marie Antoinette.
❖ The time that Louis XVI ascended the throne,
France was going through a financial turmoil.
Financially France was drained because of
the war. France, Under Louis XVI, had
helped the thirteen American colonies to
gain their independence from Britain.
The war added more than a billion livres to
a debt that had already risen to more than
2 billion livres. .
Taxes were increased to meet regular
expenses, such as the cost of maintaining
an army, the court, running government
offices or universities.
And the King and the Queen used to
party instead of catering to the
situation!
Financial Turmoil:
Livre – Unit of currency in
France, discontinued in 1794
Everyone
Else
18th
Century
French
Society-
OLD
REGIME
1st Estate
3rd Estate
Clergy – Group of
persons invested with
special functions in the
church. Exempted from
taxes. Privileged by birth.
Nobility - High Ranking
people and families of
Court and Royal
Relations. They further
enjoyed feudal privileges
1st Estate
Everyone else.
Compromised of 90% of
total population of
France. Had to pay taxes.
Plight of Common People in Old Regime
1. Peasants were obliged to render services to
the lord.
2. The Church extracted its share of taxes
called tithes from the peasants
3. Third estate also had to pay taxes to the
state. These included a direct tax, called
taille, and a number of indirect taxes which
were levied on articles of everyday
consumption like salt or tobacco.
4. The burden of financing activities of the
state through taxes was borne by the third
estate alone.
The Struggle to Survive
● Increase in population led to a rapid increase
for food grains.
● Production of grains could not keep pace with
the demand due to which the price of bread
rose rapidly.
● Due to low wages paid to the labourers the gap
between the poor and the rich widened.
● Things became worse whenever drought or
hail reduced the harvest.
Financial Turmoil:
Subsistence Crisis
An extreme situation
where the basic means
of livelihood/survival
are endangered.
18th Century
witnessed the
emergence of
middle class
They had earned
their wealth through
an expanding
overseas trade.
Also included
lawyers or
administrative
officials. They were
educated and
against the
privileges by birth
They believed that a
person’s social
position must depend
on his merit.
These ideas
envisaging a society
based on freedom
and equal laws and
opportunities for all,
were put forward by
philosophers
Spread of Ideas
● French Philosophers were so influential that the
American constitution and its guarantee of
individual rights was an important example for
political thinkers in France.
● These ideas were discussed intensively:
1. Salons
2. Coffee-houses
3. Books and newspapers.
The news that Louis XVI planned to impose further taxes
to be able to meet the expenses of the state generated
anger and protest against the system of privileges.
Montesquieu- The Spirit of the Laws
Proposed a division of power within the
government between the judiciary, the
legislative, and the executive..
Ideas of Philosophers
John Locke- Two Treatises of Government
He rejected doctrine of the divine &
absolute
Right of the monarch.
Rousseau- Social Contract
Proposed a form of government based
on a Social Contract between people &
their representatives
THE OUTBREAK OF THE
REVOLUTION
● Louis XVI had to increase taxes because of
the financial status of France during that
time.
● In France of the Old Regime the monarch
did not have the power to impose taxes
according to his will alone.
● Rather he had to call a meeting of the
Estates General which would then pass his
proposals for new taxes.
● The Estates General was a political body to
which the three estates sent their
representatives respectively.
● The monarch alone could decide when to
call a meeting of this body.
● The last time it was done was in 1614
POLITICAL CLUBS
5 May, 1789:
Louis XVI called an assembly of the Estates
General
First & Second Estates sent 300 representatives
each & 600 representative from Third estates.
The third estate was represented by its more
prosperous and educated members.
They demanded that voting now be conducted
where each member would have one vote.
Proposal rejected by the King. Members of the
third estate walked out of the assembly in
protest
Peasants, artisans and
women were denied
entry to the assembly.
However, their
grievances and demands
were listed in some
40,000 letters which the
representatives had
brought with them.
The representatives of the
third estate viewed
themselves as spokesmen
for the whole French nation
● Donec risus dolor porta
venenatis
● Pharetra luctus felis
On 20 June they
assembled in the hall of
an indoor tennis court in
the grounds of
Versailles.
They declared
themselves a National
Assembly
01
02
03
03
Tennis Court Oath:
They won’t dispense until they
draft a constitution for France
to limit the powers of the
monarch.
They were led by Mirabeau (a noble) & AbbÈ
SieyËs (a priest).
Mirabeau Abbe Sieyes
Mirabeau bought out a journal & delivered powerful
speeches to the crowds assembled at Versailles.
AbbÈ SieyËs, wrote an influential pamphlet called ‘What is
the Third Estate’?
Situation in Countryside
Often bakers exploited
the situation and
hoarded supplies.
After spending hours
in long queues at the
bakery, crowds of
angry women stormed
into the shops.
While the National
Assembly was busy
at Versailles drafting
a constitution, the
rest of France
seethed with turmoil.
A severe winter had
meant a bad harvest;
the price of bread
rose.
The king ordered
troops to move into
Paris
1
3
On 14 July, the
agitated crowd
stormed and
destroyed the Bastille.
2
Freedom of the press;
opposing views of events
could be expressed.
4
Caught in a frenzy of fear,
peasants in several
districts seized hoes and
pitchforks and attacked
chateaux.
5
Events during French Revolution:
In the countryside
rumours spread that the
lords of the manor had
hired bands of brigands to
destroy the ripe crops.
Pitchfork
Hoes Chateaux
They looted hoarded grain and burnt down
documents containing records of manorial dues
(Tax paid to big landlords by small peasants).
A large number of nobles fled from their homes,
many of them migrating to neighbouring
countries.
❖ Louis XVI finally recognized National Assembly.
❖ On 4 August 1789 decree passed abolishing the feudal
system of obligations and taxes. This was known as
AUGUST DECREE.
❖ Members of the clergy too were forced to give up their
privileges.
❖ Tithes were abolished & lands owned by the Church
were confiscated. As a result, the government acquired
assets worth at least 2 billion livres.
France becomes a constitutional Monarchy
❖ 1791- Draft of Constitution got
completed by National Assembly.
❖ Objective- Limit the powers of
the monarch.
❖ The legislature, executive and
judiciary. Separation of power.
+ Constitution
Monarchy
Constitutional
Monarchy
Absolute rule of
king
Limited Powers of King.
TWO TYPES OF CITIZENS
ACTIVE CITIZENS
Men above 25 years of age who
paid taxes equal to at least 3 days
of a labourer’s wage
They had voting rights!
Passive Citizens
Remaining men & all women
They had no Voting Rights.
Suffrage : Right to Vote
The Constitution began with a Declaration of the
Rights of Man and Citizen.
Rights such as the:
1. Right to life
2. Freedom of speech
3. Freedom of opinion
4. Equality before law
were established as ‘natural and inalienable’ rights. It
means that they belonged to each human being by
birth and could not be taken away. It was the duty of
the state to protect each citizen’s natural rights
FRANCE ABOLISHES MONARCHY &
BECOMES A REPUBLIC
❖
❖ Louis XVI entered into a secret negotiations
with the King of Prussia.
❖ Before King could do anything the National
Assembly voted in April 1792 to declare war
against Prussia and Austria.
Reaction among French People
Thousands of volunteers joined
the army.
French people saw this war as a
war of the poor people against
kings and aristocrats all over
Europe
Volunteers sang patriotic songs
such as Marseillaise composed by
Roget de LíIsle.
The Marseillaise is now
the national anthem of
France
● The revolutionary wars brought
losses and economic difficulties to
the people.
● While the men were away fighting
at the front, women were left to
cope with the tasks of earning a
living and looking after their
families.
● Large sections of the population
were convinced that the revolution
had to be carried further, as the
Constitution of 1791 gave political
rights only to the richer sections of
society.
POLITICAL CLUBS
Political clubs became an important rallying
point for people who wished to discuss
government policies and plan their own forms
of action.
Most successful club was JACOBIN CLUB.
Women too, who had been active
throughout this period, formed their
own clubs.
Jacobin Clubs
Their leader was
Maximilien
Robespierre
Small
shopkeepers,
artisans such as
shoemakers,
pastry cooks,
etc.
STRIPED
TROUSERS to
set themselves
apart by
fashionable
sections of
society
Members from to
the less
prosperous
sections of society.
1792- Jacobins planned a
rebellion with large number
of Parisians
August 10- Stormed the Palace
of the Tuileries, massacred the
king’s guards & held the king
as hostage.
Later the Assembly voted
to imprison the royal family.
They were known as
sans-culottes : ‘those without
knee breeches’
Red Cap
symbolized
Liberty!
Male
Suffrage
only!
Voting Rights : To all the men of 21 years of age
and above, regardless of wealth, got the right to
vote.
The newly elected assembly was called the
Convention.
21 September 1792
Monarchy was abolished
& France declared as
republic.
A republic is a form of
government where the
people elect the
government including
the head of the
government.
Louis XVI was sentenced to death by a court
on the charge of treason. On 21 January 1793
he was executed publicly at the Place de la
Concorde.
The queen Marie Antoinette met with the
same fate shortly after.
Reign of Terror
● Period : 1793 - 1794
● Robespierre
followed a policy of
severe control and
punishment.
● All those whom he
saw as being
‘enemies’ of the
republic were
arrested,
imprisoned and
then tried.
● If the court found
them ‘guilty’ they
were guillotined.
The guillotine is a device consisting of two
poles and a blade with which a person is
beheaded.
It was named after Dr Guillotin who invented
it.
Laws placing a
maximum ceiling on
wages and prices
1
3
Meat and bread were
rationed. Peasants
were forced to sell at
fixed prices fixed
2
Instead of the traditional
Monsieur (Sir) and
Madame (Madam), Citoyen
and Citoyenne (Citizen)
were used.
4
Churches were shut
down and their buildings
converted into barracks
or offices.
5
Reign of Terror:
The use of more expensive
white flour was forbidden;
all citizens were required to
eat the pain d’égalité
(equality bread)
Robespierre pursued his policies so
relentlessly that even his supporters began to
demand moderation.
Finally, he was convicted by a court in July
1794, arrested and on the next day sent to the
guillotine
A Directory Rules France
New constitution didn’t allow non-propertied men to
vote.
However, the Directors often
clashed with the legislative
councils, who then sought to
dismiss them.
The political instability of the
Directory paved the way for the
rise of a military dictator,
Napoleon Bonaparte.
Did Women have a Revolution?
Daughters of nobles or wealthier members of the
third estate could study at a convent, after which
their families arranged a marriage for them.
Their wages were lower than those of men.
Working women had also to care for their
families, that is, cook, fetch water, etc.
Most women of the third estate had to work for a
living. These women did not have access to
education or job training
From the very beginning women were active
participants in the events
To discuss and voice their interests women started their
own political clubs and newspapers. About sixty women’s
clubs came up in different French cities
The Society of Revolutionary and Republican
Women was the most famous of them.
● Main Demand : Right to Vote for women as well.
● But Constitution of 1791 reduced them to
passive citizens.
● They demanded the right to vote, to be elected
to the Assembly and to hold political office.
But the
revolutionary
government
introduced laws to
improve the lives of
women.
Divorce was
made legal, and
could be applied
for by both
women and men.
Marriage was
made into a
contract entered
into freely and
registered under
civil law.
Creation of state
schools,
schooling was
made compulsory
for all girls.
Women could now train for jobs, could become
artists or run small businesses.
Reign of Terror & Women
➢ New government issued laws ordering
closure of women’s clubs.
➢ Political activities banned.
➢ Many prominent women were arrested.
➢ Most of them were executed.
Movement for Voting Rights &
Equal Wages
The fight for women's suffrage continued for 200
years.
Finally in 1946 that women in France won the
right to vote.
Women across globe carried out international
suffrage movement during 19th & 20th century.
Did Women have a Revolution?
The colonies in the Caribbean – Martinique, Guadeloupe
and San Domingo – were important suppliers of
commodities such as tobacco, indigo, sugar and coffee.
But europeans were reluctant to work there. This started
Triangular Slave Trade.
● Triangular Slave Trade
● Started in : 17th Century
● Between : Europe, Africa and America
● Objective : To meet the growing demand of
labour of European Plantation owners
Then they were Sold to European plantation owners.
Exploitation of slave labour made it possible to meet
the growing demand in European markets
Branded & shackled. Slaves were packed tightly into
ships for 3 months long voyage.
From the ports of Bordeaux or Nantes to the African
coast.
● The National Assembly held debates upon
whether the rights of man should be
extended to slaves or not.
But never passed any law, fearing opposition
from businessmen.
● Finally the Convention freed all slaves in
the French overseas possession in 1794
● Ten years later, Napoleon reintroduced
slavery. Freedom was misinterpreted as
the right to enslave African Negroes in
pursuit of their economic interests.
Slavery was finally abolished in French
colonies in 1848.
1. Negroes – A term used for the
indigenous people of Africa south
of the Sahara. It is a derogatory
term not in common use any longer
2. Emancipation – The act of freeing
The Revolution and Everyday Life
The years following 1789 in France saw many such
changes in the lives of men, women and children.
The revolutionary governments took it upon
themselves to pass laws that would translate the
ideals of liberty and equality into everyday practice
Abolition of
censorship
Declaration of
the Rights of
Man and
Citizen
Newspapers, pamphlets, books and printed pictures
described and discussed the events and changes
taking place in France.
1. Freedom of the press meant that opposing
views of events could be expressed. Each side
sought to convince the others of its position
through the medium of print.
2. Plays, songs and festive processions attracted
large numbers of people.
In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor
of France.
Napoleon saw his role as a moderniser of Europe. He
introduced many laws such as the protection of private
property and a uniform system of weights and measures
provided by the decimal system.
Initially, many saw Napoleon as a liberator who would
bring freedom for the people. But soon the Napoleonic
armies came to be viewed everywhere as an invading
force. He was finally defeated at Waterloo in 1815.
CONCLUSION
The ideas of liberty and democratic rights were the most
important legacy of the French Revolution.
Soon the idea of French Revolution spread across the
globe.
Colonised peoples reworked the idea of freedom
from bondage into their movements to create a
sovereign nation state.
Tipu Sultan and Rammohan Roy are two examples of
individuals who responded to the ideas coming from
revolutionary France.
CONCLUSION
FRANCE ABOLISHES MONARCHY &
BECOMES A REPUBLIC
❖
❖ Louis XVI entered into a secret negotiations
with the King of Prussia.
❖ Before King could do anything the National
Assembly voted in April 1792 to declare war
against Prussia and Austria.
Reaction among French People
Thousands of volunteers joined
the army.
French people saw this war as a
war of the poor people against
kings and aristocrats all over
Europe
Volunteers sang patriotic songs
such as Marseillaise composed by
Roget de LíIsle.
The Marseillaise is now
the national anthem of
France
● The revolutionary wars brought
losses and economic difficulties to
the people.
● While the men were away fighting
at the front, women were left to
cope with the tasks of earning a
living and looking after their
families.
● Large sections of the population
were convinced that the revolution
had to be carried further, as the
Constitution of 1791 gave political
rights only to the richer sections of
society.
POLITICAL CLUBS
Political clubs became an important rallying
point for people who wished to discuss
government policies and plan their own forms
of action.
Most successful club was JACOBIN CLUB.
Women too, who had been active
throughout this period, formed their
own clubs.
Jacobin Clubs
Their leader was
Maximilien
Robespierre
Small
shopkeepers,
artisans such as
shoemakers,
pastry cooks,
etc.
STRIPED
TROUSERS to
set themselves
apart by
fashionable
sections of
society
Members from to
the less
prosperous
sections of society.
1792- Jacobins planned a
rebellion with large number
of Parisians
August 10- Stormed the Palace
of the Tuileries, massacred the
king’s guards & held the king
as hostage.
Later the Assembly voted
to imprison the royal family.
They were known as
sans-culottes : ‘those without
knee breeches’
Red Cap
symbolized
Liberty!
Male
Suffrage
only!
Voting Rights : To all the men of 21 years of age
and above, regardless of wealth, got the right to
vote.
The newly elected assembly was called the
Convention.
21 September 1792
Monarchy was abolished
& France declared as
republic.
A republic is a form of
government where the
people elect the
government including
the head of the
government.
Louis XVI was sentenced to death by a court
on the charge of treason. On 21 January 1793
he was executed publicly at the Place de la
Concorde.
The queen Marie Antoinette met with the
same fate shortly after.
Reign of Terror
● Period : 1793 - 1794
● Robespierre
followed a policy of
severe control and
punishment.
● All those whom he
saw as being
‘enemies’ of the
republic were
arrested,
imprisoned and
then tried.
● If the court found
them ‘guilty’ they
were guillotined.
The guillotine is a device consisting of two
poles and a blade with which a person is
beheaded.
It was named after Dr Guillotin who invented
it.
Laws placing a
maximum ceiling on
wages and prices
1
3
Meat and bread were
rationed. Peasants
were forced to sell at
fixed prices fixed
2
Instead of the traditional
Monsieur (Sir) and
Madame (Madam), Citoyen
and Citoyenne (Citizen)
were used.
4
Churches were shut
down and their buildings
converted into barracks
or offices.
5
Reign of Terror:
The use of more expensive
white flour was forbidden;
all citizens were required to
eat the pain d’égalité
(equality bread)
Robespierre pursued his policies so
relentlessly that even his supporters began to
demand moderation.
Finally, he was convicted by a court in July
1794, arrested and on the next day sent to the
guillotine
A Directory Rules France
New constitution didn’t allow non-propertied men to
vote.
However, the Directors often
clashed with the legislative
councils, who then sought to
dismiss them.
The political instability of the
Directory paved the way for the
rise of a military dictator,
Napoleon Bonaparte.
Did Women have a Revolution?
Daughters of nobles or wealthier members of the
third estate could study at a convent, after which
their families arranged a marriage for them.
Their wages were lower than those of men.
Working women had also to care for their
families, that is, cook, fetch water, etc.
Most women of the third estate had to work for a
living. These women did not have access to
education or job training
From the very beginning women were active
participants in the events
To discuss and voice their interests women started their
own political clubs and newspapers. About sixty women’s
clubs came up in different French cities
The Society of Revolutionary and Republican
Women was the most famous of them.
● Main Demand : Right to Vote for women as well.
● But Constitution of 1791 reduced them to
passive citizens.
● They demanded the right to vote, to be elected
to the Assembly and to hold political office.
But the
revolutionary
government
introduced laws to
improve the lives of
women.
Divorce was
made legal, and
could be applied
for by both
women and men.
Marriage was
made into a
contract entered
into freely and
registered under
civil law.
Creation of state
schools,
schooling was
made compulsory
for all girls.
Women could now train for jobs, could become
artists or run small businesses.
Reign of Terror & Women
➢ New government issued laws ordering
closure of women’s clubs.
➢ Political activities banned.
➢ Many prominent women were arrested.
➢ Most of them were executed.
Movement for Voting Rights &
Equal Wages
The fight for women's suffrage continued for 200
years.
Finally in 1946 that women in France won the
right to vote.
Women across globe carried out international
suffrage movement during 19th & 20th century.
Did Women have a Revolution?
The colonies in the Caribbean – Martinique, Guadeloupe
and San Domingo – were important suppliers of
commodities such as tobacco, indigo, sugar and coffee.
But europeans were reluctant to work there. This started
Triangular Slave Trade.
● Triangular Slave Trade
● Started in : 17th Century
● Between : Europe, Africa and America
● Objective : To meet the growing demand of
labour of European Plantation owners
Then they were Sold to European plantation owners.
Exploitation of slave labour made it possible to meet
the growing demand in European markets
Branded & shackled. Slaves were packed tightly into
ships for 3 months long voyage.
From the ports of Bordeaux or Nantes to the African
coast.
● The National Assembly held debates upon
whether the rights of man should be
extended to slaves or not.
But never passed any law, fearing opposition
from businessmen.
● Finally the Convention freed all slaves in
the French overseas possession in 1794
● Ten years later, Napoleon reintroduced
slavery. Freedom was misinterpreted as
the right to enslave African Negroes in
pursuit of their economic interests.
Slavery was finally abolished in French
colonies in 1848.
1. Negroes – A term used for the
indigenous people of Africa south
of the Sahara. It is a derogatory
term not in common use any longer
2. Emancipation – The act of freeing
The Revolution and Everyday Life
The years following 1789 in France saw many such
changes in the lives of men, women and children.
The revolutionary governments took it upon
themselves to pass laws that would translate the
ideals of liberty and equality into everyday practice
Abolition of
censorship
Declaration of
the Rights of
Man and
Citizen
Newspapers, pamphlets, books and printed pictures
described and discussed the events and changes
taking place in France.
1. Freedom of the press meant that opposing
views of events could be expressed. Each side
sought to convince the others of its position
through the medium of print.
2. Plays, songs and festive processions attracted
large numbers of people.
In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor
of France.
Napoleon saw his role as a moderniser of Europe. He
introduced many laws such as the protection of private
property and a uniform system of weights and measures
provided by the decimal system.
Initially, many saw Napoleon as a liberator who would
bring freedom for the people. But soon the Napoleonic
armies came to be viewed everywhere as an invading
force. He was finally defeated at Waterloo in 1815.
CONCLUSION
The ideas of liberty and democratic rights were the most
important legacy of the French Revolution.
Soon the idea of French Revolution spread across the
globe.
Colonised peoples reworked the idea of freedom
from bondage into their movements to create a
sovereign nation state.
Tipu Sultan and Rammohan Roy are two examples of
individuals who responded to the ideas coming from
revolutionary France.
CONCLUSION
 French revolution

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French revolution

  • 2. Kirori Mal College Delhi School of Social Work
  • 4. ❖ King of the France : Louis King XVI ❖ Dynasty - Bourbon family ❖ Ascended the throne of France in 1774 ❖ At the age of 20 he married Austrian Princess Marie Antoinette. ❖ The time that Louis XVI ascended the throne, France was going through a financial turmoil.
  • 5. Financially France was drained because of the war. France, Under Louis XVI, had helped the thirteen American colonies to gain their independence from Britain. The war added more than a billion livres to a debt that had already risen to more than 2 billion livres. . Taxes were increased to meet regular expenses, such as the cost of maintaining an army, the court, running government offices or universities. And the King and the Queen used to party instead of catering to the situation!
  • 6. Financial Turmoil: Livre – Unit of currency in France, discontinued in 1794
  • 7.
  • 8. Everyone Else 18th Century French Society- OLD REGIME 1st Estate 3rd Estate Clergy – Group of persons invested with special functions in the church. Exempted from taxes. Privileged by birth. Nobility - High Ranking people and families of Court and Royal Relations. They further enjoyed feudal privileges 1st Estate Everyone else. Compromised of 90% of total population of France. Had to pay taxes.
  • 9. Plight of Common People in Old Regime 1. Peasants were obliged to render services to the lord. 2. The Church extracted its share of taxes called tithes from the peasants 3. Third estate also had to pay taxes to the state. These included a direct tax, called taille, and a number of indirect taxes which were levied on articles of everyday consumption like salt or tobacco. 4. The burden of financing activities of the state through taxes was borne by the third estate alone.
  • 10. The Struggle to Survive ● Increase in population led to a rapid increase for food grains. ● Production of grains could not keep pace with the demand due to which the price of bread rose rapidly. ● Due to low wages paid to the labourers the gap between the poor and the rich widened. ● Things became worse whenever drought or hail reduced the harvest.
  • 11. Financial Turmoil: Subsistence Crisis An extreme situation where the basic means of livelihood/survival are endangered.
  • 12. 18th Century witnessed the emergence of middle class They had earned their wealth through an expanding overseas trade. Also included lawyers or administrative officials. They were educated and against the privileges by birth They believed that a person’s social position must depend on his merit. These ideas envisaging a society based on freedom and equal laws and opportunities for all, were put forward by philosophers
  • 13. Spread of Ideas ● French Philosophers were so influential that the American constitution and its guarantee of individual rights was an important example for political thinkers in France. ● These ideas were discussed intensively: 1. Salons 2. Coffee-houses 3. Books and newspapers. The news that Louis XVI planned to impose further taxes to be able to meet the expenses of the state generated anger and protest against the system of privileges.
  • 14. Montesquieu- The Spirit of the Laws Proposed a division of power within the government between the judiciary, the legislative, and the executive.. Ideas of Philosophers John Locke- Two Treatises of Government He rejected doctrine of the divine & absolute Right of the monarch. Rousseau- Social Contract Proposed a form of government based on a Social Contract between people & their representatives
  • 15. THE OUTBREAK OF THE REVOLUTION
  • 16. ● Louis XVI had to increase taxes because of the financial status of France during that time. ● In France of the Old Regime the monarch did not have the power to impose taxes according to his will alone. ● Rather he had to call a meeting of the Estates General which would then pass his proposals for new taxes. ● The Estates General was a political body to which the three estates sent their representatives respectively. ● The monarch alone could decide when to call a meeting of this body. ● The last time it was done was in 1614
  • 17. POLITICAL CLUBS 5 May, 1789: Louis XVI called an assembly of the Estates General First & Second Estates sent 300 representatives each & 600 representative from Third estates. The third estate was represented by its more prosperous and educated members. They demanded that voting now be conducted where each member would have one vote. Proposal rejected by the King. Members of the third estate walked out of the assembly in protest
  • 18. Peasants, artisans and women were denied entry to the assembly. However, their grievances and demands were listed in some 40,000 letters which the representatives had brought with them. The representatives of the third estate viewed themselves as spokesmen for the whole French nation ● Donec risus dolor porta venenatis ● Pharetra luctus felis On 20 June they assembled in the hall of an indoor tennis court in the grounds of Versailles. They declared themselves a National Assembly 01 02 03 03 Tennis Court Oath: They won’t dispense until they draft a constitution for France to limit the powers of the monarch.
  • 19. They were led by Mirabeau (a noble) & AbbÈ SieyËs (a priest). Mirabeau Abbe Sieyes Mirabeau bought out a journal & delivered powerful speeches to the crowds assembled at Versailles. AbbÈ SieyËs, wrote an influential pamphlet called ‘What is the Third Estate’?
  • 21. Often bakers exploited the situation and hoarded supplies. After spending hours in long queues at the bakery, crowds of angry women stormed into the shops. While the National Assembly was busy at Versailles drafting a constitution, the rest of France seethed with turmoil. A severe winter had meant a bad harvest; the price of bread rose.
  • 22.
  • 23. The king ordered troops to move into Paris 1 3 On 14 July, the agitated crowd stormed and destroyed the Bastille. 2 Freedom of the press; opposing views of events could be expressed. 4 Caught in a frenzy of fear, peasants in several districts seized hoes and pitchforks and attacked chateaux. 5 Events during French Revolution: In the countryside rumours spread that the lords of the manor had hired bands of brigands to destroy the ripe crops.
  • 24. Pitchfork Hoes Chateaux They looted hoarded grain and burnt down documents containing records of manorial dues (Tax paid to big landlords by small peasants). A large number of nobles fled from their homes, many of them migrating to neighbouring countries.
  • 25. ❖ Louis XVI finally recognized National Assembly. ❖ On 4 August 1789 decree passed abolishing the feudal system of obligations and taxes. This was known as AUGUST DECREE. ❖ Members of the clergy too were forced to give up their privileges. ❖ Tithes were abolished & lands owned by the Church were confiscated. As a result, the government acquired assets worth at least 2 billion livres.
  • 26. France becomes a constitutional Monarchy
  • 27. ❖ 1791- Draft of Constitution got completed by National Assembly. ❖ Objective- Limit the powers of the monarch. ❖ The legislature, executive and judiciary. Separation of power. + Constitution Monarchy Constitutional Monarchy Absolute rule of king Limited Powers of King.
  • 28.
  • 29. TWO TYPES OF CITIZENS ACTIVE CITIZENS Men above 25 years of age who paid taxes equal to at least 3 days of a labourer’s wage They had voting rights! Passive Citizens Remaining men & all women They had no Voting Rights. Suffrage : Right to Vote
  • 30. The Constitution began with a Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen. Rights such as the: 1. Right to life 2. Freedom of speech 3. Freedom of opinion 4. Equality before law were established as ‘natural and inalienable’ rights. It means that they belonged to each human being by birth and could not be taken away. It was the duty of the state to protect each citizen’s natural rights
  • 31.
  • 32. FRANCE ABOLISHES MONARCHY & BECOMES A REPUBLIC
  • 33. ❖ ❖ Louis XVI entered into a secret negotiations with the King of Prussia. ❖ Before King could do anything the National Assembly voted in April 1792 to declare war against Prussia and Austria.
  • 34. Reaction among French People Thousands of volunteers joined the army. French people saw this war as a war of the poor people against kings and aristocrats all over Europe Volunteers sang patriotic songs such as Marseillaise composed by Roget de LíIsle.
  • 35. The Marseillaise is now the national anthem of France
  • 36. ● The revolutionary wars brought losses and economic difficulties to the people. ● While the men were away fighting at the front, women were left to cope with the tasks of earning a living and looking after their families. ● Large sections of the population were convinced that the revolution had to be carried further, as the Constitution of 1791 gave political rights only to the richer sections of society.
  • 37. POLITICAL CLUBS Political clubs became an important rallying point for people who wished to discuss government policies and plan their own forms of action. Most successful club was JACOBIN CLUB.
  • 38. Women too, who had been active throughout this period, formed their own clubs.
  • 40. Their leader was Maximilien Robespierre Small shopkeepers, artisans such as shoemakers, pastry cooks, etc. STRIPED TROUSERS to set themselves apart by fashionable sections of society Members from to the less prosperous sections of society.
  • 41. 1792- Jacobins planned a rebellion with large number of Parisians August 10- Stormed the Palace of the Tuileries, massacred the king’s guards & held the king as hostage. Later the Assembly voted to imprison the royal family. They were known as sans-culottes : ‘those without knee breeches’ Red Cap symbolized Liberty!
  • 42. Male Suffrage only! Voting Rights : To all the men of 21 years of age and above, regardless of wealth, got the right to vote. The newly elected assembly was called the Convention. 21 September 1792 Monarchy was abolished & France declared as republic. A republic is a form of government where the people elect the government including the head of the government.
  • 43. Louis XVI was sentenced to death by a court on the charge of treason. On 21 January 1793 he was executed publicly at the Place de la Concorde. The queen Marie Antoinette met with the same fate shortly after.
  • 45. ● Period : 1793 - 1794 ● Robespierre followed a policy of severe control and punishment. ● All those whom he saw as being ‘enemies’ of the republic were arrested, imprisoned and then tried. ● If the court found them ‘guilty’ they were guillotined.
  • 46. The guillotine is a device consisting of two poles and a blade with which a person is beheaded. It was named after Dr Guillotin who invented it.
  • 47. Laws placing a maximum ceiling on wages and prices 1 3 Meat and bread were rationed. Peasants were forced to sell at fixed prices fixed 2 Instead of the traditional Monsieur (Sir) and Madame (Madam), Citoyen and Citoyenne (Citizen) were used. 4 Churches were shut down and their buildings converted into barracks or offices. 5 Reign of Terror: The use of more expensive white flour was forbidden; all citizens were required to eat the pain d’égalité (equality bread)
  • 48. Robespierre pursued his policies so relentlessly that even his supporters began to demand moderation. Finally, he was convicted by a court in July 1794, arrested and on the next day sent to the guillotine
  • 50. New constitution didn’t allow non-propertied men to vote.
  • 51. However, the Directors often clashed with the legislative councils, who then sought to dismiss them. The political instability of the Directory paved the way for the rise of a military dictator, Napoleon Bonaparte.
  • 52. Did Women have a Revolution?
  • 53. Daughters of nobles or wealthier members of the third estate could study at a convent, after which their families arranged a marriage for them. Their wages were lower than those of men. Working women had also to care for their families, that is, cook, fetch water, etc. Most women of the third estate had to work for a living. These women did not have access to education or job training From the very beginning women were active participants in the events
  • 54. To discuss and voice their interests women started their own political clubs and newspapers. About sixty women’s clubs came up in different French cities The Society of Revolutionary and Republican Women was the most famous of them.
  • 55. ● Main Demand : Right to Vote for women as well. ● But Constitution of 1791 reduced them to passive citizens. ● They demanded the right to vote, to be elected to the Assembly and to hold political office.
  • 56. But the revolutionary government introduced laws to improve the lives of women. Divorce was made legal, and could be applied for by both women and men. Marriage was made into a contract entered into freely and registered under civil law. Creation of state schools, schooling was made compulsory for all girls. Women could now train for jobs, could become artists or run small businesses.
  • 57. Reign of Terror & Women ➢ New government issued laws ordering closure of women’s clubs. ➢ Political activities banned. ➢ Many prominent women were arrested. ➢ Most of them were executed.
  • 58. Movement for Voting Rights & Equal Wages The fight for women's suffrage continued for 200 years. Finally in 1946 that women in France won the right to vote. Women across globe carried out international suffrage movement during 19th & 20th century.
  • 59. Did Women have a Revolution?
  • 60. The colonies in the Caribbean – Martinique, Guadeloupe and San Domingo – were important suppliers of commodities such as tobacco, indigo, sugar and coffee. But europeans were reluctant to work there. This started Triangular Slave Trade.
  • 61. ● Triangular Slave Trade ● Started in : 17th Century ● Between : Europe, Africa and America ● Objective : To meet the growing demand of labour of European Plantation owners
  • 62.
  • 63. Then they were Sold to European plantation owners. Exploitation of slave labour made it possible to meet the growing demand in European markets Branded & shackled. Slaves were packed tightly into ships for 3 months long voyage. From the ports of Bordeaux or Nantes to the African coast.
  • 64. ● The National Assembly held debates upon whether the rights of man should be extended to slaves or not. But never passed any law, fearing opposition from businessmen. ● Finally the Convention freed all slaves in the French overseas possession in 1794 ● Ten years later, Napoleon reintroduced slavery. Freedom was misinterpreted as the right to enslave African Negroes in pursuit of their economic interests. Slavery was finally abolished in French colonies in 1848.
  • 65. 1. Negroes – A term used for the indigenous people of Africa south of the Sahara. It is a derogatory term not in common use any longer 2. Emancipation – The act of freeing
  • 66. The Revolution and Everyday Life
  • 67. The years following 1789 in France saw many such changes in the lives of men, women and children. The revolutionary governments took it upon themselves to pass laws that would translate the ideals of liberty and equality into everyday practice Abolition of censorship Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
  • 68. Newspapers, pamphlets, books and printed pictures described and discussed the events and changes taking place in France. 1. Freedom of the press meant that opposing views of events could be expressed. Each side sought to convince the others of its position through the medium of print. 2. Plays, songs and festive processions attracted large numbers of people.
  • 69. In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor of France. Napoleon saw his role as a moderniser of Europe. He introduced many laws such as the protection of private property and a uniform system of weights and measures provided by the decimal system. Initially, many saw Napoleon as a liberator who would bring freedom for the people. But soon the Napoleonic armies came to be viewed everywhere as an invading force. He was finally defeated at Waterloo in 1815. CONCLUSION
  • 70. The ideas of liberty and democratic rights were the most important legacy of the French Revolution. Soon the idea of French Revolution spread across the globe. Colonised peoples reworked the idea of freedom from bondage into their movements to create a sovereign nation state. Tipu Sultan and Rammohan Roy are two examples of individuals who responded to the ideas coming from revolutionary France. CONCLUSION
  • 71.
  • 72. FRANCE ABOLISHES MONARCHY & BECOMES A REPUBLIC
  • 73. ❖ ❖ Louis XVI entered into a secret negotiations with the King of Prussia. ❖ Before King could do anything the National Assembly voted in April 1792 to declare war against Prussia and Austria.
  • 74. Reaction among French People Thousands of volunteers joined the army. French people saw this war as a war of the poor people against kings and aristocrats all over Europe Volunteers sang patriotic songs such as Marseillaise composed by Roget de LíIsle.
  • 75. The Marseillaise is now the national anthem of France
  • 76. ● The revolutionary wars brought losses and economic difficulties to the people. ● While the men were away fighting at the front, women were left to cope with the tasks of earning a living and looking after their families. ● Large sections of the population were convinced that the revolution had to be carried further, as the Constitution of 1791 gave political rights only to the richer sections of society.
  • 77. POLITICAL CLUBS Political clubs became an important rallying point for people who wished to discuss government policies and plan their own forms of action. Most successful club was JACOBIN CLUB.
  • 78. Women too, who had been active throughout this period, formed their own clubs.
  • 80. Their leader was Maximilien Robespierre Small shopkeepers, artisans such as shoemakers, pastry cooks, etc. STRIPED TROUSERS to set themselves apart by fashionable sections of society Members from to the less prosperous sections of society.
  • 81. 1792- Jacobins planned a rebellion with large number of Parisians August 10- Stormed the Palace of the Tuileries, massacred the king’s guards & held the king as hostage. Later the Assembly voted to imprison the royal family. They were known as sans-culottes : ‘those without knee breeches’ Red Cap symbolized Liberty!
  • 82. Male Suffrage only! Voting Rights : To all the men of 21 years of age and above, regardless of wealth, got the right to vote. The newly elected assembly was called the Convention. 21 September 1792 Monarchy was abolished & France declared as republic. A republic is a form of government where the people elect the government including the head of the government.
  • 83. Louis XVI was sentenced to death by a court on the charge of treason. On 21 January 1793 he was executed publicly at the Place de la Concorde. The queen Marie Antoinette met with the same fate shortly after.
  • 85. ● Period : 1793 - 1794 ● Robespierre followed a policy of severe control and punishment. ● All those whom he saw as being ‘enemies’ of the republic were arrested, imprisoned and then tried. ● If the court found them ‘guilty’ they were guillotined.
  • 86. The guillotine is a device consisting of two poles and a blade with which a person is beheaded. It was named after Dr Guillotin who invented it.
  • 87. Laws placing a maximum ceiling on wages and prices 1 3 Meat and bread were rationed. Peasants were forced to sell at fixed prices fixed 2 Instead of the traditional Monsieur (Sir) and Madame (Madam), Citoyen and Citoyenne (Citizen) were used. 4 Churches were shut down and their buildings converted into barracks or offices. 5 Reign of Terror: The use of more expensive white flour was forbidden; all citizens were required to eat the pain d’égalité (equality bread)
  • 88. Robespierre pursued his policies so relentlessly that even his supporters began to demand moderation. Finally, he was convicted by a court in July 1794, arrested and on the next day sent to the guillotine
  • 90. New constitution didn’t allow non-propertied men to vote.
  • 91. However, the Directors often clashed with the legislative councils, who then sought to dismiss them. The political instability of the Directory paved the way for the rise of a military dictator, Napoleon Bonaparte.
  • 92. Did Women have a Revolution?
  • 93. Daughters of nobles or wealthier members of the third estate could study at a convent, after which their families arranged a marriage for them. Their wages were lower than those of men. Working women had also to care for their families, that is, cook, fetch water, etc. Most women of the third estate had to work for a living. These women did not have access to education or job training From the very beginning women were active participants in the events
  • 94. To discuss and voice their interests women started their own political clubs and newspapers. About sixty women’s clubs came up in different French cities The Society of Revolutionary and Republican Women was the most famous of them.
  • 95. ● Main Demand : Right to Vote for women as well. ● But Constitution of 1791 reduced them to passive citizens. ● They demanded the right to vote, to be elected to the Assembly and to hold political office.
  • 96. But the revolutionary government introduced laws to improve the lives of women. Divorce was made legal, and could be applied for by both women and men. Marriage was made into a contract entered into freely and registered under civil law. Creation of state schools, schooling was made compulsory for all girls. Women could now train for jobs, could become artists or run small businesses.
  • 97. Reign of Terror & Women ➢ New government issued laws ordering closure of women’s clubs. ➢ Political activities banned. ➢ Many prominent women were arrested. ➢ Most of them were executed.
  • 98. Movement for Voting Rights & Equal Wages The fight for women's suffrage continued for 200 years. Finally in 1946 that women in France won the right to vote. Women across globe carried out international suffrage movement during 19th & 20th century.
  • 99. Did Women have a Revolution?
  • 100. The colonies in the Caribbean – Martinique, Guadeloupe and San Domingo – were important suppliers of commodities such as tobacco, indigo, sugar and coffee. But europeans were reluctant to work there. This started Triangular Slave Trade.
  • 101. ● Triangular Slave Trade ● Started in : 17th Century ● Between : Europe, Africa and America ● Objective : To meet the growing demand of labour of European Plantation owners
  • 102.
  • 103. Then they were Sold to European plantation owners. Exploitation of slave labour made it possible to meet the growing demand in European markets Branded & shackled. Slaves were packed tightly into ships for 3 months long voyage. From the ports of Bordeaux or Nantes to the African coast.
  • 104. ● The National Assembly held debates upon whether the rights of man should be extended to slaves or not. But never passed any law, fearing opposition from businessmen. ● Finally the Convention freed all slaves in the French overseas possession in 1794 ● Ten years later, Napoleon reintroduced slavery. Freedom was misinterpreted as the right to enslave African Negroes in pursuit of their economic interests. Slavery was finally abolished in French colonies in 1848.
  • 105. 1. Negroes – A term used for the indigenous people of Africa south of the Sahara. It is a derogatory term not in common use any longer 2. Emancipation – The act of freeing
  • 106. The Revolution and Everyday Life
  • 107. The years following 1789 in France saw many such changes in the lives of men, women and children. The revolutionary governments took it upon themselves to pass laws that would translate the ideals of liberty and equality into everyday practice Abolition of censorship Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
  • 108. Newspapers, pamphlets, books and printed pictures described and discussed the events and changes taking place in France. 1. Freedom of the press meant that opposing views of events could be expressed. Each side sought to convince the others of its position through the medium of print. 2. Plays, songs and festive processions attracted large numbers of people.
  • 109. In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor of France. Napoleon saw his role as a moderniser of Europe. He introduced many laws such as the protection of private property and a uniform system of weights and measures provided by the decimal system. Initially, many saw Napoleon as a liberator who would bring freedom for the people. But soon the Napoleonic armies came to be viewed everywhere as an invading force. He was finally defeated at Waterloo in 1815. CONCLUSION
  • 110. The ideas of liberty and democratic rights were the most important legacy of the French Revolution. Soon the idea of French Revolution spread across the globe. Colonised peoples reworked the idea of freedom from bondage into their movements to create a sovereign nation state. Tipu Sultan and Rammohan Roy are two examples of individuals who responded to the ideas coming from revolutionary France. CONCLUSION