Top Banner
The French Revolution Begins
10

1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

Dec 22, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

The French Revolution Begins

Page 2: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

1) Absolutism vs. the EnlightenmentDuring the 1600s and 1700s, French kings

gained total power over the country’s governmentThis conflicted sharply with the

Enlightenment philosophy of a government whose purpose was to protect individual rights2) Social and Political Stratification

Power in French society was concentrated in the the First and Second Estates

No matter how wealthy a commoner became, he could never move up the social ladder

Causes of the French Revolution

Page 3: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

First Estate

Second Estate

Third Estate

Page 4: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

3) Severe Economic Crisis in the 1770s and 1780s:

a) Rapid Inflation and High Taxes decrease in trade and an economic slowdown

b) A series of Bad Winters led to Crop Failures bread prices skyrocket; peasants face a real possibility of starvation

c) High Public Debt caused by Wars and the opulent royal court

Causes of the French Revolution

Page 5: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.
Page 6: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

The Estates General Meets-Desperate for money, King Louis XVI attempted to impose a new tax on the nobles and clergy

-Nobles: force Louis to call a meeting of the Estates General (the French “legislature”)

-Spring, 1789: King Louis caves in to the nobles’ demand, and calls the Estates General to meet for the first time in 175 years

Voting Rules

1) Representatives of each Estate meet separately and decide on their vote

2) Each Estate gets one vote

Page 7: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

The Estates General

Page 8: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

-Immediately after the Estates General opened, the delegates of the Third Estate withdrew and formed the National Assembly

-National Assembly—declared themselves the legitimate representatives of the French People, and began passing laws in their name

-The Tennis Court Oath—the Third Estate delegates were locked out of the Estates General meeting;

-They met by themselves in an indoor tennis court, and swore an oath to not disband until they had written a French Constitution

The Third Estate Revolts

Page 9: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.

-Word of the events at Versailles quickly reached the capital city of Paris

-The urban poor took to the streets, staging demonstrations in support of the National Assembly

-Some people/mobs began to arm themselves

-July 14, 1789—a mob storms the Bastille Prison; killing guards, freeing prisoners, and taking weapons and ammunition

-”Bastille Day” is the symbolic beginning of the French Revolution

Revolution in Paris

Page 10: 1) Absolutism vs. the Enlightenment During the 1600s and 1700s, French kings gained total power over the country’s government This conflicted sharply.