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Chapter 17 The French Revolution
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Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Chapter 17

The French Revolution

Page 2: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

PART I

From Revolution to Republic

Page 3: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The First Estate

• Clergy• Divided

between wealthy

• Influential clerics and poor parish priests

Page 4: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The Second Estate

• Nobles• Exempted

themselves from taxation

• Refused to modernize the economic structure

Page 5: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The Third Estate

• 97% of the population

• Could not claim nobility

• Exempted themselves from taxes (bourgeoisie)

• Poor/urban workers and rural peasants

Page 6: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Estates General

• Came together to organize the three estates (by the nobility)

• The first and third estate rejected the nobility

Page 7: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen

• All men are equal/have rights to liberty, property, security, and resistance

• Opened the persecution of the Church

• Could practice any religion

Page 8: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The Civil Constitution of the Clergy

• Church property/wealth seized to help balance budget

• Clergy could not leave their parishes for more than two weeks

• Outlawed the publication of papal documents

Page 9: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Bl. Fr. William Chaminade

• Bordeaux, France • Defied Civil

Constitution of the Clergy

• Underground • Formed Society

of Mary (Marianist)

Page 10: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Bl. Fr. William Chaminade

• Christians needed to bring the story of Jesus/Good News to life through their daily activities

• Example to follow: Mary • …do whatever He tells you.

Page 11: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Venerable Sr. Adele

• Daughters of Mary Immaculate

• Created female lay communities/ convent

• United with Fr. Chaminade in face of persecution

Page 12: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Marie Thèrése

• Gathered parishioners for prayer, religious instruction, spiritual guidance, secret Masses

• Spent time counseling Prostitutes after the Revolution

Page 13: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

PART II

The Death of Louis XIV and the Age of the Revolutionary Republic

Page 14: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The “De-Christianization” of France

• The Reign of Terror• Missionary Reps:

• Closed down Churches /basilicas• Killed priests who tried to flee• Seized the Cathedral of Notre Dame/dedicated it to the “Goddess of Reason”

Page 15: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Deistic Religion

• Mass replaced with civil ceremonies.

• Pagan Cults centered upon justice, liberty, and equality

• Saint’s days were replaced with festivals dedicated to justice, etc.

Page 16: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The Directory

• Extremely hard on the Church• Oppressed priests who would not

take an Oath to the Republic• Refused to replace bishops• Reigned under Napoleon

Page 17: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Pope Pius VII

• Goal: To revive the Christian Faith

• Sympathized with the movement for liberty/equality/justice

• Saw that the French were using unjust means to gain rights

• Christ is the fulfillment of these rights

Page 18: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

PART IIINapoleon Bonaparte

Page 19: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Concordat of 1801

• Guaranteed the free and public practice of Catholicism

• Civil authorities could only interject in matters of public safety

• Bishops reduced• Napoleon could

nominate bishops• France agreed to

compensate the Church for loss of property

Page 20: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

The Organic Articles

• Prohibited the publication of papal documents/council decrees without consent from the government

• Gallican Catechism • Limited the administrative powers

of the bishops

Page 21: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Emperor Napoleon vs. Pope Pius VII

• “Napoleonic Code”– Religious

denominations equal

– Freedom of religious practices

– Civil marriage and divorce

– Church heavily restricted

Page 22: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Napoleon vs. Pope Pius VII

• Pope Pius: - Asked to annul Napoleon’s

brother’s marriage- Refused to join Continental System

Page 23: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Napoleon vs. Pope Pius VII

• Napoleon: - Threatened to

abolish priestly celibacy

- Suppressed religious orders

- Established a French Patriarch

- Ordered troops to Rome

Page 24: Chapter 17 The French Revolution. PART I From Revolution to Republic.

Napoleon vs. Pope Pius VII

• Napoleon:- Seized papal

states - Assumed

jurisdiction over the pope

- Issued a salary to the pope

- Restricted papal power

- Arrested/excommunicated the pope