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FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6
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FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

FRENCH REVOLUTIONFRENCH REVOLUTION

CHAPTER 6

Page 2: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

I. French RevolutionI. French Revolution

A. 1789-99B. A period of disorder,

turmoil, and chaos

Page 3: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

II. CausesII. CausesA. Social Structure

–1. Three main classes–2. Special Privileges to upper

classes (no taxes)

Page 4: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

II. CausesII. Causes B. Enlightenment Ideas

–1. Ideas from U.S. entered France with individuals who had helped Americans fight for independence

–2. France helped U.S. fight British with some money, arms supplies (including a ship)

Page 5: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

II. CausesII. Causes

C. Economic Problems–1. France Bankrupt

a. Louis XIV--spent, spent, spentb. Louis XV- lazy, poor leaderc. Louis XVI--not interested-- wanted to be a locksmith

Page 6: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

2. Result was a tax on everything (high taxes)–a. Gabelle tax--salt tax that

everyone 8 yrs or older must buy 7 pounds of salt per year from the govt

Page 7: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

–B. Peasants paid to pick up sticks for fire wood which at one time was free

–c. Tax on some peasants amounted to 80% of income

Page 8: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

III. Estates GeneralIII. Estates General

A. French society was divided into three parts

B. Met for the first time in 1789 after almost 300 years of inactivity.

Page 9: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

III. Estates GeneralIII. Estates General

–1. Their mission was to solve France’s economic problems

–2. Would go much further

Page 10: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

III. Estates GeneralIII. Estates General

C. First Estate–1. Clergy

–2. Less than one percent of population

–3. 300 delegates

Page 11: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

III. Estates GeneralIII. Estates GeneralD. Second Estate

–1. Nobles

–2. Less than two percent of population

–3. 300 delegates

–4. Many nobles had financial problems

Page 12: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

III. Estates GeneralIII. Estates GeneralF. Third Estate

–1. The resta. Middle class, professional people--leaders of the revolution

b. Manual workersc. peasants

Page 13: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

III. Estates GeneralIII. Estates General

–2. About 97% of population

–3. 600 delegatesG. Each group had one vote

–1. Result was that the 1st and 2nd Estates could out vote the 3rd.

Page 14: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

III. Estates GeneralIII. Estates General

H. Major mistake on the part of Louis XVI to get the Estates together

Page 15: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Y.T.T.W.Y.T.T.W.

Determine the three causes that led to the beginning of the French Revolution.

Page 16: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

IV. Tennis Court OathIV. Tennis Court Oath

A. King called Estates General together to try and solve some of France’s financial problems

Could not decide on voting procedures.

Page 17: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

C. Refused to accept the voting conditions, the king locked the meeting house doors and told the group to return home.

Page 18: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

D. 3rd Estate refused and moved to nearby indoor tennis court

E. A vow to continue to meet until they had produced a French constitution.

Page 19: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

– 1. This was the first act of the French Revolution

– The Third Estate becomes known as the National Assembly.

– The National Assembly adopted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen.

Page 20: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Declaration of the Rights of Man and the CitizenDeclaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen

All men were free and equal before the law.

Appointment to public office should be based on talent

No group should be exempt from taxation

Freedom of speed and press were affirmed.

Page 21: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Storming the BastilleStorming the Bastille

A. While the Tennis Court Oath is being taken the people of Paris riot.

B. The most hate building in Paris was the Bastille, a prison

C. Citizens believed that weapons were stored there along with hundreds of prisoners

Page 22: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

– D. Once the mob had taken the prison they found seven prisonersa. 2 lunaticsb. 4 convictsc. 1 pervertd. All guarded by 100 disabled war

veterans

Page 23: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

C. This was the first violent act of the French Revolution.

Page 24: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Women March on VersaillesWomen March on Versailles

Louis XVI did not want to accept these terms but thousands of women from Paris marched to the palace and captured him, his wife (Marie Antoinette), and their son.

Page 25: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Constitution of 1791Constitution of 1791

Set up a Limited Monarchy(with a constitution)

“active” citizens-men over 25 who paid a certain amount of taxes could vote

“passive” citizens- equal rights but no right to vote

Page 26: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Y.T.T.W.Y.T.T.W.

Determine why the Third Estate was upset by the voting conditions. After the discovery at the Bastille do you feel the Third Estate should have stopped the Revolution?

Page 27: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

SECTION 3: RADICAL DAYS

SECTION 3: RADICAL DAYS

Page 28: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

The Monarch AbolishedThe Monarch Abolished

National Convention- Sept. 1792 wanted to establish a republic

Two groups of people formed:– 1. Jacobins-Radicals- Wanted the King

dead.– 2. Girondins-Supporters of the King

Page 29: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Louis XVI- was put on trial as a traitor

Jan 21, 1793- Louis was beheaded by the guillotine.

October- Marie Antoinette executed

Their son Louis XVII- died of unknown causes

Page 30: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

1793 National Convention1793 National Convention

Committee of Public Safety- 12 members- absolute power- save the revolution–Mass levy- requiring all

citizens to contribute to the war effort

Page 31: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

– Mandating education– Abolishing slavery– Controlled prices– Tried to de-Christianize France

“saint” was removed from street signs New calendar renumbered years from the first

day of the French Republic, not the birth of Christ

Sunday service and church holidays eliminated.

Page 32: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Maximillien Robespierre Maximillien Robespierre

Leader of the Committee of Public Safety (12 people)

Great public speaker–Democracy

–Universal male suffrage “Criminals lose their heads”

Page 33: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Reign of Terror--2nd StageReign of Terror--2nd Stage

July 1793- July 1794 40,000 people died --

Guillotine July 27, 1794- Robespierre

was arrested and then executed

Page 34: FRENCH REVOLUTION CHAPTER 6. I. French Revolution n A. 1789-99 n B. A period of disorder, turmoil, and chaos.

Reaction and the Directory- 3rd StageReaction and the Directory- 3rd Stage

The Constitution of 1795- set up a five-man Directory and a two-house legislature.

-Lower House (500), drafted laws

-Upper House (250) accepted or rejected laws

Held power from 1795 to 1799 and then failed