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The French Revolution - Ça ira! Ça ira ! (Edith Piaf) Ça ira, ça ira! Les aristocrates à la lanterne! Song dates from the Revolution itself.
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The French Revolution - Ça ira! Ça ira! (Edith Piaf) Ça ira! – Ça ira, ça ira! Les aristocrates à la lanterne! – Song dates from the Revolution itself.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: The French Revolution - Ça ira! Ça ira! (Edith Piaf) Ça ira! – Ça ira, ça ira! Les aristocrates à la lanterne! – Song dates from the Revolution itself.

The French Revolution - Ça ira!

• Ça ira! (Edith Piaf)– Ça ira, ça ira! Les

aristocrates à la lanterne!

– Song dates from the Revolution itself.

Page 2: The French Revolution - Ça ira! Ça ira! (Edith Piaf) Ça ira! – Ça ira, ça ira! Les aristocrates à la lanterne! – Song dates from the Revolution itself.

Making of the Modern World

The French Revolution

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The French Revolution

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. - Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities

The French Revolution is a movement of God. It is a pure gift to progress. - Victor Hugo, Les Misérables

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Enduring Reference Point for Social and Political Change

• ‘It will be like the French Revolution… It will take years.’

• Hatim Tallima of the Revolutionary Socialists in Cairo, 2013 (Arab Spring)

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Watershed moment of modernity

• Overturned– Divine-right, absolutist monarchy– Privilege (as opposed to equality before the law)– Nobility– Guilds, corporations– The Church’s wealth and moral preeminence

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• Inaugurated (sometimes in ‘proto’ form): – Liberalism– Republicanism– Socialism– Conservatism– Free-market capitalism– Feminism– Nationalism– Imperialism (an ideologically driven form of it)– Liberal authoritarianism (contradiction in terms?)– Totalitarianism (Cold War term: from Rousseau, to

Robespierre, to Stalin?)– Secular universalism

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Burke (anti) vs. Paine (pro)

• Kings will be tyrants by policy when subjects are rebels by principle.

– Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790)

• The circumstances of the world are continually changing and the opinions of man also; and as government is for the living, and not for the dead, it is the living only that has any right in it.

– Paine, Rights of Man (1791)

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• Origins– Circumstances (financial, political)– Class– Enlightenment ideas– Public Opinion

• Course– Was radicalisation inevitable?– Why the Terror (1793-94, the Year II)?– Why did republicanism give way to authoritarianism?

• Legacies– Did the French Revolution pave the way to liberalism and human

rights, social democracy or pathological forms of democracy?

Historical debates

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Thesis of circumstances• Financial breakdown

– France helped finance the American War for Independence from Britain (1770s-1780s)

– More than half of annual tax revenues used up to pay interest on the debt (1786)

– No central bank, regime borrowed at high interest rates– Refusal to pay more taxes

• Political juggernaut– Parlements and Notables (represent ‘the nation’) vs.– Monarchy

• Bad harvests, high bread prices

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Class Thesis(prevalent in mid-20th century)

• Three Estates– Clergy, nobles, third estate

• High bourgeoisie: had most of the productive power but no political power

• abbé Sieyès, What is the Third Estate? (1789)– What is the Third Estate? Everything– What has it been recognised to be until now?

Nothing– What does it aspire to be? Something

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Enlightenment Origins: Ideas?

• Faute à Rousseau?– Collective sovereignty– Moral regeneration and virtue– Utopian principles lead to authoritarianism?

• Faute à Voltaire and aux philosophes?– Desacralisation of throne and altar– Critical reason trumps ethics, morality

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Enlightenment Origins: Public Opinion

– A more literate and critical public• Content of print and conversations

– Critical of monarchy (debauched, arbitrary, corrupt)– Irreverence for sacred power: throne and altar

• The rise of a critical public, thinking for oneself– People, bombarded with print (some of it produced by

politically interested sources like the monarchy) learn to be skeptical

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Course of Revolution

• Liberal Phase – 1789-1792 (constitutional monarchy)

• Radical Phase – 1792-1794 (republic)– Year II, the Terror (1793-94)

• Thermidor – 1794-1795 (republic)• Directory – 1795-1799 (republic, but

increasingly authoritarian)• Consulate, Empire – 1799-1814 (Napoleon)

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Meeting of the Estates GeneralMay 1789

• Prior failure to persuade hand-picked assemblies of notables (1787 and 1788) to agree to more taxes

• Parlement (sovereign judicial courts) refuses to agree to more taxes

• Only remaining solution is an Estates General: a meeting of the clergy, nobles and third estate. First time since 1614 (absolutism had suppressed most representative bodies).

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1789 – La Révolution

• June 17 - Third Estate, impatient and suspicious of clergy and nobles, declares itself to be ‘the nation’. Asserts its sovereign authority over taxation and swears to uphold the debt

• Also creates a committee to investigate bread crisis and propose solutions.

• Late June – Louis XVI eventually concedes but plots military repression.

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June 20 – Tennis Court Oath (indoor, see below)New National Assembly takes an oath to refuse to disband until Constitution is completedJune 27 – Louis XVI concedes but plots military repression

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1789• July 14 – The Storming of the Bastille

– Parisians, in search of arms to protect themselves from monarchy’s repression, attack this fortress and prison on the edge of Paris for arms; few prisoners being held there at the time. Governor fires on crowds, who storm the prison and put his head on a pike.

• August 4 – Abolition of Privilege (end of the Old Regime, since privilege was at the very heart of it)

• End of August: Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen

• October 5-6 – Women’s Bread March to Versailles– Brings King, Queen and National Assembly to Paris, where they were more

vulnerable to popular pressures

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Storming of the Bastille, July 14Was torn down, stone by stone

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Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizennote resemblance to Ten Commandments: a modern, secular

religion?

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1790• Civil Constitution of the Clergy

– State seizes church lands (10-12% of all land), which will be auctioned off (to pay for the national debt)

– Closure of monasteries and convents (seen as un-useful institutions in an age of Enlightenment utility)

– Requires religious clerics to swear an oath to uphold the new Constitution

• Left/Right splits in National Assembly– Arch-Royalists sit on right; Progressives (Jacobins and their allies) on the left

• Spread of Jacobin clubs throughout France– Who were Jacobins?

• Initially a group of legislators who met to strategize• Eventually, became a nationwide network of clubs in favour of a constitution, rights

and legal equality• Often pressured local officials to carry out new laws

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1791

• June: Flight of the King to Varennes– Intended to return with counterrevolutionary troops

to put down the Revolution (Marie-Antoinette’s brother, Joseph, was emperor of the Habsburg Empire)

– Louis XVI was recognized at border by a postman, sent back to Paris

• July: Radicals call for a Republic – authorities fire on them: Massacre on the Champs de Mars

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1791

• Constitution (September)

• Legislative Assembly replaces Constituent Assembly

• Abolition of guilds, corporations and all government regulation bodies

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1792• Tensions increase

– ReligiousCounterrevolutionary propaganda proliferatesResistance to clerical oath and anger about new

constitutional priests imposed on parishes-- Social and economic

Disruptions in the world of labour; popular discontent infiltrates political clubs and sections-- Political

King is essentially a prisoner in Paris, plotting in hopes of a foreign invasion to put down revolution

Divisions among revolutionariesradicals vs. moderates (Jacobins / Girondins)

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1792• April: War declared against Austria. Soon, France is at war with most of its

neighbours, who fear the spread of revolution.

• August 10: The monarchy falls in violent insurrection

• September 2-7: Prison massacres of priests and nobles in Paris by radical ‘sans-culotte’ forces

• September 21: First Republic declared– Constitution won’t be promulgated until June of 1793– Operating in a state of exception… all executive decisions easily denounced as

arbitrary… no constitutional guidelines.. Sharp tensions between a free-market and regulated economy

– Pressure for political justice

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1793• January 21: Louis XVI is guillotined• March: counterrevolutionary revolts in Vendée• Terror gears up

– Creation of the Committee of Public Safety (executive)– Committee of General Security (police committee)– Revolutionary Tribunals (which condemn ‘enemies’ of the revolution to

the guillotine• June: Jacobins, pushed by sans-culottes in Paris, purge the

Girondins from National Convention.• Summer: Federalist Revolts against Paris and sans-culotte

movement (provinces resent purge)• Autumn: Marie-Antoinette and Girondins guillotined

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1794

• Slavery in French colonies abolished (Feb)

• Terror escalates (spring)– Purge of Dantonistes (who wanted to end the Terror)– Purge of Hébertistes (sans-culottes who wanted to push the

Terror further)

• High Terror (June/July): thousands executed in Paris

• 27 July (9 Thermidor): Robespierre and other members of the Committee of Public Safety are arrested and guillotined

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1795-1799• The Directory– Executive-heavy Republic, with 5 directors– Difficult to pursue a middle path between

radicalism and royalism– 1797: elections are nullified; repression increases– Revolution exported; the republican generals gain

in reputation and power• 18 Brumaire (Nov 9, 1799): Coup brings

Napoleon to power

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1800-1815

• Consulate and First Empire: – Napoleon conquers much of Europe

– overturns old regimes across Europe

– Fleeces conquered countries but imposes new ideology and administrative structures… creating new political and administrative structures that will help bring about the rise of ‘nation states’ across the 19th century

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Key terms and concepts• Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789)• Jacobinism (centralising state, fiercely secular, touch of social

justice)• Sans-culottes (for economic regulations and punishment of

‘enemies’ of the nation)• Vendée (civil war)• Levée en masse – universal draft, largest army in Europe almost

overnight (1793---)• Terror• Guillotine (pain and torture is no longer the point of judicial

punishment. Equality and prompt, painless elimination of enemies from the nation)

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The Terror in perspective

• Struck at all ‘suspects’ of the new regime. • Deaths from revolutionary strife– 17,000 executions by revolutionary tribunals– 15,000-17,000 die in prison

• Deaths in civil and foreign wars (1792-1815) – roughly 4 million across Europe– 250,000 to 400,000 in the civil war of the Vendée– Most deaths occur during Napoleon’s wars

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A new culture• Time, weights and measure - rationality

– Metric system created – more rational than inches, feet, etc.– Revolutionary Calendar based on nature. 10 day weeks

• Brumaire (Nov-Dec): ‘brume’ means fog• Ventôse (March-Apr): ‘vent’ means wind

• Revolutionary Festivals– Festival of the Supreme Being (June 1794)

• Deism• Notre Dame cathedral converted into the Temple of Reason

• Some public schools and museums founded

• Cult of the Nation –– Pantheon: where France’s ‘great’ heroes were buried

• Voltaire, Rousseau, radical murdered journalist Marat, etc.

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Revolutionary Calendar

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Sample of a ‘meter’ for public to use as guide, during Revolution

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A Temple of Reason (conversion of church, 1794)

Reads: The French people recognise the Supreme Being and the immortality of the spirit

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Festival of the Supreme Being

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GuillotineExecution of Louis XVI (Jan 21, 1793)

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Impact

• Revolutionary persists across (19th Century)– Notably in 1830, 1848 and 1871

• Nationalism, rise of nation states (19th/20th centuries)

• Democratic revolutions across the world (20th century)

• Literature and Philosophy– Fires imaginations for more than two centuries

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Founding Interpretations

• Edmund Burke (Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790)– Modern conservatism– Need for tradition and reverence

• Alexis de Tocqueville (The Old Regime and the French Revolution, 1857)– Abstract literary politics (Enlightenment) combines with

state centralisation to form new, modern forms of political oppression

• Marx/Jaurès (mid 19th, turn-of-20th)– Revolution as class war