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Creating A New France Chapter 6 Section 2 pp. 171-175
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Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Creating A New FranceChapter 6 Section 2

pp. 171-175

Page 2: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

VocabFaction-small groups

Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons

Republic-government ruled not by a monarch

Page 3: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Revolts in Paris and the Provinces

The political crisis of 1789 coincided with the worst famine ever

Peasants roamed the country or flocked the town

As grain prices soared, everyone had to spend up to 80% of their income on bread

Page 4: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

The Great FearRumors ran wild and set off what was later

called the “Great Fear”

Tales of attacks on villages and towns spread panic

Because of the famine and fear, peasants unleashed their fury on nobles who were trying to reimpose medieval dues Attacked noble’s homes, set fire to old manor

records, and stole grain from storehouses

Page 5: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Paris in Arms As the capital and chief city of France, it was Paris was the

revolutionary center

A variety of factions competed to gain power

Moderates looked to the Marquis de Lafayette- the aristocratic hero who fought alongside George Washington

A more radical group called the Paris Commune, replaced the royalist government of the city

Some demanded an end to the monarchy and spread scandalous stories about the royal family and court members

The Guard was the first group to don the tricolor- a red, white, and blue badge which eventually became the flag of France

Page 6: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Moderate ReformsPeasant uprisings and the storming of the

Bastille stampeded the National Assembly into action

On August 4, nobles in the National Assembly voted to end their privileges

Gave up their old manorial dues, exclusive hunting rights, legal statues, and exemption from taxes

Page 7: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

An End to Special Privilege

Delegates abolished feudalism at 2 a.m. on August 4

The National Assembly turned the reforms of August 4 into law,. meeting a key Enlightenment goal– the equality of all citizens before the law

Page 8: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Declaration of the Rights of Man

In the late August, the Assembly issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man & the Citizen

The Declaration proclaimed that the all male citizens were equal before law

The Declaration asserted freedom of religion and called for taxes to be levied according to ability to pay

They followed the French Revolution slogan “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.”

Page 9: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Women March on Versailles

On October 5, thousands of women streamed down the road that led from Paris to Versailles

They were angry at the queen, Marie Antoinette

The women refused to leave Versailles until the king met their most important demand– to return to Paris He agreed but wasn’t happy about it

Page 10: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

The National Assembly Presses Onward

The National Assembly soon followed the king to Paris

To pay off the huge government debt, the Assembly voted to take over and sell Church lands

Page 11: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Reorganizing the ChurchThe National Assembly put the French Catholic

Church under state control

Under the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, bishops and priests became elected, salaried officials Many priests and bishops refused, as well as

peasants

A huge gulf opened between revolutionaries in Paris and the peasantry in the provinces

Page 12: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Constitution of 1791 The Constitution of 1791 set up a limited monarchy in

place of the absolute monarchy

A new Legislative Assembly had the power to make laws, collect taxes, and decide on issues of war and peace

Only about 50,000 out of 27 million men could qualify as candidates to run for Assembly

The Constitution abolished the old provincial courts and it reformed laws

Reflecting Enlightenment goals, it ended Church interference in government and ensured equality before the law for all male citizens

Page 13: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Louis’s Failed FlightMarie Antoinette urged the king to escape their

situation

On June 1791, the king disguised as a peasant and the queen dressed as a governess rolled into Paris Their attempted escape failed

A company of soldiers escorted the royal family back to Paris

Page 14: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Widespread Fears European rulers increased border patrols to stop

the spread of the “French plague”

Those fears were horror stories told by emigres They reported attacks on their privileges, their

property, and even their lives

In Britain, Edmund Burke bitterly condemned revolutionaries in Paris. He predicted that the revolution would become

more violent

Page 15: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Threats From AbroadThe failed escape of Louis XVI brought further

hostile rumblings from abroad

In August 1791, the king of Prussia and the emperor of Austria issued the Declaration of Pilnitz Stated that two monarchs threatened to

intervene to protect the French monarch Revolutionaries in France took the threat

seriously and prepared for war

Page 16: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

War at Home and Abroad

In October 1791, the newly elected Legislative Assembly took office

Faced with crises at home and abroad, it would survive for less than a year

Uncertainty about prices led to hoarding and addition food shortages

Page 17: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Internal Divisions In Paris, working-class men and women called

sans-culottes pushed the revolution into more radical action

By 1791, many sans-culottes demanded a republic government

Within the Legislative Assembly, several hostile factions competed for power Sans-culottes found support among radicals in

the Legislative Assembly, especially the Jacobins

Page 18: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

War on TyrannyThe radicals soon held the upper hand in the

Legislative Assembly

In April 1792, the war of words between French revolutionaries and European monarchs moved onto the battlefield

The Legislative Assembly declared war first on Austria, then on Prussia, Britain and other states

The fighting that began in 1792 lasted on and off until 1815

Page 19: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

ReviewTri Color-A red, white, and blue badge that

became the flag of France 

Jacobins-a revolutionary political club that supported the sans-culottes 

Faction-small groups 

Émigré-nobles, clergy, and others who had fled France and its revolutionary forces 

Sans-Culottes-working class men and women who pushed the revolution into more radical action

Page 20: Vocab Faction-small groups Émigré-person who flees his or her country for political reasons Republic-government ruled not by a monarch.

Review con’tMarie Antoinette-Queen of Versailles married to

King Louis XVI

Louis XVI-King of Versailles