1 / 22

The French Revolution

The French Revolution. Louis XVI (1754-1793). Ruled from 1774 – 1791 1770 Married Marie Antoinette Austrian Princess Populace not happy because an Alliance with Austria is what drew France into the 7 years war Couldn’t produce and heir Main flaw was lacked firmness

phuc
Download Presentation

The French Revolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The French Revolution

  2. Louis XVI (1754-1793) • Ruled from 1774 – 1791 • 1770 Married Marie Antoinette • Austrian Princess • Populace not happy because an Alliance with Austria is what drew France into the 7 years war • Couldn’t produce and heir • Main flaw was lacked firmness • Always consulted public opinion • Found guilty of high treason • Executed by guillotine in 1793

  3. Problem 1 - Money • Louis XV left France deeply in debt • By 1787 the French government was 4000 million livres in dept. • In 1787 the King asked the nobility to help him reform the tax system • Members of the 1st estate and the 2nd estate did not pay taxes • Louis wanted the 1st and 2nd estate to pay taxes • Not surprisingly they refused

  4. Problem 2 – Bad harvest • In the years 1787 to 1789 there was terrible weather • Heavy rain, bard winters and hot summers • Led to 3 very bad harvests in France • Inflation and starvation followed • The nobility, the clergy and the King lived in the lap of luxury

  5. Estates General 1789 • A gathering of the 3 estates • Not called since 1614 • Convened by Louis to deal with the debt • No real power mostly symbolic • Used as an advisory council • Each estate would have one vote

  6. Estate General • Meeting supposed to be about taxes, degrades into who should have what power • Louis closes the meeting • Locks everyone out • 3rd estate moves to a Tennis Court and takes the • “Tennis Court Oath”

  7. Tennis Court Oath • June 20, 1789 • 576 of 577 members of the 3rd estate • Take an oath not to separate until a constitution is created • Creation of the “National Assembly”

  8. Tennis Court Oath - Significance • Shifting of the balance of power from the monarch to the people • Louis less able to rely on the divine right of kings • Forces Louis to count voting by head rather than order of the estates • Birth of modern democracy • 3rd estate does not back down • Inspires riots and revolutionary behaviour throughout the countryside

  9. National Assembly 1789 (June) • Begins with the Tennis Court Oath • Majority the 3rd estate • Invite the 1st and 2nd estate to join them • Most of the clergy and some of the nobles join • Declare themselves the governing power of France • The army at this point is still loyal to Louis • Foreign mercenaries summoned by Louis

  10. Storming the Bastille • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4OCheQDr5ag

  11. The Fall of the Bastille • National Assembly feels threatened by the impending troops • Large scale rioting across Paris and the countryside begins to organize • Rallying cry “Liberty, Equality and Fraternity!” • Set their sights on the Bastille • A prison • More a symbol of royal power • Housed weaponry • Now the 3rd estate was armed

  12. Abolishment of Feudalism • August 4 1789 • National Assembly takes away seigneurial rights from the nobles and the tithing rights away from the clergy • Within a few hours all special privileges are taken from the 1st and 2nd estates • Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen passed • Makes one legislative assembly where all men are equal and the King only has a “suspensive veto” • Could delay laws but not veto them • Assembly abolishes all hereditary offices (government)

  13. Reformation of the French Church • National Assembly declares on November 1789 that all Church land (10% of total land) becomes property of the state (Assembly) • Assembly Auctions off the land to the highest bidder • The Church now becomes the charge of the State • The poor, sick and weak now under the care of the State • Assembly abolishes “Monastic Vows” • All monks and nuns are forced to return to private life

  14. Louis XVI and the Army • Army becoming increasingly difficult to control • Made up of peasants with nobles as commanding officers • Louis not really liking what he is seeing tries to flee France dressed as a commoner • Recognized, arrested and brought back to France • This is the beginning of the end for the monarchy in France

  15. War 1792 • Groups in France wanted to “export” the ideals of the revolution to the rest of Europe • Louis thought war would strengthen his reputation • This lead to declaration of war against Austria • Austrian ally Prussia declares that they will attack if France does not withdraw and reinstate the monarchy

  16. Execution of Louis XVI • Louis accused of conspiring with the enemies of France (foreign nations) • Executed by guillotine • Jan 17, 1793

  17. Reign of Terror • Committee of Public safety comes under the control of Maximillien Robespierre and the Jacobins • Jacobins • Radical revolutionary group who believed in force to further the revolution • 16 594 people killed by guillotine for “counter revolutionary actions” • Girondins • More moderate opposition to the Jacobins • Many killed in the Reign

  18. The White Terror • Girondin response to the Jacobin Terror • Execution of many of the Jacobins responsible • Robespierre executed • July 27, 1794 • Brings an end to the reign of Terror • New constitution brought in

  19. The Constitutional Republic • New Parliament chosen by eligible land owners (vote) • Council of 500 • 500 representatives (lower house) • Council of Elders • 250 Senators • Executive power was granted to 5 people chosen by the council of elders and nominated by the council of 500

  20. Results of the French Revolution • Crippled the aristocracy (nobles) • Destroyed the power of the Church • Ended the monarchy in France • Modern style democracy established

More Related