1 / 44

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 1789-1815

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 1789-1815. What circumstances can lead to a REVOLUTION? Think back . . . See what you can remember from 8 th Grade U.S. History . . . AMERICAN REVOLUTION (1775-1781) War broke out between the 13 colonies and the British Gov’t

Download Presentation

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 1789-1815

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 REVOLUTION1789-1815

  2. What circumstances can lead to a REVOLUTION? Think back . . . See what you can remember from 8th Grade U.S. History . . . AMERICAN REVOLUTION (1775-1781) • War broke out between the 13 colonies and the British Gov’t • Reasons: British wanted to control colonial trade and manufacturing as well to increase taxes • Colonists felt their British rights were being abused by the king

  3. The Outbreak of the Revolution What problems did France face in the late 1700’s? 1st: American Revolutionaries freed themselves from British rule, yet they kept many British ways of gov’t 2nd: In France, the revolutionaries wanted to create a new French society . . . so, widespread unhappiness w/the old regime produced a revolution that shook the continent def: old regime: the French political & social system in the years before 1789

  4. What was the social structure of the Old Regime? The Old Regime: the Three Estates . . . Since the middle ages, everyone in France belonged to one of the three social class

  5. 1. FIRST ESTATE -- Clergy * enjoyed enormous wealth & privileges * paid NOtaxes (taille)to the state** * owned about 10% of land * included bishops 2. SECOND ESTATE – Nobility * paid almost no taxes *held highest offices in gov’t * received generous gifts from the king *owned about ¼ of land (France) * jealous of king’s power *feared to lose privileges (tax) included only about 2% of total population of 24 mill.

  6. 3. THIRD ESTATE – everyone else Bourgeoisie (middle class: merchants, lawyers, doctors, intellectuals, gov’t bureaucrats) * peasants, city workers, middle class * peasants were the largest group; struggled to make a living * most owned no land * worked as day laborers 9 out of 10 people were peasants

  7. Why did peasants live in poverty? 1. old fashion ways of farming 2. taxation paid to who? church and king . . . Sometimes taxes took more than half of a peasant’s family income from land to soap to salt

  8. IF YOU ADD ‘EM UP ALL TOGETHER: By 1789, France faced several crises: - Peasants were hungry; they wanted a fairer tax system - 1788 bad harvest followed by bad winter food prices rise, people are starving - ENLIGHTENMENT ideas led people to question the old regime WHY should the first two estates have privileges at the expense of the majority? . . . it just didn’t meet the test of reason! EVERYWHERE, THEY CALLED FOR THE PRIVILEGED CLASSES TO PAY THEIR SHARE!!

  9. 1789 – France faced several crises: -- cause: deficit spending (gov’t spending more $ than it takes in ) Why? * Seven Yrs. War * Am. Revolution . . . So how are they going to solve the problem? by INCREASING TAXES Nobles & clergy resisted any attempt to end their exemption from taxes. left country in debt

  10. . . . looking back – 1788 What just went on in 1788? * bad harvest, prices increased * high unemployment * people are hungry, they’re rioting for food * widespread famine, malnutrition, disease, death * Rise of Enlightenment ideals Louis XVI (1774) did little to make gov’t work better

  11. * Peasants (3rd Estate) cannot pay taxes * No other choice but to tax the nobles. This financial crisis touched off the FRENCH REVOLUTION IN 1789 def: the rebellion of the French people beginning in 1789 against the monarchy and the old regime structure 3rd Estate v. 1st & 2nd Estates Bourgeoisie v. Nobles/Clergy

  12. How did the people of France push for reforms? Crisis and Revolt: * Nobles refused to be taxed * Louis XVI calls on a meeting of the Estates General (an assembly for all France) to talk about the approval of a plan to tax the 1st & 2nd Estates * So they met and they couldn’t decide * The 3rd Estate’s delegates were mostly from the Bourgeoisie and wanted the 3 estates to meet w/each delegate having one vote. * Since about ½ of the 1,200 delegates were from the 3rd estate there would be a better chance of reform

  13. The National Assembly – the 3rd estates delegates decided to force the estates to meet as one body --- saying they represented the people of France June 17, 1789 – the 3rd estate declared themselves a National Assembly and invited the other estates to join them. • Against the king, they ALL joined together and demanded a constitution for France and swore not to leave until they achieved this goal • They chose the delegates.

  14. Tennis Court Oath • They took an oath, vowing not to disband until they had drawn up a constitution for France. • Louis had no choice – he had to accept it! • Troops gathered outside Versailles --Rumor: King wanted to dissolve the assembly . . . CRISIS DEEPENED

  15. Storming of the Bastille ** July 14, 1789: tired of the oppressive brutality of the French monarchy,an angry mob captured the Bastille (prison for political prisoners)

  16. * They searched for guns/gunpowder * Guards opened fire – 100 shot dead * King is frightened, troops are ordered out People of Paris won!! July 14, Bastille Day! . . . After this, all sorts of rumors spread out * nobles v. peasants and troops v. peasants Peasants violently revolted– attacked noble homes, burned manor records

  17. Declaration of Rights of Man & Citizen • nobles in danger because of peasant uprisings; large #s fled to other parts of Europe becoming émigrés (nobles who fled France); Old regime was coming to an end; No more tax collection from Church/nobles; all gov’t positions open regardless of birth Aug 27 – Declaration of Rights of Man & Citizen: (gov’t belonged to the people as a whole; aim: gov’t was to preserve the “natural rights” of liberty/equality; but no political rights for women) ** Enlight. ideas created limited monarchy

  18. How did the French Revolution move into a more extreme phase? radicals: people favoring drastic change * Jacobins: radical political club * Maximilien Robespierre (Jacobin member) News about Fr.Rev. spread across Europe • Europeans feared that these ideas would spread to their countries • In 1792, France declared war on Austria, Prussia, Britain; it lasted 20 yrs.

  19. Extreme Phase -- French Revolution moved into a radical stage willing to take drastic actions against all enemies **Louis and Antoinette are beheaded for treason

  20. Reign of Terror Reign of Terror: a period when brutal measures were used to eliminate enemies and critics of the revolutionary republic set up in France They arrested girondins, clergy, aristocrats, common people – anyone who disagreed w/Jacobins

  21. Why? To silence the critics 1793-94: 16,000 were killed on the guillotine; 20,000 were found guilty RESULTS: • End to the Old Regime • Bourgeoisie dominates gov’t • Promoted spirit of nationalism

  22. End of Terror 1794 – Robespierre is guillotined; b/c he was becoming very powerful and people thought he was becoming obsessed w/ ridding France of all corruption and people feared him After his death, revolutionary fervor began to cool; Jacobins lost power; Moderate middle class came to power

  23. 1795 -- A new government was drafted, the third since 1789 – the new constitution placed power firmly in the hands of the upper middle class and called for a two-house legislature and an executive body of five men, known as the Directory The Directory also found the right general to command France’s army –supremely talented and young – Napoleon Bonaparte

  24. Rise of Napoleon • Le petit Corporal • ambitious; overextended his power • Greatest military genius of his time • Perhaps the greatest general in history • 1793 – he joined the French Revolutionary forces and showed great talent/leadership • Wanted to rule all of France

  25. The Terror is over; Churches open for worship; New constitution is created (Council of Elders accept/reject laws); It is a weak gov’t; was corrupt, couldn’t find solutions for France’s problems; ruled by legislature (1795-1799) • 1799 – A coup d´état (blow of state), led by Napoleon, overthrows the Directory to establish his consulate • 1800 – a new constitution gave all real power to Napoleon; was made consul for life (held absolute power, even though it was a republic)

  26. 1804 – he crowned himself emperor

  27. What does he do for France? • He set up an efficient tax collection system • Fired corrupt officials, he trained new officials • Set up government-run public schools, even for ordinary citizens • New relationship between church and state • Set up a new comprehensive system of laws – Napoleonic Code

  28. Napoleonic Code • Most important: CIVIL CODE: all French men were treated as equals regardless of birth or wealth • class privileges were abolished • Freedom of religion • woman could acquire property only w/her husband’s written consent • supported education (set up public schools) • reflected the ideals of the Enlightenment

  29. Napoleon creates an Empire • 1810 –he annexed Holland, Austria, Netherlands, parts of Italy and France, and much of Germany • Built largest Empire since the Romans How did he do it? * He was ambitious; overextended his power; was power hungry conqueror; won confidence of his men w/his energy, charm, ability to make quick decisions, keen intelligence, ease w/words, supreme confidence in himself; he wanted Europe to be united under a liberal gov’t & he did this by concentrating power in his own hands

  30. 1812 – his victories had given him mastery of over most of Europe, except: * Britain * Ottoman Empire * Portugal * Sweden

  31. Napoleon’s Empire Collapses Napoleon’s three costly mistakes: • Continental System: he orders a blockade to destroy Britain’s commercial and industrial economy 2. Peninsular War: he sends his army to attack Portugal through Spain because Portugal did not follow the Continental System

  32. Invasion of Russia in 1812 (thirst for power, most disastrous mistake!!!): Why? Alexander I refuses to stop selling grain to Britain and both France and Russia want Poland • June– He marches into Russia What was Napoleon’s greatest enemy in his war against Russia? • Sept – he lost about 60,000 men so they retreat, Russia used their scorched-earth policy, temperatures of -15, -35

  33. December – winter and starvation kills most of his army he began with 422,000 men and ended with 10,000

  34. Fall of Napoleon • 1814 – he is exiled to Elba, but escapes in March 1815 • 1815 - Final defeat: led by the British Duke of Wellington, Napoleon is defeated at Battle of Waterloo; he is exiled to St. Helena where he dies alone in 1821 (he was 51; a remote island in South Atlantic) Reasons for fall: * Survival of Great Britain; force of nationalism (deep devotion to one’s country)

  35. “ Such work as mine is not done twice in a century . . . I have saved the Revolution as it lay dying. I have cleansed it of its crimes, and have held it up to the people shining with fame. I have inspired France and Europe with new ideas that will never be forgotten.” Napoleon, quoted in Napoleon at St. Helena

More Related