Title: How Do We Think About the French Revolution?
1How Do We Think About the French Revolution?
- How did the French Jacobins use state power to
achieve revolutionary goals during the Terror
(1793-1794)? - What were their goals?
- Why did extraordinary state power seem critical
to attaining these goals?
2The Terror in The French Revolution Contrasting
Images
3The Terror as Genocide/Totalitarianism
- 250,000 Insurgents killed in Vendée Fighting
Alone -15 population - But 200,000 Revolutionary troops killed too
- Victims of Vendée describe the Terror as a
Genocide of the Catholic Western France - Probably 40,000 officially executed in all of
France - Others described coercion, the Jacobin
Dictatorship, the price controls, and levée en
masse (universal draft of all citizens) an
example of early Totalitarianism
- Drowning Prisoners The Vendée
4The Terror as Desperate Measure to deal with
Crisis
- During Terror
- Universal Manhood Suffrage (womens clubs)
- Radical Constitution of 1793
- Abolished Serfdom
- Abolished Slavery
- Attempted Land Reform
- But
- At war with most of Europe
- In serious civil war with uprisings in the
Vendée, major cities (Caen, Bordeaux, Marseille,
Lyon)
5Key Problem Sovereignty
- Who are the sovereign people and how do they
exercise sovereignty? - Why had they not resolved the question between
1789 and1793?
6First Hint at Potential of Popular Violence
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9Bringing the Baker, the Bakers Wife, and the
Bakers Son Back to Paris
10- Key Questions
- How much would popular violence influence
rational political debate? - Is popular sovereignty possible?
- How do you incorporate working class Parisians,
peasants, and women into the polity?
11August 10, 1792 Attack on King in Tuileries
12The National Convention
- Fall of Verdun to Prussians (September 2, 1792)
- September Massacres (September 2-6,1792)
- French Victory at Valmy (September 20, 1792)
- French Annexation of Savoy (27 November 1793)
13Trial of King Move to Terror
14Growing Split Between Mountain and Girondins
- Execution of Louis XVI (January 21, 1793)
- French Declare War on England, Holland, Spain
(Feb-March 1793) - Levée (Draft) of 300,000 (February 24, 1793)
- Creation of Special Revolutionary Tribunal (March
10, 1793) - Creation of Surveillance Committees (March 10,
1793) - Creation of Committee of Public Safety (April 6,
1793)
15Counterrevolution in Western France, March 1793
- Number of Capital Sentences Passed
16Have People of Paris Become Source of Sovereignty?
- Law of Maximum (May 4, 1793)
- Invade Convention Persuade Mountain to Arrest
31 Girondist Deputies for Treason (June 2, 1793) - Ascendancy of Committee of Public Safety -
Robespierre
17July- August 1793 Situation Dire
- Federalist Revolts in Caen, Bordeaux, Marseille,
Lyon Provinces should be sovereign, not just
people of Paris - Charlotte Corday Assassinates Jean-Paul Marat
(July 13, 1793) - Toulon Surrenders to British Navy (August 27,
1793) - Defeat of French Revolution Seemed Certain
- Popular Movements in Paris pressure Convention to
Take Radical Measures (September 5-6, 1793)
18Radical Measures of Terror
- Levée en masse (August 23, 1793)
- The young men will go in battle married men
will forge arms and transport provisions women
will make tents and clothing and serve in
hospitals children will make bandages old men
will get themselves carried to public places to
arouse the courage of warriors and preach hatred
of kings and unity of the republic.
19The General Maximum Organize Economy for War
(September 29, 1793)
20July 1794 Enemies Defeated
- Planned Economy Fixed Prices, Wages
- Food Rationing
- Equality Bread
- Organized Industry/Society to Produce Arms and
Ammunition - Emergency Socialism of a Profound Kind
21Ended Serfdom
22Constitution of 1793
- The aim of society is the happiness of all.
- Public assistance is a sacred debt. Society owes
a living to the unfortunate among its citizens,
either by finding work for them or by
guaranteeing the means of subsistence to those
who are not in a fit condition to work. - Education is a necessity for all.
- When the government violates the rights of the
people, then insurrection is the most sacred and
necessary of duties.
23Womens Clubs
- Universal Manhood suffrage proclaimed with
Republic (September 1792) - Women actively involved in clubs, Parisian
sections, Convention (as hecklers) - Womens Clubs Closed (October 30, 1793)
24Divorce
- September 1792 Couple could divorce by mutual
consent, or for reasons like insanity, battering,
or criminal conviction - April 23, 1794 Women could divorce husbands who
abandoned them and remarry immediately
25Abolition of Slavery
- Abolition of slavery in French colonies (February
4, 1794)
26The Revolution Devours Its Own
- Terror Put on Trial Enemies of the Nation for
crimes against the nation, against the people - Arrest and execution of Hébertistes (March 13-24,
1794) - Arrest and execution of Dantonists (March
30-April 6, 1794) - Law of 22 Prairial II (June 10, 1794)
- Every citizen is empowered to seize
conspirators and counterrevolutionaries, and to
bring them before the magistrates. He is
required to denounce them as soon as he knows
of them. - 40,000 Killed, 300,000 arrested
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28Thermidorian Reaction
- French defeat Austrians at Fleurus (June 26,
1794) removal of external military threat - 9th Thermidor (July 27, 1794) Execution and
overthrow of Robespierre - Wanted to create A Republic of Virtue
- Wrote early treatise against the Death Penalty
- How could the Revolution have gone so wrong?
- Abolition of General Maximum (December 24, 1794)
- Forced used to restrict Popular Political
Activity - Runaway Inflation
- Restricted Suffrage
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30Question of Sovereignty Up for Grabs