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The French Revolution. Chapter 18. No taxation without representation.
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The French Revolution Chapter 18
No taxation without representation • One might say that the nobility caused the Revolution, in their refusal to compromise on the tax issue. Because of their inflexibility, they soon lost all traditional rights and privileges. It is useful to remember that the American slogan “no taxation without representation” is true, at least in democratic states, in reverse: “no representation without taxation.”
THE REVOLT OF THE POOR AND THE OPPRESSED • Common people take action • Bad harvest 1788 & economic depression • Increased the price of bread so much that it cost ½ the wages of ordinary laborer • Artisans lost their jobs • Small traders lost businesses • Unemployment reached around 25% in July 1789
Growing anxiety • King dismissed finance minister • Rumors about the kings troops activity • March on the Bastille • July 14 – march began • Believed they could find weapons • Prison governor ordered his men to fire on the mob • Killed 98 • People fought back – took the Bastille • Hacked the governor to death, stuck head on spike & paraded thru the streets
Paris Commune Comes to Power • Paris in turmoil. • capital and chief city of France - the revolutionary center. • factions - or dissenting groups of people • competed to gain power. • Moderates looked to the Marquis de Lafayette • the aristocratic “hero of two worlds” • fought alongside George Washington in the American Revolution • headed the National Guard - a largely middle-class militia • The Guard was the first group to wear the tricolor—a red, white, and blue badge - eventually adopted as the national flag of France.
The great fear • City’s armed forced • Organized under Marquis de Lafayette • King acquiesced • Recalled the dismissed finance minister • Withdrew his troops • Simultaneously peasants organize • The Great Fear • Rebelled against lords and took possession of the countryside • Seized land • Burned the records of feudal obligations • Refused to pay taxes • Nobles respond • Aug 4 1789 • Renounced traditional privileges and rights • Abolished all remnants of serfdom • The Old Regime was over
The National Assembly Acts • The National Assembly moved to action • Peasant uprisings • storming of the Bastille • On August 4 • combative all-night meeting • nobles in the National Assembly voted to end their own privileges. • gave up their old manorial dues, • exclusive hunting rights, • special legal status, • exemption from taxes. • meeting a key Enlightenment goal— the equality of all male citizens before the law
Declaration of the Rights of Man • Late August, • the Assembly issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen. • modeled after the American Declaration of Independence, • All men were “born and remain free and equal in rights.” • natural rights to “liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression.” • influenced by Locke and the philosophes • governmentsexist to protect the natural rights of citizens. • all male citizens were equal before the law • equal right to hold public office • “with no distinction other than that of their virtues and talents.” • freedom of religion • taxes to collected according to ability to pay. “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.”
Tension & violence • The actions of the common people proved crucial in the French Revolution whenever there was stalemate. Violence or the threat of violence pushed the Revolution forward at crucial moments. Therefore it is hard to discuss the leadership of the Revolution in a cohesive way. The class tensions that underplay the violence of 1789 to 1795 broke out again in 1830 and 1848.
Women March on Versailles • On October 5, • about six thousand women marched 13 miles in the pouring rain from Paris to Versailles. • the crowd’s anger was directed at the Austrian-born queen, Marie Antoinette • The queen lived a life of great pleasure and extravagance, and this led to • She was against reforms and bored with the French court. • She often retreated to the Petit Trianon, a small chateau on the palace grounds at Versailles where she lived her own life of amusement. • The women refused to leave Versailles until the king met their most • demand—to return to Paris. • Not too happily, the king agreed • For the next three years, Louis was a virtual prisoner.
The Church Is Placed Under State Control • National Assembly put the French Catholic Church under state control. • bishops and priests became elected, salaried officials. • ended papal authority over the French Church and • dissolved convents and monasteries.
The Constitution of 1791 • Establishes a New Government • The National Assembly completed its main task by producing a constitution. • The Constitution of set up a limited monarchy in place of the absolute monarchy. • A new Legislative Assembly had the power to • make laws, • collect taxes, decide on issues of war and peace. • Lawmakers would be elected by tax-paying male citizens over age 25.
Rulers Fear Spread of Revolution European rulers • Rulers increased border patrols to stop the spread of the rebellion • Fueling those fears were the horror stories that were told by émigrés(EM ihgrayz)—nobles, clergy, and others who had fled France and its revolutionary forces. • Émigrés reported attacks on their privileges, their property, their religion, and even their lives. The French Plague European rulers, nobles, and clergy (such as, from left, Catherine the Great of Russia, the Pope, Emperor Leopold II of Prussia, and George III of England) feared the revolution in France would spread to their countries. Many émigrés fueled the flames with their tales of attacks by the revolutionary government.
WAR • In August 1791, • Declaration of Pilnitz - the king of Prussia and the emperor of Austria—who was Marie Antoinette’s brother—threatened to intervene to protect the French monarchy. • The declaration may have been mostly a bluff, but revolutionaries in France took the threat seriously and prepared for war.
Radicals Fight for Power and Declare War • In October 1791, • The newly elected Legislative Assembly took office. • Faced with crises at home and abroad, it survived for less than a year. • Economic problems fed renewed turmoil. • Assignats(AS ignats), the revolutionary currency, dropped in value, causing prices to rise rapidly. • Uncertainty about prices led to hoarding and caused additional food shortages. • sans-culottes (sanzkooLAHTS), which means “without breeches,” were working-class men and women, • pushed the revolution into more radical action. • demanded a republic, or government ruled by elected • Within the Legislative Assembly, several hostile factions competed for power. • The sans-culottes found support among radicals in the Legislative Assembly, especially the Jacobins • Jacobins were mostly middle-class lawyers or intellectuals. • Opposing the radicals were moderate reformers and political officials who wanted no more reforms at all.
The National Assembly Declares War on Tyranny • In April 1792, the war of words between French revolutionaries and European monarchs moved onto the battlefield. • The radicals held the influence in the Legislative Assembly. • Eager to spread the revolution • wanted destroy tyranny abroad, • the Legislative Assembly declared war • first on Austria • then on Prussia, • Britain, and other states. • The great powers expected to win an easy victory against France, a land divided by revolution. • In fact, however, the fighting that began in 1792 lasted on and off until 1815.
French revolution clip • http://www.history.com/videos/the-french-revolution#the-french-revolution