390 likes | 405 Views
How Can Nationalism Develop?. France: A Case Study. Questions for Inquiry:. How did nationalism develop in France? How did Napoleon contribute to French nationalism? How has nationalism developed in recent times?. Background:.
E N D
How Can Nationalism Develop? France: A Case Study
Questions for Inquiry: • How did nationalism develop in France? • How did Napoleon contribute to French nationalism? • How has nationalism developed in recent times?
Background: • During the French Revolution a series of events and conditions prompted the French people to revolt against the King and form a new nation • Before 1789, France was an absolute monarchy and a feudal society that favoured the aristocracy and the Catholic clergy
Key Terms • Absolutism- a system where the monarch (king, queen) is given the power to rule by divine right of kings. They answer only to God. • Feudal ism – a system that allowed the King and nobility to own all the land in the country. Peasants could farm the land but were forced to give a portion of their crops the nobles who owned the land
Key Terms • Aristocracy – a privileged group of people that owned most of the land and wealth. A small fraction of the population • Catholic Clergy – Religious leaders in the Catholic church. The church was powerful, wealthy and owned a tremendous amount of land in France. • Serfs – poor peasant farmers. They could not own land and represented the majority of the French population.
Historical and Social Factors in the Development of Nationalism • From about 400 – 1500 CE, powerful kingdoms in Europe developed such as England and France. • Before the French Revolution the political system in France was called the ancien regime. • The ancien regime divided French society into 3 estates.
The Three Estates of the Ancien Regime • The First Estate was the Roman Catholic Clergy • Male dominated • 250, 000 people • Landowners paid no taxes • Had political decision making power
The Three Estates of the Ancien Regime • The Second Estate was the nobility • 250, 000 people • Landowners paid no taxes • Political decision making power • Enjoyed other privileges such as hunting rights, and access to high ranks in clergy and the military not available to the third estate
The Three Estates of the Ancien Regime • The Third Estate included serfs/peasants, merchants (bourgeoisie), and artisans/ workers • 25, 000, 000 people (mostly serfs) • Could not own land • Paid heavy taxes • Little/no political power
Consider: • How might the division of members of society into three separate estates have affected identity in pre-1789 France? • How might a member of the Third Estate feel about members of the First and Second Estate? • To what extent might the members of all three estates have shared a collective identity?
Old Regime had to go • Inequalities in society • Lavish lifestyle of royal family • King Louis XVI, shy and indecisive • Unpopular, self-indulgent queen, Marie-Antoinette • Rest of French society divided into three classes, called estates • Rise of a middle class - they demanded democracy. • French treasury was empty • Widespread starvation / unemployment
Language: • Until the year 1539, Latin was the language used in official French documents • In 1539 a piece of legislation called the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterets made French the official language in court proceedings and government administration • French became the language used by people across the country
The Age of Enlightenment • European intellectuals began thinking about the world in a new way in the 17th (1600s) and 18th (1700s) centuries • Instead of looking to religion for answers Enlightenment philosophers looked to reason, evidence and proof • French writers such as Montesquieu, Voltaire and Rousseau questioned the authority of the monarch and the church.
Meeting of the Estates General • May 1789 • Louis XVI calls representatives of Estates General • The representatives bring lists of grievances to encourage the King to make political changes • Louis XVI was stubborn and little was agreed upon • Meeting considered a failure
National Assembly and Tennis Court Oath • After failed Estates General meeting, representatives of Estates General declare themselves the National Assembly • June 20th Louis XVI locks them out of their meeting room and they meet on a nearby handball (tennis) court. • They swear to continue until France had a written constitution – called the “Tennis Court Oath”
The People Revolt • King does not recognize the National Assembly • Royal troops are assembled in Paris and National Assembly fears an attack • July 14th 1789 - Crowds sympathetic to the National Assembly storm the Bastille to release political prisoners and collect weapons
Poor economy , scarcity of food and rising prices cause attacks on the nobility in the countryside • On August 4th 1789 the National Assembly abolishes the Estates General and the Feudal System • This gives the National Assembly legislative power in France
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen • August 1789 the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen was passed by the National Assembly. • Described rights of individuals and democratic principles • “All people shall have equal rights upon birth and ever after: the right to freedom, property, safety and the right to resist oppression.”
Constitutional Monarchy • 1790 – National Assembly wrote a new Constitution for France that kept the monarchy but limited the powers of the king. • It eliminated the nobility as a legally recognized class • Granted the same civil rights to all citizens • Stripped the clergy of property and special rights
The Jacobins and the Girondins • 1790 -1793 – during this period two political groups emerged, the radical Jacobins, and the moderate Girondins • Girondins wanted to keep the monarchy • Jacobins wanted to eliminate the monarchy and establish a republic – Robespierre and Marat
Republic of France • In 1792 – the Jacobins stormed the palace wher e the royal family was staying and the Legislative Assembly suspended the king from his duties • Many nobles flee to Austria and Prussia where they attempt to mobilize forces against the new French government • Sept. 1792 – The National Convention is formed with representatives from the Jacobins and the Girondins where they vote to remove the monarchy and establish a republic
Executions of Marie-Antoinette and Louis XVI • 1793 – Both Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette are found guilty of treason and executed by guillotine • This was controversial as many still saw Louis XVI as a representative of God
The Reign of Terror: 1793-94 • Committee of Public Safety established by the revolutionary government to eliminate those who threatened the goals of the Republic • Maximilien Robespierre was instrumental in the reign of terror
The Guillotine • Up to 40,000 perceived enemies of the state were executed, mostly by guillotine • In 1794 Robespierre himself was arrested and executed • The Guillotine was invented as a more humane way to execute people
Napoleon Bonaparte • Napoleon emerges as a strong military leader during the early years of the revolution • Nov. 1799 - Napoleon is approached to lead a coup against the government • He manipulated the situation and was elected first counsel, the new leader of France
What were the factors that led up to the Revolution? Historical • Since 14th century the Ancien Regime had divided the country into three estates • Catholic church had a long history of strong spiritual and political influence Political • King was an absolute ruler • Political power in the hands of the First and Second Estates • Lack of cohesion and structure in government (no central bank or federal taxation system) • No political representation by population
What were the factors that led up to the Revolution? Economic • France was on the edge of bankruptcy • Third Estate heavily taxed to pay government debt • Inflation and unemployment were increasing • Food shortages Social Factors • Feudal society that forced serfs and peasants to work land of nobility • Nobility and Clergy lived a life of privilege and freedom • Third estate lived in poverty and opression • Rise of the middle class
In a one page response explain how France was changed by the revolution and whether you think the changes made by the revolution were positive or negative for the people of France.