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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > French History > French Revolution
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French Revolution, French History

Related Category: French History

Parisians mobilized, and on July 14 stormed the Bastille fortress. Louis XVI meekly recalled Necker and went to the HOtel de Ville in Paris, where he accepted the tricolor cockade of the Revolution from the newly formed municipal government, or commune. The national guard was organized under the marquis de Lafayette. This first outbreak of violence marked the entry of the popular classes into the Revolution. Mobilized by alarm over food shortages and economic depression, by hopes aroused with the calling of the States-General, and by the fear of an aristocratic conspiracy, peasants pillaged and burned chAteaus, destroying records of feudal dues; this reaction is known as the grande peur [great fear].

On Aug. 4, the nobles and clergy in the Assembly, driven partly by fear and partly by an outburst of idealism, relinquished their privileges, abolishing in one night the feudal structure of France. Shortly afterward, the Assembly adopted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen. Rumors of counterrevolutionary court intrigues circulated, and on Oct. 5, 1789, a Parisian crowd, aroused by rising food prices, marched to Versailles and brought the king and queen, "the baker and the baker's wife," back to the Tuileries palace in Paris. The Assembly also removed to Paris, where it drafted a constitution. Completed in 1791, the constitution created a limited monarchy with a unicameral legislature elected by voters with property qualifications.

Of gravest consequence were the Assembly's antireligious measures. Church lands were nationalized (1789), religious orders suppressed (1790), and the clergy required (July, 1790) to swear to adhere to the state-controlled Civil Constitution of the Clergy. Only a bare majority (52%) of all priests took the oath; disturbances broke out, especially in W France; and Louis XVI, though forced to assent, was roused to action. Numerous princes and nobles had already fled abroad (see EmigrE); Louis decided to join them and to obtain foreign aid to restore his authority. The flight (June 20–21, 1791) was halted at Varennes, and the king and queen were brought back in humiliation. Louis accepted the constitution.



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assignats
Alphonse Aulard
Bastille
Louis Blanc
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Charles Alexandre de Calonne
Code NapolEon
ComEdie FranCaise
Commune of Paris
Condorcet, Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas Caritat, marquis de
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Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
Denis Diderot
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enragEs
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French Revolutionary Wars
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FranCois Guizot
Alexander Hamilton
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Jacobins
Jean JaurEs
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Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, marquis de
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Etienne Charles LomEnie de Brienne
Louis XV, king of France
Louis XVI, king of France
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Marie Antoinette
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Jacques Necker
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parlement
physiocrats
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Maximilien Marie Isidore Robespierre
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Emmanuel Joseph SieyEs
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