The French Revolution - Class Notes - Sprint
The French Revolution - Class Notes - Sprint
The French Revolution - Class Notes - Sprint
FRENCH REVOLUTION
SHUBHAM GUPTA
On the morning of 14 July 1789, the city of Paris was in a state of alarm. The
king had commanded troops to move into the city. Rumours spread that he
would soon order the army to open fire upon the citizens. Some 7,000 men and
women gathered in front of the town hall and decided to form a peoples’
militia. They broke into a number of government buildings in search of arms.
A group of several hundred people
marched towards the eastern part of the
city and stormed the fortress-prison,
the Bastille, where they hoped to find
hoarded ammunition. In the armed fight
that followed, the commander of the
Bastille was killed and the prisoners
released – though there were only
seven of them.
§ Long years of war had drained the financial resources of France. Added to this was
the cost of maintaining an extravagant court at the immense palace of Versailles.
Under Louis XVI, France helped the thirteen American colonies to gain their
independence from the common enemy, Britain. The war added more than a billion
livres to a debt that had already risen to more than 2 billion livres. Lenders who
gave the state credit, now began to charge 10% interest on loans.
§ The first and second estates sent 300 representatives each, who were seated in
rows facing each other on two sides, while the 600 members of the third estate
had to stand at the back. The third estate was represented by its more prosperous
and educated members.
§ Peasants, artisans and women were denied entry to the assembly. However,
their grievances and demands were listed in some 40,000 letters which the
representatives had brought with them.
§ Voting in the Estates General in the past had been conducted according to the
principle that each estate had one vote. This time too Louis XVI was determined
to continue the same practice.
§ But members of the third estate demanded that voting now be conducted by the
assembly as a whole, where each member would have one vote.
When the king rejected this proposal, members of the third estate walked out of the assembly in
protest.
On 20 June they assembled in the hall of an indoor tennis court in the grounds of Versailles. They
declared themselves a National Assembly and swore not to disperse till they had drafted a
constitution for France that would limit the powers of the monarch. They were led by Mirabeau
and Abbé Sieyès.
§ While the National Assembly was busy at Versailles
drafting a constitution, the rest of France seethed with
turmoil. At the same time, the king ordered troops to
move into Paris.
§ Working women had also to care for their families, that is, cook,
fetch water, queue up for bread and look after the children.
Their wages were lower than those of men.
Women started their own political clubs & newspapers. About sixty women’s clubs came up in
different French cities. The Society of Revolutionary and Republican Women was the most
famous of them. One of their main demands was that women enjoy the same political rights as
men. Women were disappointed that the Constitution of 1791 reduced them to passive citizens.
They demanded the right to vote, to be elected to the Assembly and to hold political office.
The revolutionary government did introduce
laws that helped improve the lives of women.
§ Women’s movements for voting rights and equal wages continued through the next two
hundred years in many countries of the world. The fight for the vote was carried out through an
international suffrage movement during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
§ It was finally in 1946 that women in France won the right to vote.
The Abolition of Slavery
§ The colonies in the Caribbean – Martinique, Guadeloupe and San Domingo –
were important suppliers of commodities such as tobacco, indigo, sugar and
coffee. But the reluctance of Europeans to go and work in distant and unfamiliar
lands meant a shortage of labour on the plantations.
One important law that came into effect soon after the storming of the Bastille in the summer of 1789
was the abolition of censorship. In the Old Regime all written material and cultural activities – books,
newspapers, plays – could be published or performed only after they had been approved by the
censors of the king.
§ The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
proclaimed freedom of speech and
expression to be a natural right.