The French Revolution 1789
The French Revolution 1789
Revolution
Second •Circa 110,000 •Collected taxes in the form of •Paid no taxes •Support the monarchy and Old
feudal dues Regime
•Nobles •Monopolized military and state
appointments
•Owned 20% of the land
Made decisions
Made all laws regarding war and
peace
Economic Conditions under the
Old Regime
• France’s economy was based primarily on
agriculture
• Peasant farmers of France bore the burden of
taxation
• Poor harvests meant that peasants had trouble
paying their regular taxes
– Certainly could not afford to have their taxes raised
• Bourgeoisie often managed to gather wealth
– But were upset that they paid taxes while nobles did
not
France Is Bankrupt
• The king (Louis XVI) lavished money on himself and
residences like Versailles
• Queen Marie Antoinette was seen as a wasteful
spender
• Government found its funds depleted as a result of
wars
– Including the funding of the American Revolution
• Deficit spending – a government spending more
money than it takes in from tax revenues
• Privileged classes would not submit to being taxed
Long-term Causes of the French
Revolution
Everything previously
Also
discussed
• Absolutism • System of mercantilism
• Unjust socio-political which restricted trade
system (Old Regime) • Influence of other
• Poor harvests which left successful revolutions
peasant farmers with • England’s Glorious
little money for taxes Revolution (1688-1689)
• Influence of • American Revolution
Enlightenment philosophes (1775-1783)
Short-term Causes of the French
Revolution
Bankruptcy Great Fear Estates-General
• Cahiers
– Traditional lists of grievances written by the
people
– Nothing out of the ordinary
• Asked for only moderate changes
Meeting of the Estates-General:
May 5, 1789
• Voting was conducted by estate
– Each estate had one vote
– First and Second Estates could operate as a bloc to stop
the Third Estate from having its way
Louis XVI responded by locking the Third Estate out of the meeting.
The Third Estate relocated to a nearby tennis court where its members vowed to stay
together and create a written constitution for France.
On June 23, 1789, Louis XVI relented. He ordered the three estates to meet together
as the National Assembly and vote, by population, on a constitution for France.
Tennis Court Oath by Jacques Louis David
Review Questions
3. Describe the size,
2. How does an
1. What was the Old privileges, exemptions,
absolute monarchy
Regime? and burdens of the
(absolutism) operate?
three estates.
Convention (1792-1795)
Directory (1795-1799)
National Assembly
(1789-1791)
• Louis XVI did not
actually want a
written constitution
• When news of his
plan to use military
force against the
National Assembly
reached Paris on July
14, 1789, people
stormed the Bastille
Uprising in Paris
Abolishment of
Abolition of Constitution of
guilds and labor
special privileges 1791
unions
Right to a fair
trial
Declaration of the Rights of
Woman
Women did gain some
rights during the
French Revolution, but
Journalist Olympe de these were designed
Madame Jeanne
Gouges argued in her
Roland also served as for purposes other
Declaration of the Rights
a leader in the women’s than liberating women.
of Woman that women
rights movement, and • Women could inherit
are equal citizens and property, but only because
was able to heavily
should benefit from doing so weakened feudalism
influence her husband and reduced wealth among
governmental reforms
(a government official). the upper classes.
just as men did. • Divorce became easier, but
only to weaken the Church’s
control over marriage.
End of Special Privileges
• Church lands were seized, divided, and sold to
peasants
• Civil Constitution of the Clergy required
that Church officials be elected by the people,
with salaries paid by the government
– 2/3 of Church officials fled the country rather than
swear allegiance to this
• All feudal dues and tithes were eradicated
• All special privileges of the First and Second
Estates were abolished
Reforms in Local Government
• The 30 provinces and their “petty tyrants”
(Intendants) were replaced with 83 new
departments
– Ruled by elected governors