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On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 - 215

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Page 1: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

On the Eve of the RevolutionPages 210 -215

Page 2: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

End of an Age• For centuries France was

controlled by absolute monarchs.

• Living lavish lifestyles the French Monarchs were out of touch with their people.

• The Year is 1789, A time for Change

… A Rather Bloody Change

Hall of Mirrors in Versailles

Starving Peasants… Monty Python Style

Page 3: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

French Society Divided• In 1789, France, like the rest

of Europe, still clung to an outdated social system

• According to the ancien regime, or old order, everyone in France was divide into three social orders.

• The three social classes were called Estates.

Page 4: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Estate #1: The Clergy• The Church still enjoyed

many privileges in 1789.– Owned 10% of land– Collected Tithes (1/10th)– Paid no direct taxes to state

So in a way they were kind of like freeloaders. They had all of the benefits and none of the responsibilities.

Page 5: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

• They did provide some social services.– Schools– Hospitals– Orphanages

• Came under attack by enlightened philosophers who criticized the church idleness, its intolerance of dissent, and its interference in politics.

Page 6: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

• In response to criticism many clergy condemned the Enlightenment for undermining religion and moral order.

Page 7: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Estate #2: The Nobles• Cardinal Richelieu and

Louis XIV crushed noble military power but had given them other rights.

• They held top jobs in the:

• Government• Military• Courts• Church

Elitism It’s lonely at the top. But it’s comforting

to look down upon everyone at the bottom.

Page 8: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

• The ambitious nobles at Versailles enjoyed endless entertainments.

• Many nobles also resented the royal bureaucracy that employed middle-class citizens.– They feared losing their

traditional privileges. Especially their privilege to not pay taxes!

Narcissus by Caravaggio

Page 9: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Estate #3: Everyone Else• The third estate in France

was the largest and most diverse social class.

• At the top of this social class sat the bourgeoisie.

• Bourgeoisie – (boor zhwah Zee), Middle Class– Included bankers,

merchants, manufacturers, lawyers, doctors, journalists, and professors.

Page 10: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

• The bulk of the third estate consisted of rural peasants.

• The poorest people of the third estate were urban (city) workers.

Page 11: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

The Pot Begins to Boil• People from the 3rd Estate

begin to wonder why the Nobles and Clergy get such lavish privileges.

• Enlightenment ideas soon spread across the country.

• Wonder turns to action, and the Third Estate start to call for the privileged classes to pay their share.

Page 12: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

More Problems• Economic woes soon add to

the class tensions in France.• France had been deficit

spending for years.• Deficit Spending – when a

government spends more than it takes in.

• Money was spent on expensive wars and the Nobles’ lavish lifestyle.

• They government started to borrow money.

Page 13: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Woe is France• By 1789, half the

government’s income from taxes went to pay the interest on the debt.

• To compound the problem, bad harvest had caused food prices to soar.

• The government had to increase taxes (nobles had to start paying taxes) and reduce expenses (no more fun).

• The nobles and clergy fiercely resisted this idea.

No More Fun?

Page 14: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

A Valiant Effort• King Louis XVI wisely chose

Jacques Necker, a financial expert, as an advisor.

• Necker advised reducing lavish spending, government reform, and burdensome taxes.

• When he proposed taxing the 1st and 2nd Estates the nobles and clergy forced the king to dismiss him.

• As the financial crisis deepened the king was urged to summon the Estates-General.

Jacques Necker

FAIL!!!

Page 15: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

The Estates-General• Estates-General – a

legislative body consisting of representatives from the three estates.

• Had not met for 175 years.

• King feared the nobles would gain the feudal powers lost under absolute rule.

Page 16: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

A Roiling Boil• King Louis XVI calls the

Estates-General to meet in 1789 to discuss the financial problem.

• For weeks they were hung up on the issue of voting.

• Traditionally each estate met and voted separately.

• Under this system the 1st and 2nd Estates always out voted the 3rd Estate.

• The 3rd Estate wanted all Estates to meet as one and vote “by head”

Page 17: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

• They were in stalemate for weeks.

• In a daring move the 3rd Estate declared themselves to be the national assembly.

• A few days later the meeting hall was locked and guarded.

• So the delegates moved to the nearby tennis courts and took their famous Tennis Court Oath.

Page 18: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Tennis Court Oath• They swore “never to

separate and to meet wherever the circumstances might require until we have established a sound and just constitution.”

• Soon reform minded clergy and nobles joined the assembly and King Louis XVI Grudgingly accepted.

Page 19: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

The Pot Boils Over: People are going to get burned!• The king accepted but

royal troops start to surround Paris.

• Rumors spread that the king is planning to dissolve this new assembly.

• WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN?

Page 20: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Parisians Storm the Bastille!!!• People in Paris don’t care

what a bunch of old men are doing on a tennis court in Versailles.

• They are scared of the troops surrounding Paris

• 800 Parisians assemble outside the Bastille.

• Bastille – grim medieval fortress used as a prison for political prisoners.

Page 21: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

• The Crowd demands the weapons they think are stored there.

• The commander says “no” and fires on the mob.

• After many deaths the fortress is taken over.

• The Bastille represented the abuses of the monarchy.

• The capture acts as a wake up call to the king.

Page 22: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

A New Holiday!• Since 1880, the

French have celebrated Bastille day annually as their national independence day.

Page 23: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Funny PicturesOld People with Guns

What the Heck?

Page 24: On the Eve of the Revolution Pages 210 -215. End of an Age For centuries France was controlled by absolute monarchs. Living lavish lifestyles the French

Chuck Norris• It is said that

looking into Chuck Norris' eyes will reveal your future. Unfortunately, everybody's future is always the same: death by a roundhouse-kick to the face.