Module 2
Module 2
• Napoleonic Era
French Revolution- Context
France at the Eve of Revolution
Absolute monarchy
• France was an absolute
monarchy.
The society was divided into different social orders called the Estates.
There were three Estates in the French Ancien Regime:
• First Estate: Clergy
• Second Estate: Nobility
• Third Estate: Peasants and Bourgeoisie
The Clergy The Nobility The Commoners
• They were less than 1% of • They were less than 2% of • 98% of the population.
the total people the population.
• It can be divided into the
• They owned 10% of land • They owned 20% of the land. bourgeoisie, the artisans and
labourers and the farmers and
• They paid little taxes. • They paid no taxes. the peasants.
French Revolution
[Enlightenment]Ideological Causes
• Prominent French intellectuals (philosophes) like Montesquieu, Voltaire,
Rousseau and Diderot influenced the people.
• No representative institution
● 1780s saw consecutive failure of
harvest, causing famine and
• Inefficiency and corruption inflation.
● Great Fear: General panic in
• Absence of local self- 1789 just before the Revolution
government and excessive ○ Several rural unrests (Bread Riots)
centralization ○ Rumours of aristocratic plot to
starve off the mobilized
population
• Privileged groups opposed ○ People armed themselves and
reforms attacked manor houses
Social Classes
Bourgeoisie The Artisans-Labourers
• Comprised money lenders,
businessman, teachers, advocates, • Meagre wages
doctors, etc.
• Long working hours
• Grew rich by trade and business The Farmers
• The American Revolutionary War (1775-83)- France entered the war on the
American side, leading to:
• Worsened the state of finance in France
• Spread of revolutionary ideas
• The king’s Finance Minister, Jacques Necker, continued to float loans and
presented a false account of the king’s finances even as the crown was
going bankrupt.
• Brienne called the Estates-General, the representative assembly of the three Estates.
• Representation of the three Estates
The Estates- • Feuds, debates and discussions among the Third Estate
General of May • June 17, 1789: Third Estate passes “National Assembly” resolution
5,1789
Tennis Court Oath
Emmanuel- Joseph Sieyes • The National Assembly met
released a pamphlet "What is in a tennis court where they
the Third Estate?" to mobilize the took an oath that the
people. National Assembly couldn't
be dissolved until they frame
He asked: themselves a new written
• What is the Third Estate? constitution.
Everything. • More priests and nobles
• What has it been until now in started joining.
the political order? Nothing.
• What does it ask? To become • Estates- General later
replaced with National
something.
Assembly.
• Shortage of food and inflation led to rumours
• Necker was reinstated and sacked again
• People started rioting in the streets.
Storming of
• July 14, 1789: Commoners stormed Bastille, a major prison fortress and royal
the Bastille, Armoury.
July 14, 1789
• These sat on the left of the Legislative Assembly, came to be called the Leftists. Jacobins came to be known as
the Sans-Culottes
Jacobin club
• Less prosperous sections of society
• Small shopkeepers, artisans such as shoemakers, pastry cooks, watch-makers, printers, servants and daily-
wage workers.
• Leader was Maximilian Robespierre
• Wore long striped trousers similar to those worn by dock workers.
• Different from the fashionable sections of society, especially nobles.
Rising Tensions
• Secret negotiations with the King of Prussia.
• National Assembly voted in April 1792 to declare war against Prussia and
Austria.
• War of the people against kings and aristocracies all over Europe.
Impact of Revolutionary Wars with Prussia
• Brought losses and economic difficulties to the people.
• Men were away fighting, women were left to cope with the tasks of
earning a living and looking after their families.
• Considered a constitutional
● Armed revolutionaries of sans-
monarchy essential, i.e.
culottes stormed the palace at
monarchists Tuileries, taking the royal
family captive and marking the
fall of the Girondins
• They were lawyers, intellectuals
and journalists with reputation ● Monarchy was suspended.
among the businessmen.
● National Convention
established.
• Sat on the right of the Legislative
Assembly so called the rightists
21 September, 1792:
September genocide They abolished the
Jacobins won
killed thousands on monarchy and the
National Convention
Paris streets First Republic of
France was founded.
National Convention
discovered the links King Louis XVI was
King was convicted of
between the guillotined summarily
high treason.
Austrians and Louis on 21 January, 1793.
XVI.
Reign of Terror [1793-94]
The Jacobins of extreme left,
The temporary government
Counter-revolutionary activity called “the Mountain” or the
Montagnards, thus sidestepped
consisted of:
demanded decentralization the implementation of the Committee of Public Safety
and economic liberalization democratic Constitution of 1793
and implemented the “Terror”. Committee of General Safety
Code of
Code of Civil Commercial
Civil Code Penal Code Criminal
Procedure Code
Procedure
• Land redistribution
• Promoted Automation
1802 1804
Senate elects Napoleon Senate declares
consul for life Napoleon hereditary
Emperor of France