Enlightenment
Enlightenment
Enlightenment
The Renaissance
The Enlightenment
followed the
Renaissance.
Renaissance means
"rebirth."
The Renaissance
began in Italy in the
14th century.
Italy was a the
crossroads of trade
between the Arab world
and Europe.
Humanism was a
central idea during the
Renaissance.
Humanists believed in
the genius of man...
the unique and
extraordinary ability of
the human mind.
Italy
Iberian
Peninsula
Route to the
Ottoman Empire
Route to
Arabia
Definition of the
Enlightenment
Major Events of the
Enlightenment
Salons
Marie Thrse Rodet Geoffrin
lisabeth-Louise Vige-Le
Brun
The Philosophes
Enlightenment Academies
The Encyclopdie
Enlightenment Secularism
Natural Rights
Thomas Hobbes
John Locke
Voltaire
Candide
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Julie
Social Progress
Charles-Louis
Montesquieu
The Persian Letters
Table of Contents
Enlightenment Secularism
Secularism is the idea that
the church and the state
should be separate.
Secularism requires that
governments respect freedom
of religion.
Governments should not
give special preference to any
particular religion.
Bentham
Voltaire
Locke
Natural Rights
Thomas Paine believed that
governments do not give people
rights, but that people are born
with natural rights, some of
which they voluntarily give up
to governments.
Natural Rights
Thomas Hobbes also
believed that if people
want to live peacefully
they have to give up
some natural rights.
Voltaire
Franois-Marie Arouet, better known by
his pen name Voltaire, was an important
French Enlightenment thinker who
influenced the American and French
revolutions.
Voltaire was famous for his sense of
humor. He often used humor to criticize of
the Catholic Church and the French
political establishment.
Voltaire was a strong supporter of
natural rights, especially freedom of
religion.
Voltaires most famous book is Candide,
which makes fun of the philosophy of
optimism, that is, the idea that the world
is perfect and that everything that
happens is for the best.
Emperor Joseph II
of the Holy Roman
Empire believed in
the idea of
government by
social contract.
William of Orange
James II
of England
Queen
Mary II
Erskine Mays
works on British
law are now part
of Britains
constitution.
THE FRENCH
REVOLUTION: 1789-1791
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Active Citizen/Passive
Citizen
Enlightenment
political ideas were
supported by many
members of the
middle class and
aristocracy.
However, their
interests were with
the theory, not the
practice.
Most people with
money did not
believe voting rights
should be given to
those who did not
own property.
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Marquis de
Lafayette
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French
aristocrats who
were uneasy with
their privileges,
as well as
members of the
middle class who
wanted equality
with the nobility,
were inspired by
these stories.
Paul Reveres
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ride
The family of Louis XIV presented in mythological roles, by Jean Nocret, 1670
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1%
1%
98%
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The bourgeoisie
included wealthy
merchants,
manufacturers,
shopkeepers, and
artisans as well as
educated lawyers
and doctors.
Morning coffee, F.
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Medieval meeting
of the Estates
General
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The Bastille had walls 10 ft. thick and towers 100 ft. high.
It was guarded by 80 retired French guards and 30 Swiss
guards in July 1789.
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Pike
spea
r
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Marquis de
Lafayette
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Declaratio
n of the
Rights of
Man,
adopted
by the
National
Assembly
on
August 26,
1789
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Meanwhile,
thousands of
Parisian women
marched through
the rain to the
palace at
Versailles.
Their anger was
the result of the
loss of their work.
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Election areas,
1789
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Girondins
: liberal
republica
Moderate
Conservative
Feuillants:
wanted
constitutional
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Central European
areas with which
France shared a 61
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Dr.
Guillotin
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The National
Convention,
dominated by the
radical Jacobins,
took desperate
measures to deal
with foreign and
domestic troubles.
They set aside the
constitution
approved in 1793
and established the
Committee of Public
Safety.
The Crushed
Aristocracy
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The Committee
ruled between July
1793 and July 1794,
the period known
as the Reign of
Terror.
The Committee of
Public Safety had
total authority and
waged a brutal
campaign to
eliminate enemies
of France and the
revolution.
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Robespierre
Above:
Committee
meetings
Right: trial
proceedin
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Republic of Virtue
The Jacobins believed
that reason and
patriotism were the
most important virtues,
or values
All men were legally
and politically equal
Reason
Equality
Liberty
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Reign of Terror,
July 1793-July 1794
Between 20,000 and
40,000 men, women,
and children were
condemned to die by
the guillotine across
France.
Another 300,000
crowded prisons.
The accused came
from all classes.
One of its victims was
the former queen,
Marie Antoinette.
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Trial of Marie
Antoinette
Marie Antoinette on
the way to her
execution, by Flameng
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The Directory
Thermidorean Reaction
Writing a new constitution
Continued issues with poverty
Disappointment with the
Directorys leadership
Return of monarchists and
conservatives
Emergence of Napoleon
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Thermidorean Reaction
The death of Robespierre
in 1794 signaled the end
of the radical
revolutionary phase.
The people of France
were exhausted from the
horrible extremes of the
Reign of Terror.
More conservative
middle class lawyers and
businessmen asserted
their authority in the
period known as the
Thermidorean (one of the
months in the new
calendar) Reaction or
Directory period.
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On October 3, 1795, an
angry mob of royalists
and
counterrevolutionaries
threatened the
National Convention at
Tuileries Palace.
Napoleon Bonaparte
was put in charge of
protecting the
Convention members.
He and his men
successfully stopped
the attack.
Tuilerie
s
Napoleon in
1796
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Napoleon Bonaparte
Attended military school at
the age of nine, joined the
French military at sixteen
Supported the Revolution
Served in several places
during the early part of the
revolutionary wars
Became famous after
protecting the National
Convention in 1795
Led successful campaigns
against Austria, Sardinia,
Italy
Became known as the
general
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