Post on 28-Dec-2015
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Causes of the French Revolution
Cultural CausesVoltaire
Montesquieu
Cultural Causes
• Influence of the Enlightenment:-18th century philosophes like Rousseau, Voltaire, Montesquieu, & Diderot-Drew attention to the political & social problems-Urban centers-educated middle class began to criticize the social class system known as the Estates
Cultural Causes: The EnlightenmentPeriod of time when world’s greatest thinkers/“philosophers” were
sharing ideas and changing the way ordinary people viewed world.
Examples: CHURCH NOBILITY • Should church be rich? -Share power/privilege! •Must do everything priest says? -Abuse of position
GOVERNMENT •Should kings have complete control? •Are kings directly associated with God?
As these new thoughts and teachings spread, the poor peasant class realize that perhaps it’s time for a change...
Example of a quote by one of these famous enlightened philosophers, Voltaire:
“The art of government consists of taking as much money as possible from one class of citizens to give to another.”
Cultural Causes
• Warned of the dangers of tyranny & religious intolerance
• Questioned the relationship between the people & their king
• Thought all men had certain rights like freedom of speech, press, & right to fair trial
Baron de Montesquieu• Critical of absolute monarchy• Member of French nobility who supported a constitutional
monarchy • Did not support a constitutional republic• Wanted a government headed by a king who had the right to
veto acts of the legislature• Wanted separation of power between three branches of
government• His ideas appealed to the Second Estate who argued at the
Meeting of the Estates-General that the traditional rights and privileges of the nobility should be protected from an abusive absolute monarch
Voltaire• Spent much of this career fighting for religious
toleration and a system of justice where all citizens are treated equally under the law
• Critical of the unfair Estates System---”You do not hear in England of one kind of justice for the higher class, a second for the middle, and a third for the lowest.”
• Saw his pen as a weapon in the fight for justice• “I have no sceptre, but I have a pen.”
Rousseau• Popularized the ideas of the Social Contract in France• He wrote much of the evils of civilization and not its
benefits.• He spelled out the institutions necessary to correct the
injustices brought about by civilization.• Spoke of virtue in a republic• This virtue requires citizen patriotism and reasoned
devotion to the national community.• Profound influence on Robespierre---”The soul of the
republic is virtue, love of country, the generous devotion that fuses all interests into the general will.”
Cultural Causes: Political Pamphlet by Rousseau
“The people should have power, 1775.Man is born free. No man has any natural authority over others; force does not give anyone that right. The power to make laws belongs to the people and only to the people.”(a pamphlet, banned by the French government in 1775, Jean Jacques Rousseau.)
Cultural: Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes• A reform-minded clergymen who was elected as a
representative of the Third Estate to the Meeting of the Estates-General
• Wrote the famous pamphlet called “What is the Third Estate?”
• As a commoner, Sieyes could not rise to a bishop position.• His frustrations may have contributed to his violent
animosity towards the aristocracy.• His pamphlet made him an oracle of the French Revolution.• In his eyes, the Third Estate was the nation, and he, more
than any other, led the Third Estate in the early weeks of the Estates-General.
Cultural Causes: What is the Third Estate?
Cultural Causes
• Political pamphlets circulated in the cafes & homes of the bourgeoisie.
• Gathered in salons to discuss the new ideas & the recent American Revolution.
Cultural Causes
• During Louis XVI's reign, the press was censored.
• No criticism of the King's policies was allowed.• At the onset of the French Revolution, the
press was given complete freedom, and introduced harsh critiques of the government.
• Refer to the Political Causes Section: Anti-Marie Antoinette Propaganda
Cultural Causes: American Revolution
• Served as a model of rebellion against a monarchy
• Used Declaration of Independence and Constitution as models
• Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Paine corresponded with the leaders of the French Revolution and/or visited France to advise them
•The Phrygian cap also appears in ancient Rome as the cap of the freedman (liberty cap) and is associated with the winter holiday Saturnalia.• Much later, French Revolutionaries adopted the Phrygian cap to stand for freedom.
Social Causes
The Estates System
THE FRENCH CITIZENS
1ST
2ND
3RD
Estates General
(1%)Catholic Clergy
(2%)Nobility
(97%)Everyone Else
Varied widely in what they contributed in terms of work and taxes
• Roman Catholic clergy
• One percent of the population
• Exempt from taxes
• Owned 10 percent of the land– Collected rents and
fees– Bishops and other
clergy grew wealthy
First Estate
• Nobility
• Less than 2 percent of the population
• Paid few taxes
• Controlled much wealth
• Held key positions– Government– Military
• Lived on country estates
Second Estate
• Largest group—97% of the population
• Bourgeoisie—city-dwelling merchants, factory owners, and professionals
• Sans culottes—artisans and workers
• Peasants—poor with little hope, paid rents and fees
Third Estate
Social Causes: The Three Estates
Three Estates
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%
LandOwnership
Taxation Population
ClergyNobilityCommoners
King Louis XVI (16th)
(Absolute Monarch - Right to rule by God)
The 3 Estates
First Estate
CLERGY (0.004%)
•Very wealthy.
•Paid no taxes.
•Owned land
•Charged “tithes”
Second Estate
NOBILITY (0.02 %)
•Owned land
•Very wealthy
•Paid no taxes
Third Estate
•Bourgeoisie
•Sans Culottes
•PEASANTS (98%)
•Few owned land
•Paid a LOT of taxes. (1/2 $)
•Most extremely poor.
•Not allowed to hunt Add the numbers. 1 Extremely wealthy king with great power
1 Group of rich clergy members
1 Group of rich nobles, doing as they wish
1 Huge group of poor, frustrated, starving peasants/workers
1 REVOLUTION WAITING TO HAPPEN :-(
+
Estates Determine rights, obligations, status. Difficult to move up
Social Causes: Estates System
• First Estate:– 100,000 to 130, 000 members of the clergy; 10,000 were
upper clergy; 1% of the population– Huge wealth & great influence over local & national
government = 80 to 120 million livres– Highest clergymen like cardinal, bishops, archbishops, &
abbots came from the nobility; could be paid up to 400,000 livres a year
– Lower clergy like parish priests & monks came from the lower classes; were poor, uneducated, and lived like the peasants---60,000 parish priests & 60,000 monks and nuns
– Owned 10% of the land in France; collected taxes & produce from the land
Social Causes: First Estate
• Consisted of members of the clergy---priests, bishops, monks, and nuns
• The upper clergy of bishops and cardinals came from rich noble families and behaved in the corrupt manner of the Medieval and Renaissance clergy.
Social Causes: First Estate
-Clergy did not pay taxes-Church controlled schools, hospitals, and press-Had separate courts system-Supported divine right-Provided social services to the poor-Clergy divided; upper clergy arrogant, acted like
nobles, & looked down on the parish priests-Parish priests wanted to reform the church & society;
identified with the Third Estate
Social Causes: Second Estate
• Made up of the nobility: dukes, counts, & marquises
• Many lived on huge estates; lived off the income from their lands
• Held the highest jobs in army, navy, church, court, king’s ministers, & diplomats
• 400, 000 members; 50,000 noble families; 2 to 5% of the population
• Owned 20% of the land in France
Social Causes: Second Estate
• Consisted of the nobles/aristocracy• Owned most of the land in France• Were the courtiers who lived at Versailles and
did not work• On their own lands, they have powers similar to
a king• Most French peasants were virtually slaves to
the lords who owned the land on which they worked and taxed them on everything
Social Causes: Second Estate• Politically conservative & determined to oppose any
reforms that would take away their privileges.• Some nobles born into position-known as Nobles of
the Sword; others bought their title from the King-known as Nobles of the Robe
• There was a hierarchy among the nobles-? Noble blood
• Exempt from taxes (Taille)• Exclusive hunting rights• Own courts system
Social Causes: Second Estate
• The court nobles lived a life of debauchery-partying, gambling, affairs, low morals,…part of Marie Antoinette’s crew---rumors and scandals developed
• Nobles of the Robe held posts in Parlement and courts; outranked the court nobles; but arranged marriages of daughters to sons of court nobles to gain closer relationship to King & Queen
• Collected rents, corvees, & taxes from peasants• Liberal nobles favored the philosophes & called for
reform & a constitutional monarchy like Marquis de Lafayette & Comte de Mirabeau
Second Estate: The Seigneurial System
• Feudal method of land ownership and organization
• Peasant labor
Receiving a seigneurial grant
Second Estate: NOBILITY
•Rich from parents/land rent/no taxes to pay
•Desire to return to feudal system
•Wanted more power from King
•Resisted wealthy merchants from joining
•Extravagant spending:Example: Hairstyles so high, afraid to dance in fear of hair catching fire from chandeliers!
Second Estate
Second Estate-Nobility
• Lords could:– Ride across peasants’ fields when hunting, even if
there were crops growing– Keep rabbits, which the peasants weren’t allowed
to kill even if they were eating their crops– Keep pigeons, which the peasants weren’t
allowed to kill even if they were eating their crips
Social Causes: Third Estate• Rest of population; about 25 million• 2.3 million or 8% of the population made up the
Bourgeoisie---middle class; landowners, lawyers, doctors, merchants, craftsman, writers, etc…
• Bourgeoisie owned about 20% of land• Lived in the cities; copied the dress of the nobility;
upwardly mobile• Frustrated by their lack of power & privilege• Wanted all Church, army, & govt positions to be
opened up to men of talent & merit• Wanted a constitutional monarchy, fair trials,
religious freedom
Third Estate: Bourgeoisie or Middle Class
• Part of the Third Estate, they were the “middle class” of France.
• They were bankers, merchants, factory owners (educated people)
• Led the revolution
Third Estate: Bourgeoisie• Welcome to the world of the
bourgeoisie, a class that walked the line between middle class and aristocracy with image as its balancing pole.
• The bourgeoisie was a class fighting for freedom from the aristocracy while simultaneously striving to attain the privilege of that class.
• For the social climbing bourgeoisie, image was everything.
• Members of the bourgeoisie utilized fashion to mimic the air of the aristocracy, outings to the theater and the opera to inflate their public image, and appearances at restaurants and casinos to demonstrate their economic status and their aristocratic taste.
•In addition, members of the bourgeoisie spent many hours promenading through gardens. •But in all places a social climbing bourgeoisie must behave with grace in order to fully mimic the noble image, thus proper etiquette was essential.• This ironic mix of revolutionary spirit and high society aspirations forms the essence of the bourgeoisie.
Bourgeoisie
Bourgeoisie
Social Causes: Third Estate and Peasants
• Peasantry-about 21 million people• Collectively owned 30 to 40% of the land• Most rented land from other peasants or
nobles• Tried to supplement income by working as
day laborers or textile workers• Victimized by the heavy taxes to King, Nobles,
and Church
Social Causes: Third Estate-Peasants
• Every year the peasants had to give part of their crops to the King, to the nobles, and to the Church, so there was little left for them to sell and eat
• They had to build or repair roads and bridges for no pay
Peasants
Social Causes: Third Estate and Sans-Culottes
• Sans-culottes: urban workers or artisans, factory workers, dock workers, etc…
• Lived in poverty• Most politicized
group of poor people due to high literacy rate
Sans-Culottes• The sans-culottes were the common people of Paris, and were so
named this because they didn't wear upper class breeches or culottes.
• They were the working people, the shop owners, the trades-people, the artisans, and even the factory workers.
• They were among the prominent losers of the first, more subtle revolution.
• While the middle class and wealthy classes benefitted greatly from the revolution, the sans-culottes saw their livelihoods disappearing and inflation driving them to fight for survival.
• Of all the groups of France, the views of the sans-culottes is what drove the radical revolution from 1792 to 1794---Robespierre, National Convention, Republic, and Reign of Terror.
Sans-Culottes• The desires of the sans-culottes were simple.
They believed that survival was a right of all people, inequality of any kind was to be abolished, and the aristocracy and the monarchy were to be eliminated.
• Property was not to be completely eliminated, but to be shared in communal groups.
• These ideas were far more radical than what the Jacobins had in mind. However, more radical Jacobins sympathized with the sans-culotte and began to work with them.
• This radical group of Jacobins were called the Mountain, because they took the highest seats in the Assembly.
Sans-Culottes
Sans-Culottes Pamphlet• Pamphlet trying to describe who the sans-culottes were
• “A sans-culotte, you devils? This is a creature who always goes on foot, who does not own millions of livres, as you would all like to do, owns no chateau, has no servants to do his bidding, and who lives very simply, with his wife and children, if he has any, on the fourth or fifth floor.
• He is useful, for he knows how to work in the fields, or in a smithy or sawmill, how to use a file, how to cover a roof, make his own clogs - and how to pour out his blood to the last drop for the good of the republic. And since he is at work, one may be sure not to see his face in the fashionable Chartres café nor in the low bars where there is conspiring and gambling, nor in the literary salons”
Sans-Culottes Pamphlet Continued
• “In the evening he goes to his section meeting, without powder or scent or boots, not with any hope of being noticed by the women citizens on the benches, but in order to lend all his strength to sound motions, and to crush any which arise from the odious faction of so-called statesmen. Apart from that, sans-culotte always has an edge on his blade: to trim the ears of ill-wisheirs. Sometimes he marches with his pike; but at the first sound of the drum you may see him setting off for the Vendée, for the army of the Alps or of the North. “
Members Needs1st estate clergy less than 1 % A decrease in the power
of the Monarch and increase in their political power. Maintain their property rights
2nd estate
Nobility less than 2 % To maintain their current position
3rd estate
upper
middle
lower
97 %
drs., merchants
artisans
peasants
Political Power to match their economic power which meant the elimination of the Monarch
less taxes and lower rent
Rewards for their work and food on the table
"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" SLOGAN OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION MEANT DIFFERENT THINGS TO DIFFERENT CLASSES OF PEOPLE