What caused the French Revolution Tom Mullaney

What rights do people have,
and where do they come from?

Who gets to make decisions for others
and on what authority?

And how can we organize society
to meet people’s needs?

These questions challenged
an entire nation

during the upheaval
of the French Revolution.

By the end of the 18th century,

Europe had undergone a profound
intellectual and cultural shift

known as the Enlightenment.

Philosophers and artists promoted
reason and human freedom

over tradition and religion.

The rise of a middle class
and printed materials

encouraged political awareness,

and the American Revolution had turned
a former English colony

into an independent republic.

Yet France, one of the largest and richest
countries in Europe

was still governed by an ancient regime
of three rigid social classes

called Estates.

The monarch King Louis XVI
based his authority on divine right

and granted special privileges
to the First and Second Estates,

the Catholic clergy, and the nobles.

The Third Estate, middle class merchants
and craftsmen,

as well as over 20 million peasants,
had far less power

and they were the only ones
who paid taxes,

not just to the king,
but to the other Estates as well.

In bad harvest years,

taxation could leave peasants
with almost nothing

while the king and nobles lived lavishly
on their extracted wealth.

But as France sank into debt due to
its support of the American Revolution

and its long-running war with England,

change was needed.

King Louis appointed
finance minister Jacques Necker,

who pushed for tax reforms

and won public support by openly
publishing the government’s finances.

But the king’s advisors
strongly opposed these initiatives.

Desperate for a solution, the king called
a meeting of the Estates-General,

an assembly of representatives
from the Three Estates,

for the first time in 175 years.

Although the Third Estate represented
98% of the French population,

its vote was equal to each
of the other Estates.

And unsurprisingly, both of the upper
classes favored keeping their privileges.

Realizing they couldn’t
get fair representation,

the Third Estate broke off,

declared themselves
the National Assembly,

and pledged to draft a new constitution
with or without the other Estates.

King Louis ordered the First
and Second Estates

to meet with the National Assembly,

but he also dismissed Necker,
his popular finance minister.

In response, thousands
of outraged Parisians

joined with sympathetic soldiers
to storm the Bastille prison,

a symbol of royal power
and a large storehouse of weapons.

The Revolution had begun.

As rebellion spread
throughout the country,

the feudal system was abolished.

The Assembly’s Declaration
of the Rights of Man and Citizen

proclaimed a radical idea for the time –

that individual rights and freedoms
were fundamental to human nature

and government existed
only to protect them.

Their privileges gone,
many nobles fled abroad,

begging foreign rulers to invade France
and restore order.

And while Louis remained as the figurehead
of the constitutional monarchy,

he feared for his future.

In 1791, he tried to flee the country
but was caught.

The attempted escape shattered
people’s faith in the king.

The royal family was arrested
and the king charged with treason.

After a trial,

the once-revered king
was publicly beheaded,

signaling the end of one thousand
years of monarchy

and finalizing the September 21st
declaration of the first French republic,

governed by the motto
“liberté, égalité, fraternité.”

Nine months later,

Queen Marie Antoinette,

a foreigner long-mocked
as “Madame Déficit”

for her extravagant reputation,

was executed as well.

But the Revolution would not end there.

Some leaders, not content
with just changing the government,

sought to completely transform
French society –

its religion,
its street names,

even its calendar.

As multiple factions formed,

the extremist Jacobins
lead by Maximilien Robespierre

launched a Reign of Terror

to suppress the slightest dissent,

executing over 20,000 people

before the Jacobin’s own downfall.

Meanwhile, France found itself
at war with neighboring monarchs

seeking to strangle the Revolution
before it spread.

Amidst the chaos, a general named
Napoleon Bonaparte took charge,

becoming Emperor as he claimed to defend
the Revolution’s democratic values.

All in all, the Revolution
saw three constitutions

and five governments within ten years,

followed by decades
alternating between monarchy and revolt

before the next Republic formed in 1871.

And while we celebrate
the French Revolution’s ideals,

we still struggle with many
of the same basic questions

raised over two centuries ago.

人们有什么权利
,他们来自哪里?

谁可以为他人做决定
,以什么权力做决定?

我们如何组织社会
来满足人们的需求? 在法国大革命的剧变中,

这些问题向整个国家提出了挑战

到 18 世纪末,

欧洲经历了一场深刻的
知识和文化

转变,即启蒙运动。

哲学家和艺术家提倡
理性和人类自由,

而不是传统和宗教。

中产阶级的崛起
和印刷品

鼓励了政治意识,

而美国独立战争已经将
一个前英国殖民地

变成了一个独立的共和国。

然而,作为欧洲最大和最富有的
国家之一

的法国仍然由一个
由三个严格的社会阶级组成的古老政权统治,

称为等级。

国王路易十六
以神权为基础


授予第一和第二等级

、天主教神职人员和贵族特权。

第三等级,中产阶级的商人
和工匠,

以及超过 2000 万农民的
权力要小得多

,他们是唯一
纳税的人,

不仅对国王,
而且对其他等级也是如此。

在收成不好的年份,

税收可能使
农民几乎一无所有,

而国王和贵族则
靠他们榨取的财富过着奢侈的生活。

但由于法国
因支持美国革命

和与英国的长期战争而陷入债务,因此

需要做出改变。

路易国王任命了
财政部长雅克·内克尔(Jacques Necker),

后者推动税制改革,

并通过公开公布政府财政情况赢得了公众的支持

但国王的顾问们
强烈反对这些举措。

国王迫不及待地召集
了三级会议代表大会

,这

是 175 年来的第一次会议。

尽管第三等级代表
了法国人口的 98%,但

它的投票权
与其他等级相同。

不出所料,两个上层
阶级都倾向于保留他们的特权。

意识到他们无法
获得公平的代表权

,第三等级中断了,

宣布自己
为国民议会,

并承诺在
有或没有其他等级的情况下起草一部新宪法。

路易国王下令第一
和第二等级

与国民议会会面,

但他也解雇
了他受欢迎的财政部长内克尔。

作为回应,数千
名愤怒的巴黎人

与同情的士兵
一起袭击了巴士底监狱,

这是王室权力的象征
和大型武器仓库。

革命已经开始。

随着叛乱
在全国蔓延

,封建制度被废除。

大会的《
人权和公民权利宣言》在当时

宣布了一个激进的想法

——个人权利和自由
是人性的基础

,政府的存在
只是为了保护它们。

他们的特权消失了,
许多贵族逃往国外,

乞求外国统治者入侵法国
并恢复秩序。

虽然路易仍然
是君主立宪制的傀儡,但

他担心自己的未来。

1791年,他试图逃离这个国家,
但被抓住了。

企图逃跑粉碎了
人们对国王的信心。

王室被捕
,国王被控叛国罪。

经过审判,

这位曾经受人尊敬的国王
被公开斩首,

标志着一千年君主制的终结,

并最终确定了 9 月 21 日
法兰西第一个共和国的

宣言,其口号是
“自由、平等、博爱”。

九个月后,因奢侈名声而

长期被嘲笑
为“Déficit 夫人”

的外国人玛丽·安托瓦内特王后

也被处决。

但革命不会就此结束。

一些领导人不满足
于仅仅改变政府,他们

试图彻底改变
法国社会——

它的宗教
、街道名称,

甚至它的日历。

随着多个派系的形成,

马克西米连·罗伯斯庇尔领导的极端雅各宾派

发动了一场恐怖统治,

以镇压最轻微的异议,

在雅各宾派垮台之前处决了 20,000 多人。

与此同时,法国发现
自己与邻国君主交战,

试图在革命
蔓延之前扼杀它。

在混乱中,一位名叫
拿破仑·波拿巴的将军掌权,

成为皇帝,因为他声称要
捍卫革命的民主价值观。

总而言之,大革命在十年内
见证了三部宪法

和五届政府,

随后数十年
在君主制和起义之间交替,

直到 1871 年下一个共和国成立。

虽然我们
庆祝法国大革命的理想,

但我们仍然在与
许多相同的基本原则作斗争

两个多世纪前提出的问题。