Revolutions Notes - For History Quiz
-FRENCH REVOLUTION- -AND NAPOLEON-
1789 - 1815 ~ Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity
INFLUENCE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
The Philosophes: Voltaire, Diderot, Montesquieu, and Rousseau believed that knowledge should be converted into reform
Believed their task was to apply reason to society for the purpose of human improvement
CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
The American Revolution: The concept of revolution was validated as a legitimate means to produce social and political change
The French involvement increased the economic plight of the country
The Aristocracy was trying to reassert the power they had lost under Louis XIV
Cumulative Dissent with the Ancient Regime
The poor and middle classes suffered from an increasing tax burden
1786: the state was bankrupt
The Assembly of Notables refused a new tax, and the parlements insisted that Louis call together the Estates General
Louis agreed to allow each estate to choose its representative and to “Double the Third” (double the third estate’s number of representatives)
1788: bad harvests, unemployment and inflation led to the uprisings in the summer of 1789
THE ESTATES GENERAL ***
The First Estate - The Clergy > 1% of the population
Dominated by Bishops and archbishops from the noble ranks
Generally wealthy and exempt from taxes
Owned 20% of the land
The Second Estate - The Nobility - >2% of the population
Exempt from direct taxes
Owned 25% of the land
The Third Estate - 98% of the population
Made up of peasants, the middle class, (Bourgeoisie), and urban workers (Sans Culottes)
Paid high taxes
Many owned the land they farmed
Not as concerned with political rights, but wanted relief from taxes
Owned 55% of the land
THE ROAD TO REVOLUTION
May 5: Estates General convened
June 17: The Third Estate declared themselves the National Assembly
June 20: Members of the Third Estate declared the Tennis Court Oath
June 27: Louis forced the First and Second Estates to join the National Assembly
REVOLUTION OF 1789
July 14: Storming of the Bastille
Summer: The Great Fear - Émigrés (emigrants - French nobility)
August 4: Decrees
August 26: The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen
October: Women’s March on Versailles
1790 - 1791
The Constituent Assembly
Write a new Constitution for France
Govern the nation in the process
Martial Law and censorship
Civil Constitution of the Clergy
Clergy became salaried, elected officials who had to pledge their allegiance to the State
Monasteries and Convents were abolished
The Church lands were sold
The Pope’s authority was not recognized
CONSTITUTION OF 1791
Limited Monarchy
The king's powers were restricted to a 3-year veto power over the Legislative Assembly
July 20
The royal family was caught trying to flee the country
1791 - 1792
Declaration of Pillnitz
Prussia and Austria seek to restore the French monarchy
The Legislative Assembly declares war on Austria in April 1792 with disastrous results
The mood of the nation soured and many blamed Louis
August 10
The royal family were driven from the Tuileries by an angry mob and imprisoned
The National Convention, elected by Universal male suffrage, was summoned to create a Republic
THE RADICAL PHASE
The National Convention abolished the monarchy and its calendar
Declared September 22, 1792, as Day one of Year I of the Republic
July: Thermidore, November: Brumaire, June: Prairial
January 21. 1793: After being tried for treason, Louis XVI was sent to the guillotine
The National Convention split into 2 factions
Jacobins (Montagnards) - Radicals
Girondins - Moderates
THE TERROR
Robespierre was elected to the Committee of Public Safety in July 1793
Levee En Masse - call to arms for all French citizens to support the war effort
300,000 people were arrested and 40,000 executed in an attempted to eliminate all opposition and dissent
Republic of Virtue: dress and decorative objects became a means for displaying political commitment
Liberty trees, Marianne (Goddess of Liberty), government organized festivals
9 Thermidor: On July 27th, Robespierre is denounced by the Committee of Public Safety and sent to the guillotine the next day
THE DIRECTORY
Thermidorian Reaction:
Swing to the right after the fall of Robespierre
White Terror
Constitution of 1795
Reinstated old system of electors
Electors chose the new Legislative Assembly
The Legislative Assembly chose a 5-member Directory
NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
Under the Directory the economy suffered
The war abroad was successful thanks to a brilliant young military general named Napoleon Bonaparte
He was a Corsican Noble
Coup of 18 Brumaire
1799- Napoleon staged a Coup d’etat to overthrow the Directory
1800: Consulate, Bank of France established
1801: Concordat of 1801, Slave Rebellion in Haiti
1802-03: Consul for Life, Peace of Amiens, Louisiana Purchase
1804: Civil Code of 1804, Coronation as Emperor
1805: Defeated at Trafalgar
British counter blockade prevented trade between the Americas and Europe
Context for War of 1812
1806: Continental System, Holy Roman Empire abolished
1807: Treaty of Tilsit with Russia
NAPOLEON’S THREE (3) COSTLY MISTAKES
Continental System
Naval blockade between Great Britain and Europe
Peninsula War - 1808
Spanish Guerillas attacked French troops en route to Portugal
Guerilla - little war; sneak-attack type war
Not waged by people in the military
Invasion of Russia - 1812
Lost half a million troops to the scorched-Earth policy and the Russian winter
Scorched-Earth Policy: Russians would burn land that the French were coming to, rather than fight them
Attempt to lure the French deeper into Russia, leaving them ill-prepared for the Russian winter - starving troops
NAPOLEON’S DOWNFALL
Weakened army could not defeat the Fourth Coalition (Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Britain)
October 1813: Battle of Nations (Leipzig)
April 4, 1814: Napoleon was forced to abdicate (step down from the throne) and was exiled to Elba
Bourbon Restoration: Louis XVIII takes
Bourbon Dynasty returned to power; absolute monarchy restored
France returned to 1792 borders
THE HUNDRED DAYS
March 1815: Napoleon returned to France with much support
Battle of Waterloo: June 15th, 1815, Napoleon’s troops are defeated by the Duke of Wellington
Napoleon is exiled to the Island of St. Helena where he died in 1821
CONGRESS OF VIENNA, 1814 - 1815
Prussia, Russia Austria, Britain (the Fourth Coalition), and France
Fourth Coalition mainly
Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria presided
Attempt to restore Europe to what it was prior to Napoleon and the French Revolution; every country was independent, had their own power, balance of power
3 principles:
Compensation
Fourth Coalition should be compensated by the French for defeating them
Legitimacy *
Restoring the legitimate rulers to power throughout Europe
Balance of Power
- LATIN AMERICAN - INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS
CAUSES
Economic:
Mercantilism
Cash Crops
A crop produced for its commercial value rather than for use by the grower
Can lead to food shortages - not enough food grown to feed popular
Unfair distribution of wealth
Social:
Rigid class structure
Difficult to move out of your social class; if you’re born into it, you stay there
Political:
Colonial rule
Unfair distribution of power
THE ENLIGHTENMENT
Government exists to protect the citizens’ natural rights of life, liberty, & property
If the government violates the natural rights of the people, the citizens have a right to revolt
THE AMERICAN AND FRENCH REVOLUTIONS
The French and American Revolutions prove that Revolution is a legitimate means to bring about change
Political upheaval and new Enlightened ideas dominate France
Napoleonic Wars distract the European Powers attention away from their colonies
THE HAITIAN REVOLUTION
HAITI
A French colony known as St. Dominique
The first Latin American Colony to win its independence
It started out as a slave rebellion because slaves outnumbered their masters by 500,000
TOUSSAINT L’OUVERTURE
An ex-slave who emerged as the leader of the revolution
1802; French troops landed on St. Dominique and L’Ouverture promised to stop the fighting if the French would end slavery
Accused of plotting another rebellion and imprisoned
Died in prison in April 1803
January 1, 1804, Haiti was declared an independent country
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?
The first to win independence
Started as a slave rebellion
French colony
MÉXICO
MIGUEL HIDALGO
Highly educated Creole priest
September 1810: El Grito de Dólares
Called upon his mestizo and indigenous parishioners to take up arms against the Spanish
Led an army toward Mexico City
Hidalgo never made it to the capital – He was captured and shot in 1811
JOSE MORELOS
Mestizo Priests who took up the fight after Hidalgo
Captured and executed in December 1815
AGUSTIN ITURBIDE
Creole who declared independence for Mexico in 1821
Proclaimed himself Emperor of Mexico
1824: Iturbide toppled and the Republic of Mexico was established
THE LIBERATOR: SIMON BOLIVAR
Elite Creole planter -> Military General
Called the “George Washington” of South America
Known as the Liberator
Liberated territories of modern day Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia
Wanted to create a powerful, unified Latin American State
JOSE DE SAN MARTIN
Creole officer who had trained in European armies
Liberated Argentina from Spanish control
Met with Bolivar in 1822
Turned over command of his armies to Bolivar
BRAZIL
DOM PEDRO
1808: Napoleon’s troops invaded Portugal
The royal family fled to Brazil and ruled the Portuguese Empire from there
After Napoleon’s defeat, Brazilians wanted their independence
1822: 8,000 Creoles signed a petition asking Dom Pedro to rue Brazil independently
He agreed and Brazil had a Bloodless Revolution
CONCLUSION
Most Latin American colonies won their independence by 1825
Most of the independence movements were led by the Creoles
Haiti was different because:
It was the first
It was the only French colony to revel
It was the only rebellion led by slaves
Brazil was different because:
It was a Portuguese colony
It was a bloodless revolution
It became a monarchy
-FRENCH REVOLUTION- -AND NAPOLEON-
1789 - 1815 ~ Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity
INFLUENCE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
The Philosophes: Voltaire, Diderot, Montesquieu, and Rousseau believed that knowledge should be converted into reform
Believed their task was to apply reason to society for the purpose of human improvement
CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
The American Revolution: The concept of revolution was validated as a legitimate means to produce social and political change
The French involvement increased the economic plight of the country
The Aristocracy was trying to reassert the power they had lost under Louis XIV
Cumulative Dissent with the Ancient Regime
The poor and middle classes suffered from an increasing tax burden
1786: the state was bankrupt
The Assembly of Notables refused a new tax, and the parlements insisted that Louis call together the Estates General
Louis agreed to allow each estate to choose its representative and to “Double the Third” (double the third estate’s number of representatives)
1788: bad harvests, unemployment and inflation led to the uprisings in the summer of 1789
THE ESTATES GENERAL ***
The First Estate - The Clergy > 1% of the population
Dominated by Bishops and archbishops from the noble ranks
Generally wealthy and exempt from taxes
Owned 20% of the land
The Second Estate - The Nobility - >2% of the population
Exempt from direct taxes
Owned 25% of the land
The Third Estate - 98% of the population
Made up of peasants, the middle class, (Bourgeoisie), and urban workers (Sans Culottes)
Paid high taxes
Many owned the land they farmed
Not as concerned with political rights, but wanted relief from taxes
Owned 55% of the land
THE ROAD TO REVOLUTION
May 5: Estates General convened
June 17: The Third Estate declared themselves the National Assembly
June 20: Members of the Third Estate declared the Tennis Court Oath
June 27: Louis forced the First and Second Estates to join the National Assembly
REVOLUTION OF 1789
July 14: Storming of the Bastille
Summer: The Great Fear - Émigrés (emigrants - French nobility)
August 4: Decrees
August 26: The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen
October: Women’s March on Versailles
1790 - 1791
The Constituent Assembly
Write a new Constitution for France
Govern the nation in the process
Martial Law and censorship
Civil Constitution of the Clergy
Clergy became salaried, elected officials who had to pledge their allegiance to the State
Monasteries and Convents were abolished
The Church lands were sold
The Pope’s authority was not recognized
CONSTITUTION OF 1791
Limited Monarchy
The king's powers were restricted to a 3-year veto power over the Legislative Assembly
July 20
The royal family was caught trying to flee the country
1791 - 1792
Declaration of Pillnitz
Prussia and Austria seek to restore the French monarchy
The Legislative Assembly declares war on Austria in April 1792 with disastrous results
The mood of the nation soured and many blamed Louis
August 10
The royal family were driven from the Tuileries by an angry mob and imprisoned
The National Convention, elected by Universal male suffrage, was summoned to create a Republic
THE RADICAL PHASE
The National Convention abolished the monarchy and its calendar
Declared September 22, 1792, as Day one of Year I of the Republic
July: Thermidore, November: Brumaire, June: Prairial
January 21. 1793: After being tried for treason, Louis XVI was sent to the guillotine
The National Convention split into 2 factions
Jacobins (Montagnards) - Radicals
Girondins - Moderates
THE TERROR
Robespierre was elected to the Committee of Public Safety in July 1793
Levee En Masse - call to arms for all French citizens to support the war effort
300,000 people were arrested and 40,000 executed in an attempted to eliminate all opposition and dissent
Republic of Virtue: dress and decorative objects became a means for displaying political commitment
Liberty trees, Marianne (Goddess of Liberty), government organized festivals
9 Thermidor: On July 27th, Robespierre is denounced by the Committee of Public Safety and sent to the guillotine the next day
THE DIRECTORY
Thermidorian Reaction:
Swing to the right after the fall of Robespierre
White Terror
Constitution of 1795
Reinstated old system of electors
Electors chose the new Legislative Assembly
The Legislative Assembly chose a 5-member Directory
NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
Under the Directory the economy suffered
The war abroad was successful thanks to a brilliant young military general named Napoleon Bonaparte
He was a Corsican Noble
Coup of 18 Brumaire
1799- Napoleon staged a Coup d’etat to overthrow the Directory
1800: Consulate, Bank of France established
1801: Concordat of 1801, Slave Rebellion in Haiti
1802-03: Consul for Life, Peace of Amiens, Louisiana Purchase
1804: Civil Code of 1804, Coronation as Emperor
1805: Defeated at Trafalgar
British counter blockade prevented trade between the Americas and Europe
Context for War of 1812
1806: Continental System, Holy Roman Empire abolished
1807: Treaty of Tilsit with Russia
NAPOLEON’S THREE (3) COSTLY MISTAKES
Continental System
Naval blockade between Great Britain and Europe
Peninsula War - 1808
Spanish Guerillas attacked French troops en route to Portugal
Guerilla - little war; sneak-attack type war
Not waged by people in the military
Invasion of Russia - 1812
Lost half a million troops to the scorched-Earth policy and the Russian winter
Scorched-Earth Policy: Russians would burn land that the French were coming to, rather than fight them
Attempt to lure the French deeper into Russia, leaving them ill-prepared for the Russian winter - starving troops
NAPOLEON’S DOWNFALL
Weakened army could not defeat the Fourth Coalition (Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Britain)
October 1813: Battle of Nations (Leipzig)
April 4, 1814: Napoleon was forced to abdicate (step down from the throne) and was exiled to Elba
Bourbon Restoration: Louis XVIII takes
Bourbon Dynasty returned to power; absolute monarchy restored
France returned to 1792 borders
THE HUNDRED DAYS
March 1815: Napoleon returned to France with much support
Battle of Waterloo: June 15th, 1815, Napoleon’s troops are defeated by the Duke of Wellington
Napoleon is exiled to the Island of St. Helena where he died in 1821
CONGRESS OF VIENNA, 1814 - 1815
Prussia, Russia Austria, Britain (the Fourth Coalition), and France
Fourth Coalition mainly
Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria presided
Attempt to restore Europe to what it was prior to Napoleon and the French Revolution; every country was independent, had their own power, balance of power
3 principles:
Compensation
Fourth Coalition should be compensated by the French for defeating them
Legitimacy *
Restoring the legitimate rulers to power throughout Europe
Balance of Power
- LATIN AMERICAN - INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS
CAUSES
Economic:
Mercantilism
Cash Crops
A crop produced for its commercial value rather than for use by the grower
Can lead to food shortages - not enough food grown to feed popular
Unfair distribution of wealth
Social:
Rigid class structure
Difficult to move out of your social class; if you’re born into it, you stay there
Political:
Colonial rule
Unfair distribution of power
THE ENLIGHTENMENT
Government exists to protect the citizens’ natural rights of life, liberty, & property
If the government violates the natural rights of the people, the citizens have a right to revolt
THE AMERICAN AND FRENCH REVOLUTIONS
The French and American Revolutions prove that Revolution is a legitimate means to bring about change
Political upheaval and new Enlightened ideas dominate France
Napoleonic Wars distract the European Powers attention away from their colonies
THE HAITIAN REVOLUTION
HAITI
A French colony known as St. Dominique
The first Latin American Colony to win its independence
It started out as a slave rebellion because slaves outnumbered their masters by 500,000
TOUSSAINT L’OUVERTURE
An ex-slave who emerged as the leader of the revolution
1802; French troops landed on St. Dominique and L’Ouverture promised to stop the fighting if the French would end slavery
Accused of plotting another rebellion and imprisoned
Died in prison in April 1803
January 1, 1804, Haiti was declared an independent country
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?
The first to win independence
Started as a slave rebellion
French colony
MÉXICO
MIGUEL HIDALGO
Highly educated Creole priest
September 1810: El Grito de Dólares
Called upon his mestizo and indigenous parishioners to take up arms against the Spanish
Led an army toward Mexico City
Hidalgo never made it to the capital – He was captured and shot in 1811
JOSE MORELOS
Mestizo Priests who took up the fight after Hidalgo
Captured and executed in December 1815
AGUSTIN ITURBIDE
Creole who declared independence for Mexico in 1821
Proclaimed himself Emperor of Mexico
1824: Iturbide toppled and the Republic of Mexico was established
THE LIBERATOR: SIMON BOLIVAR
Elite Creole planter -> Military General
Called the “George Washington” of South America
Known as the Liberator
Liberated territories of modern day Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia
Wanted to create a powerful, unified Latin American State
JOSE DE SAN MARTIN
Creole officer who had trained in European armies
Liberated Argentina from Spanish control
Met with Bolivar in 1822
Turned over command of his armies to Bolivar
BRAZIL
DOM PEDRO
1808: Napoleon’s troops invaded Portugal
The royal family fled to Brazil and ruled the Portuguese Empire from there
After Napoleon’s defeat, Brazilians wanted their independence
1822: 8,000 Creoles signed a petition asking Dom Pedro to rue Brazil independently
He agreed and Brazil had a Bloodless Revolution
CONCLUSION
Most Latin American colonies won their independence by 1825
Most of the independence movements were led by the Creoles
Haiti was different because:
It was the first
It was the only French colony to revel
It was the only rebellion led by slaves
Brazil was different because:
It was a Portuguese colony
It was a bloodless revolution
It became a monarchy