French Revolution Screencast #2 Notes
Estates General and Social Class
Estates General represented social and economic classes, not an egalitarian system.
Egalitarianism signifies equality. The French motto: Liberté, égalité, fraternité (freedom, equality, brotherhood).
French society was divided into unequal social classes.
Louis XVI and the Debt Crisis
Louis XVI funded the American Revolution, leading to a debt crisis in France.
June 17, 1789: Louis XVI convenes the Estates General to address the debt crisis.
The Estates General comprised representatives from all social classes, representing a population of 25 million.
Representatives from each group attended the meeting at the Palace of Versailles based on population size, with the third estate having the most representatives.
The Palace of Versailles was located 11 miles from Paris. Holding the meeting there with angry members of the third estate was a bad idea.
The First and Second Estates wanted to force more taxes on the Third Estate to resolve the debt crisis.
Bourgeoisie members of the Third Estate protested against taxation without representation, quoting Enlightenment thinkers like Voltaire, Rousseau, and Montesquieu.
The Third Estate forms the National Assembly to make laws, due to the King's failure.
At first, the National Assembly was a group of about 100 angry members of the bourgeoisie (doctors, lawyers, business owners, etc.).
Louis XVI and the First and Second Estates dismissed the National Assembly.
Louis XVI locked the National Assembly out of the meetings at Versailles. This occurred in June 1789.
The National Assembly refused to leave Versailles and camped out on the indoor tennis courts.
Tennis Court Oath
Members of the bourgeoisie camped out on Louis XVI's indoor tennis courts, refusing to leave until the king listened to them.
Food and supplies were snuck into the tennis courts from Paris.
Louis XVI sent his palace guards to the tennis court.
The National Assembly told the palace guards: "Go tell your master that we are here by the will of the people and that we shall only be removed from this tennis court at the point of a bayonet."
The palace guards (who were also members of the Third Estate) did not fire on the bourgeoisie.
Louis XVI realized he couldn't trust his palace guards and hires Swiss mercenaries for protection.
He requested and paid for Swiss mercenaries, hiring only 100 Swiss Guards to be bodyguards for the royal family.
The Swiss Guards' colorful outfits were meant to be noticeable.
News of the Swiss Guards spread to Paris, leading to fears that the king was hiring an army against the people.
Rumors spread, exaggerating the number of Swiss soldiers.
Storming of the Bastille
Mass hysteria led people in Paris to arm themselves.
On July 14, 1789, members of the bourgeoisie, worker class, and peasant class stormed the Bastille.
July 14th, Bastille Day, is celebrated in French history similarly to Independence Day in the United States.
The Bastille was a fortress used as an armory and a prison.
The French stormed the Bastille to seize weapons and arm themselves against Louis XVI.
Afterward, the National Assembly broke up and members started to head home.
Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
In August 1789, the National Assembly drafted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, which Louis XVI has not signed.
The declaration restated enlightened thought and declared the rights the people believed they should have.
Taxation:
A common tax is essential for army maintenance and government costs. Taxes should be equally distributed based on citizens' means.
Citizens should decide on the necessity, usage, amount, and collection method of taxes.
The Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen suggested the election of a parliament and the creation of a legislative assembly.
March on Versailles
In October 1789, a bread shortage triggered another crisis.
The women of Paris marched to Versailles to demand that Louis XVI move the royal family to Paris to address the debt crisis.
The women knocked down the gates of Versailles.
In 1789, Louis XVI moved the royal family to the Tuileries Palace in Paris.
The royal family was placed under virtual house arrest.
Initially, Swiss Guards accompanied him, but he was also guarded by the French National Guardsmen.
The Swiss Guards were eventually killed by French revolutionaries.