A Short History of the French RevolutionWritten for today's undergraduates, this up-to-date survey of the French Revolution and Napoleonic era offers a concise alternative to the longer texts geared to advanced study in the field. This text introduces students to the major events that comprise the story of the French Revolution; to the different ways in which historians have interpreted these event; to the political, social, and cultural origins of the Revolution; and to recent scholarship in the field. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 26
Page 9
... provinces , different regions came to have differing privileges , too . New provinces might maintain their own customary laws and special institutions , such as provincial estates , and often they obtained exemptions from specified ...
... provinces , different regions came to have differing privileges , too . New provinces might maintain their own customary laws and special institutions , such as provincial estates , and often they obtained exemptions from specified ...
Page 50
... Provinces and Departments The boundaries of France's prerevolutionary provinces kept alive memories of the long process by which the kingdom had been built up . The new departments , created in 1790 , fostered a sense of national unity ...
... Provinces and Departments The boundaries of France's prerevolutionary provinces kept alive memories of the long process by which the kingdom had been built up . The new departments , created in 1790 , fostered a sense of national unity ...
Page 78
... provinces was ignored . To the Montagnard leaders and to the radical sans - culottes in Paris , this challenge cried out for action before it was too late . On 31 May 1793 , the radical Paris sections staged a repetition of the 10 ...
... provinces was ignored . To the Montagnard leaders and to the radical sans - culottes in Paris , this challenge cried out for action before it was too late . On 31 May 1793 , the radical Paris sections staged a repetition of the 10 ...
Common terms and phrases
abolish abolition army Assembly's August Austrians Bastille Bonaparte bourgeois bourgeoisie British Catholic century Church citizens Civil Constitution clergy Club colonies conflict Consulate Convention counterrevolutionary country's crisis Declaration defeat defend deputies Directory economic elections elite émigrés Estates-General execution Feuillant flight to Varennes forces France France's French Revolution French society Girondins groups historians institutions insurrection Jacobin Jacobin Club Jansenist July June king king's land leaders Legislative Assembly liberty Louis XVI lower classes major ment military ministers monarchy Montagnards movement Napoleon Napoleon Bonaparte National Assembly Necker neo-Jacobins nobility nobles Old Regime Paris parlements participation patriotic peasants period policies political popular population prairial prerevolutionary principles privileges protest provinces radical reform religious Republic republican Revo Revolution's revolutionary government Robespierre royal royalist Russian Saint-Domingue sans-culotte Sieyès social taxes Terror thermidorian thermidorian reaction Third Estate tion tional traditional troops uprising urban Vendée victory voted women