French Revolution: Facts & Related Content
Facts
Also Known As | Revolution of 1789 |
---|---|
Date | 1787 - 1799 |
Location | France |
Participants | bourgeoisie • Montagnard • peasant • philosophe • sansculotte |
Did You Know?
- The Jacobins attempted to eradicate Christianity in France.
- The storming of the Bastille is still honored in France as a national holiday.
- The later Bolsheviks admired the French Revolution and especially the Jacobins, the extremist French revolutionaries who had instigated the Reign of Terror.
- When Louis XVI was executed in January 1793, his severed head was paraded around for the crowd and was met with exclamations of "Vive la R�publique!"
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Related Topics and References
Topics
Dig Deeper: More Articles That Discuss This Topic
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- Italy: Revolution, restoration, and unification
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- Protestantism: Legacies of the American Revolution and French Revolution
- library: The effects of the French Revolution
- art market: The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Return to Weimar and the French Revolution (1788–94)
- Catherine the Great: Effects of the French Revolution
- Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, prince de Bénévent: During the Revolution
- Marie-Antoinette: The French Revolution
- Louis XVI: Louis’s reaction to the Revolution
- Marquis de Lafayette: The French Revolution of Marquis de Lafayette
Timeline
Key People

Louis XVI
king of France

Marie-Antoinette
queen of France

Marie-Thérèse-Louise de Savoie-Carignan, princesse de Lamballe
Italian-French courtier

Napoleon I
emperor of France

Maximilien Robespierre
French revolutionary

Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, prince de Bénévent
French statesman and diplomat

Jacques-Louis David
French painter

Honoré-Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau
French politician and orator

Georges Danton
French revolutionary leader

Louis de Saint-Just
French revolutionary

Lazare Carnot
French military engineer

Marie-Jean-Antoine-Nicolas de Caritat, marquis de Condorcet
French philosopher and humanist

Jean-Paul Marat
French politician, physician, and journalist

Joseph Fouché, duc d’Otrante
French statesman

Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès
French politician

Paul-François-Jean-Nicolas, vicomte de Barras
French revolutionary

Camille Desmoulins
French journalist

François-Noël Babeuf
French political journalist

Jacques Hébert
French political journalist

Jacques-Pierre Brissot
French revolutionary leader
Causes and Effects
Causes
- Crop failures in 1788 compounded existing economic restlessness
- French participation in the American Revolution that drove the government to the brink of bankruptcy
- Resentment among the bourgeoisie about being excluded from political power
- The French monarchy, no longer seen as divinely ordained, was unable to adapt to the political and societal pressures being exerted on it
- The growing popularity of the works of a number of intellectuals who argued for social reform
- Widespread inequality between the rich and poor classes alongside growing dissatisfaction with the antiquated feudal system among the poor
Effects
- Establishment of a republic in France
- Establishment of civil equality in the country (but not in the French colonies) and radical social change
- The Reign of Terror, during which the Revolutionary government arrested 300,000 suspects, resulting in at least 25,000 deaths
- The abolition of feudalism in France
- The abolition of the monarchy and the deaths of King Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette
- The rise to power of Napoleon Bonaparte
- Wars with a number of other countries, including Austria, Prussia, and Great Britain
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