Yr 12 Pre-Study Task: Miss Smith History: French Revolution and Napoleon Unit What Were People Complaining About in Early 1780s France?

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YR 12 PRE-STUDY TASK: MISS SMITH

HISTORY: FRENCH REVOLUTION AND NAPOLEON UNIT

What were people complaining about in early 1780s France?

This is a mini essay (500 words minimum) about the long term causes of the French Revolution.
You will need to do some research to tackle the question. I have suggested some resources below.
DO NOT go beyond 1789 (the question is early 1780s so I am looking for a general background not
specific events of the revolution itself!)
You will need to cover the following points. You can divide your essay into these three sections:

1. What was unfair about the tax system and the system of government?
2. What was unfair about the class system?
3. What impact did the new ideas of the Enlightenment have?

Start with the general resources on Youtube.


These are some of the better ones:
1. Causes of the French Revolution: www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDg53_0FN7o
2. The French Revolution in a nutshell: www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEZqarUnVpo
3. The French Revolution Part 1 (The Old Regime): www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2hWP3q5nXA
4. God and Grain: The French Revolution Part 1: www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvSod16wfgg

Then look at some key text-based resources:


I have attached a summary (see below) of the key areas. There are also some references to historians
here too.
Other textbooks:
Dave Martin: The French Revolution (this will be our standard textbook so you may want to buy it in
advance. I ordered an extra copy for my ipad – and it is really good as it has links to websites..)
Access to History: France in Revolution 1774-1815. 5th edition (again a textbook which we will use a lot)

Also look at some historical fiction on this topic:


A place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy

Or start to read some historians views on the topic:


Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution by Ruth Scurr
Citizens by Simon Sharma
The French Revolution by Christopher Hibbert

I AM NOT EXPECTING YOU TO READ ALL OF THESE! BUT JUST START TO GET FAMILIAR WITH THE
BACKGROUND: WHAT WAS FRANCE LIKE IN THE 1780S?
CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
LONG TERM REASONS

The French Revolution was, like the Russian Revolution of 1917, the result of a combination of
short-term and long–term factors, triggered off by the momentous events of a single year, in this
case 1789.

The Estates System. France was a rigidly classified society divided into three estates. These
estates had their own rights and privileges in the case of the first two, and lots of onerous duties
and responsibilities in the case of the Third.

“We were the First Estate. Made up of around


130 000 members, we were the cardinals,
archbishops, bishops, abbots, nuns, monks -
and humble curates. We paid no taxes
whatsoever, but every few years would present
a monetary gift to the King. We owned about
10% of the land in France and even had our
own courts. Many of us were fabulously
wealthy and powerful and had served as
ministers of the King, like Cardinals Richelieu
and Mazarin. The wealth and power of the
Church had led to a certain level of anti-
clericalism in France. However, the majority of
us were ordinary village priests who were loved
by our peasant flocks”.

“We are the Second Estate and


comprised the aristocracy of 400 000
members. We had enormous privileges
and droits or rights. We paid a few
taxes, but most of the truly onerous
ones like the taille and the corvee we
certainly did not. We even had a term
for those who paid the former. We
contemptuously called them ‘the
taillable’ meaning those who were
directly taxed. We were so snobbish
and aloof that we divided ourselves into
three hierarchies: with the court nobles
being the true elite, then the nobility of
the sword and those of the robe coming
last, as many were government
ministers and civil servants who had
only been en-nobled in the last hundred
years or so”.
“We were the Third Estate. We made up
the vast majority of France’s 26 million
people. We, however, were not really an
homogeneous group like the others, as
we comprised everyone from doctors and
lawyers and rich merchants to artisans
and peasants. We paid all the taxes and
had onerous duties like paying for the
roads and bridges to be repaired. We
had no say in government, despite the
fact that our members were often the best
educated people in society. We detested
the Second Estate, especially, which was
holding us back and refusing to relinquish
any of its enormous privileges or allow us
to enter its ranks”.

This rigid system meant even the 1st Estate was increasingly the preserve of the nobility, while
just to be an officer in the army required generations of noble ancestry. The King was advised
solely by the nobility. Opportunities were thus closed to men of education and talent with no
title. It is not a coincidence that, as Christopher Hibbert has stressed, the main leaders of the
Revolution would be highly educated members of the middle class and in particular failed
writers and lawyers. Danton, one of the leaders of the Revolution, would say that “the ancien
regime drove us [to revolution] by giving us a good education, without opening any opportunity
for our talents”.

The 2nd Estate was regarded as parasitical, as it enjoyed its many droits without living up to any
of its responsibilities. The economic problems of the 1770s and 1780s were increasingly
passed down to the peasantry by their noble landlords, who had nothing but contempt for their
tenant farmers. In France, the local squire certainly did not play cricket on the village green with
his tenants - nor did he pay his way. A bankrupt France was not allowed to tax the very people
who had all the money!

Insufficient
revenue e.g.
High Ordinary Poor financial not only lack of
Costs of wars Expenditure administration taxes, but their
e.g. in America e.g. palaces e.g. borrowing = inefficient
interest to pay collection

Massive Debts!
= £££££££££££££

The 2nd and 3rd Estates may have detested each other, but they also despised the
monarchy’s absolutism and so had a common cause.

Royal Absolutism. Since the times of the dictatorial and bigoted Louis XIV, French kings had
been invested with enormous powers (e.g. the infamous lettres de cachet, censorship, etc.).
Louis XIV had been heavily responsible through his innumerable wars for the parlous state of
the French monarchy’s finances by 1789. A megalomaniac, he had developed the ideas of
absolutism and had strived for hegemony of Europe. His Chief Minister, Cardinal Mazarin
taught him belief in divine kingship, along with a cynicism and contempt for his fellow Man. He
was a spendthrift womaniser with an insatiable sexual appetite. However, Louis had also been
capable, charming, accomplished and competent. He had been an ideal king.

However, unlike the Sun King, the present monarch, Louis XVI was not a prepossessing figure.
Kind, generous, a loving family man, he was also indolent, indecisive and vacillating. A pious
man with an enormous appetite, who preferred to hunt rather than attend to the affairs of state,
it did not help that he was short and fat (1.70m and 120kg), and hardly looked very regal. His
hobbies were also rather plebeian. His two brothers: the Counts of Provence and Artois were
extreme reactionaries and rarely gave their elder sibling sensible advice.

His extravagant Austrian wife, Marie-Antoinette, hardly helped with his image. Grant and
Temperley have even claimed that she was a “powerful and dangerous counsellor” to her
husband. She had helped in the dismissal of the progressive finance minister Turgot, for
instance.

The royalist system would be referred to as the ancien regime, so anachronistic was it. The
nobility were becoming increasingly resentful of royal power and attacks on its institutions, like
the parlements or law courts. They were also disinclined to pay any new taxes, which the
increasingly insolvent monarchy needed to impose, in order to pay its debts. It was Louis’
willingness to contemplate an erosion of the 2nd Estates rights that would drive them into an
alliance of convenience with the 3rd Estate. They demanded the re-calling of the Estates
General, a type of parliament that had not sat since 1614, hoping to put pressure on the King.
To the 3rd Estate, the Estates General would give them a chance of representation, at last.

S. J. Lee is very critical of Louis whom he says oversaw the loss of direction of government
policy and refers to his “chaotic economic and fiscal system” which, for example, saw him sign a
free trade treaty in 1786 with GB, which unleashed the forces of laissez faire at the exact time
when the struggling economy most needed protection. This made the 3 rd Estate even more
determined on a parliamentary monarchy so that its commercial interests could be represented.
The well-meaning, but incompetent and ineffectual antics of the King’s finance ministers like
Calonne and Necker hardly helped matters or endeared the King to the nobility whom they were
threatening to tax. It was this attack on the most privileged of classes (whose discontent had
been apparent as early as 1787) that ironically spurred the French Revolution into life.

The 3rd Estate wanted a review of all the inequitable taxes and a reduction, but not abolition, of
the monarchy’s powers. These ideas were expressed often in the words of liberal and
Enlightenment philosophers like Voltaire, Rousseau and Montesquieu, though Lee (and
Matthews) stresses they were used merely to articulate the demands of the reformers rather
than having drawn up their policies. In the same way, the American war of Independence
(1775-1781), in which many Frenchmen had fought (and which more importantly had
contributed to France’s insolvency), had an influence on the thinking behind the demands of the
3rd Estate (and even some of the Second).

Louis XVI was not as astute and clever as Louis XIV who had used the support of the
bourgeoisie to keep the nobility under control and so relatively docile. Nor was he as ruthless
as other French kings like Louis XI, the infamous ‘Spider King’. Such ‘divide and rule’
principles, as utilised by Le Soleil Roi, were beyond the later Louis’ limited political
understanding. By calling an Estates General, says Lee, Louis was acknowledging “the
collapse of absolutism and the existence of a political vacuum at the centre”. Grant and
Temperley put it more clearly, describing how it was “not inflexibility, but weakness of will that
was his bane”. While Matthews comments that: “the king can be said to bear major
responsibility for bringing things to a head in June 1789”.

Common problems affecting Europe. Lee, like Palmer and Godechot, has also stresses that
France’s revolution was part of a general wave of unrest in Europe and even North America.
Enormous population growth (from 100 to 200 million people between 1700-1800); the severe
economic crises of the 1770s and 1780s, and the innate instability of government were not
restricted to France. France, however, experienced the most momentous and lasting changes
because it had the strongest bourgeoisie and elements of social co-operation, while the
peasantry also supported the Revolution. Consensual factors that were absent in other
countries.

Ultimately, though the fundamental reasons for the events of 1789 were the result of the above
factors, the short-term more direct considerations were of even more paramount concern.
Grant and Temperley are certainly convinced that France was in no danger of revolution until
the late 1780s.

Most
Significant
The ideas of Enlightenment thinkers
like Montesquieu, Quesnay, Rousseau
& Voltaire pervaded educated society

France’s involvement in the


France was an over-populated American War of Independence
nation of 26m, which was (1776-1781) had helped bankrupt
experiencing a general downturn in the state and added to its fiscal
prosperity, like the rest of Europe woes

The disastrous harvests Royal absolutism Many Frenchmen


of the late 1780s led to was distrusted by all had fought in
rising bread prices and three estates, America and came
starvation amongst the especially as back with radical
poor, as well as Louis XVI was an ideas and beliefs,
unemployment ineffectual ruler which the Revolution
would copy

France was nearly bankrupt.


The King needed to raise new Unlike in the rest of Europe,
taxes and disastrously in France there was certain
considered taxing the wealthy consensus amongst the
st nd classes
1 and 2 Estates

Ambitions of the Third Estate for power and influence, and


an end to seigneurial, feudal droits, along with lower taxes.
They had been doing well, but in the last decades of the
th
18 century had seen their progress and prosperity
thwarted by the ancien regime, which had been unable and
unwilling to reform, with Louis not supporting his Less
ministers Significant

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