1789 · Bastille · Republic · Napoleon · Rights of Man
The French Revolution of 1789 was one of the most significant events in world history. It began in France and shook the foundations of monarchy, feudalism, and aristocratic privilege across Europe. The revolution proclaimed the ideas of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity (Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité) that continue to inspire democratic movements around the world.
The revolution began on 14 July 1789 with the Storming of the Bastille and lasted roughly a decade until Napoleon Bonaparte came to power in 1799.
The revolution took place in France, centered in Paris. Its effects, however, were felt across all of Europe and the world.
Severe financial crisis, an unjust tax system, food shortages, and the influence of Enlightenment ideas all combined to ignite the revolution against the absolute monarchy of King Louis XVI.
French society before the revolution was divided into three estates with extreme inequality. The king ruled as an absolute monarch (Nirankush Shasak) with complete power over laws, taxes, and governance.
18th-century philosophers like Locke, Rousseau, and Montesquieu questioned absolute power and promoted ideas of liberty, democracy, and natural rights.
The success of the American Revolution (1776) proved that people could overthrow unjust rule and establish a republic based on democratic principles. Many French soldiers who fought in America returned with revolutionary ideas.
A fundamental change in political power or organisational structures, often achieved through force or mass uprising.
A form of government where the head of state is elected by the people, not a hereditary monarch.
A system of government where a king or queen rules, often with absolute or near-absolute power, passed down through heredity.
A system of government in which power rests with the people, who exercise it through elected representatives.
The French Revolution is important not just as a historical event but because it introduced ideas that shape the modern world:
The idea that a nation should be governed by a written constitution that limits the power of rulers — this came directly from the French Revolution and influenced constitutions worldwide, including India's.
The revolution gave birth to modern nationalism — the idea that a nation belongs to its people, not to a king. This inspired independence movements across the world, from Latin America to Asia.
The Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789) was a forerunner of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and influenced the Fundamental Rights in the Indian Constitution.
In 1774, Louis XVI of the Bourbon family ascended the throne of France. France was then a society of extreme inequality. The political and social organisation of France before the revolution is known as the Old Regime (Ancien Régime). Under this system, French society was divided into three estates.
French society was divided into three estates (Varg), each with vastly different rights, privileges, and obligations.
| Estate | Members | % of Population | Land Owned | Taxes | Privileges |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Estate | Clergy (Padri Varg) — Bishops, Abbots, Priests | ~0.5% | ~10% | Exempt from all taxes | Collected tithes (religious tax), exempted from laws |
| Second Estate | Nobility (Kuleen Varg) — Lords, Dukes, Counts | ~1.5% | ~20% | Exempt from all taxes | Feudal privileges, rights over peasants, high posts in army |
| Third Estate | Peasants (Kisan), Artisans (Karigar), Middle Class (Lawyers, Traders, Doctors) | ~97% | Minimal | Paid Taille, Tithe, Feudal Dues, and indirect taxes | No political rights, no privileges |
A direct tax paid only by the Third Estate to the king. The First and Second Estates were completely exempt from this tax.
A religious tax — one-tenth of the agricultural produce — collected by the Church from the peasants. This went directly to the clergy.
Various obligations owed by peasants to their lords, including labour (corvée), rent, and a share of the harvest. Peasants even had to pay to use the lord's mill, bakehouse, and wine press.
Taxes on everyday items like salt and tobacco. The hated gabelle (salt tax) was a heavy burden on the poor.
A subsistence crisis is a situation where a large population cannot afford basic means of livelihood. France faced frequent subsistence crises due to:
The 18th century saw the emergence of a prosperous and educated middle class (Madhyam Varg) within the Third Estate. This group included lawyers, administrative officials, merchants, manufacturers, doctors, and men of letters. They had access to education and new ideas.
English philosopher who argued in his work Two Treatises of Government that government should be based on the consent of the governed. He criticised the divine and absolute right of the monarch and advocated for natural rights to life, liberty, and property.
French philosopher who proposed the idea of a social contract (Samajik Anubandh) in his work The Social Contract. He argued that government should be based on the general will of the people, and that people had the right to change an unjust government.
In his book The Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu proposed the division of power (Shaktiyon ka Vibhajan) among the legislature, executive, and judiciary. This idea of separation of powers became a cornerstone of democratic governance.
Famous for his wit and criticism of the Catholic Church and French institutions. He championed freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and separation of church and state. His famous quote: "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."
Chief editor of the famous Encyclopédie — a massive collection of knowledge that spread Enlightenment ideas to a wide audience. The Encyclopédie questioned traditional authority and promoted reason, science, and progress.
Within the Third Estate, the bourgeoisie (middle class) played a particularly crucial role. They were:
It was the bourgeoisie who provided the intellectual leadership for the revolution, drafting the Tennis Court Oath, the Declaration of Rights, and the new Constitution.
By the late 1780s, France was on the brink of collapse. A combination of financial ruin, food scarcity, and political anger led to a series of dramatic events that brought down the Old Regime.
France had been heavily in debt for decades. Under Louis XVI, the situation worsened because:
Unable to impose new taxes without approval, Louis XVI convened the Estates General (Saamaanya Parishad) at Versailles on 5 May 1789. This assembly had not met since 1614.
Traditionally, each estate had one vote, meaning the First and Second estates (2 votes) could always outvote the Third Estate (1 vote). The Third Estate demanded that voting be done by head (each member gets one vote), as they had 600 representatives vs. 300 each for the other estates. The King rejected this demand.
Before the Estates General met, each estate compiled lists of grievances called cahiers. The Third Estate’s cahiers demanded an end to feudal privileges, proportional taxation, and a constitution limiting royal power.
When the king rejected their demands, the representatives of the Third Estate walked out and assembled in the nearby indoor tennis court at Versailles. Led by Mirabeau (a nobleman sympathetic to the Third Estate) and Abbé Sieyès (a priest), they declared themselves the National Assembly (Rashtriya Sabha) and swore not to disperse until they had drafted a constitution for France that would limit the powers of the monarch.
On 14 July 1789, a large crowd gathered in Paris, alarmed by rumours that the king would send troops to shut down the National Assembly. The angry crowd stormed the Bastille — a fortress-prison that symbolized the despotic power of the king. The commander of the Bastille was killed, and the prisoners were released.
The Bastille was a symbol of royal tyranny and absolute power. It was a prison where people were locked up without trial on the king's orders (lettres de cachet). Storming it was a powerful symbolic act.
14 July is celebrated as Bastille Day in France — the national day of France — similar to our Independence Day (15 August). It marks the beginning of the French Revolution.
In the countryside, a wave of panic and violence known as the Great Fear (Maha Bhay) spread through rural France in the summer of 1789. Peasants attacked the manor houses (haveli) of their lords, burnt records of feudal dues, and looted grain stores. The rumour that brigands (hired by nobles) were coming to destroy crops fueled the panic.
Peasants broke into castles and manor houses, destroyed documents containing records of manorial dues, and in many cases burned the buildings themselves. They were determined to destroy every trace of their feudal obligations.
The Great Fear spread rapidly from village to village across France in July-August 1789. It effectively destroyed the feudal system in the countryside before the National Assembly formally abolished it on August 4.
Alarmed by the rural revolts, the National Assembly acted decisively. On the night of 4 August 1789, feudal privileges of the First and Second Estates were abolished. Tithes were eliminated, and lands owned by the Church were confiscated. Members of the clergy and nobility were now required to pay taxes like everyone else.
On 26 August 1789, the National Assembly adopted the historic Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (Manav aur Nagarik Adhikaron ki Ghoshna). Its key provisions included:
Men are born and remain free and equal in rights.
Natural rights: liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression.
The source of sovereignty resides in the nation, not the king.
Law is the expression of the general will. All citizens have the right to participate in making laws.
Every citizen has the right to free communication of thoughts and opinions (freedom of speech and press).
The right to property is inviolable and sacred.
On 5 October 1789, thousands of women marched from Paris to Versailles, demanding bread and action from the king. They were angry at the high prices and scarcity of bread. The crowd forced the royal family to leave Versailles and return to Paris, effectively ending the king's independence from the people.
The French Revolution used powerful visual symbols to communicate its ideas to a largely illiterate population:
Symbolized freedom from slavery and oppression. Chains were a sign of bondage; breaking them meant liberation.
Represented knowledge and awareness. The rays of the eye symbolized the sun that drives away the darkness of ignorance.
Symbolized royal power. In revolutionary art, a broken sceptre meant the end of the king's absolute authority.
A soft red cap worn by freed slaves in ancient Rome. Worn by the Sans-culottes and Jacobins as a symbol of liberty. The figure of Marianne (symbol of France) wears it.
A bundle of rods tied together around an axe. Symbolized strength in unity — one rod can be broken, but a bundle cannot.
The blue-white-red flag. Blue and red = colours of Paris. White = monarchy. Together they symbolized the union of the king and the people (later, just the nation).
In 1791, the National Assembly completed its main task and drafted a Constitution (Samvidhan). This constitution made France a constitutional monarchy — the king still existed but his powers were severely limited. Key features:
Following Montesquieu's ideas, power was divided among the Legislature (making laws), the Executive (king + ministers, implementing laws), and the Judiciary (applying laws). No single person or group held absolute power.
The Constitution introduced the concept of active citizens (men above 25 who paid taxes equal to at least 3 days of a labourer's wage) and passive citizens (who could not vote). Women and the poor were excluded from voting.
The king had to share power with the Legislative Assembly. He could no longer impose taxes or make laws on his own. He had a suspensive veto — he could delay laws but not permanently block them.
Other European monarchs were alarmed by the revolution. In April 1792, the National Assembly declared war against Austria and Prussia, fearing they would invade to restore the monarchy. The war went badly initially, increasing radicalism and anger in Paris. Revolutionaries blamed the king for secretly helping the enemy.
As the revolution progressed, political clubs became important centres of debate. The most radical of these was the Jacobin Club (Jaikobin Dal), which drew its members largely from the less prosperous sections of society. Key leaders:
A lawyer from Arras who became the most powerful leader of the Jacobins. He was deeply influenced by Rousseau's ideas and believed in a Republic of Virtue. He would later lead the Reign of Terror.
A charismatic orator and leading figure in the revolution. He was instrumental in organising the armed uprising that overthrew the monarchy. Later executed during the Terror.
The Sans-culottes (literally "without knee-breeches") were the radical working-class supporters of the revolution. Unlike the aristocracy who wore silk knee-breeches (culottes), they wore long trousers and red caps symbolizing liberty. They included small shopkeepers, artisans, servants, and daily-wage workers. They became the driving force of the radical phase of the revolution.
Sans-culottes wore long striped trousers, a red liberty cap (bonnet rouge), and a short jacket called a carmagnole. Their dress was a political statement — a rejection of aristocratic fashion and a symbol of their working-class identity.
They formed the backbone of the Paris Commune (city government) and were the main participants in revolutionary journeys (mass demonstrations). Their demands included maximum prices on bread, universal male suffrage, and the right to bear arms.
On 10 August 1792, the Jacobins and Sans-culottes stormed the Palace of the Tuileries, where the royal family was held. The Assembly voted to imprison the royal family. A new body called the National Convention (Rashtriya Sammelan) was elected. On 21 September 1792, it abolished the monarchy and declared France a Republic — a government where the head of state is elected by the people.
Louis XVI was put on trial by the Convention and found guilty of treason (Deshdroh). On 21 January 1793, he was publicly executed by the guillotine at the Place de la Révolution in Paris. His wife, Queen Marie Antoinette, was executed in October 1793.
| Date | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1791 | Constitution adopted | France becomes a Constitutional Monarchy; power divided among legislature, executive, judiciary |
| April 1792 | War declared on Austria & Prussia | Foreign threat increases radicalism inside France |
| Aug 10, 1792 | Tuileries Palace stormed | Jacobins and Sans-culottes attack the palace; royal family imprisoned |
| Sep 21, 1792 | Republic proclaimed | Monarchy abolished; France becomes a republic |
| Jan 21, 1793 | Louis XVI executed | King guillotined for treason; shocks all of Europe |
The period from 1793 to 1794 is known as the Reign of Terror (Aatank Ka Raaj). During this time, Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety governed France with an iron fist, executing anyone suspected of being an enemy of the revolution.
Robespierre followed a policy of severe control and punishment. His government issued a number of strict laws:
A special court was set up to try anyone accused of opposing the revolution. Trials were often quick and unfair. Ex-nobles, clergy, political opponents, and even former revolutionaries were tried and sentenced to death.
The guillotine (a device for beheading) became the symbol of the Terror. It was named after Dr. Guillotin who proposed it as a "humane" method of execution. Thousands were executed publicly in Paris and across France.
Laws were passed setting a maximum ceiling on wages and prices of essential goods like bread, meat, and grain. Hoarding was declared illegal. Expensive white flour was banned — all citizens had to eat the pain d'égalité (equality bread) made of whole wheat.
Churches were shut down and converted into offices. Meat and bread rationing was introduced. The use of "Citizen" (Citoyen) and "Citizeness" (Citoyenne) became compulsory forms of address instead of "Sir" or "Madam".
Robespierre's government arrested and executed many people — estimated at over 17,000 executions by the guillotine and many more who died in prison. Even his own allies, including Danton, were not spared. Anyone who disagreed with Robespierre's methods was labelled a traitor.
Eventually, even Robespierre's supporters turned against him. They feared they could be next. On 27 July 1794 (9 Thermidor, Year II in the new revolutionary calendar), Robespierre was arrested by the Convention. He was guillotined the next day without trial.
After the fall of Robespierre, a new constitution was drawn up. Power was placed in the hands of a Directory — an executive body of five members (Directors) appointed by elected councils. However, the Directory was plagued by:
This political instability paved the way for the rise of a military genius — Napoleon Bonaparte.
King of France from 1774. Weak and indecisive ruler who could not control the financial crisis. Tried to flee France in 1791 (Flight to Varennes) but was caught. Executed for treason in January 1793.
Austrian-born queen of France. Her extravagant lifestyle made her deeply unpopular. Called "Madame Deficit" by the French people. Executed in October 1793.
A nobleman who sympathized with the Third Estate. A powerful orator who helped lead the formation of the National Assembly. He died of natural causes in 1791 before the radical phase.
A priest who joined the Third Estate. Wrote the famous pamphlet "What is the Third Estate?" in which he argued that the Third Estate was the nation itself. Later helped Napoleon come to power.
Radical journalist who published L'Ami du peuple (Friend of the People). He constantly called for the execution of traitors. Assassinated in his bathtub by Charlotte Corday, a supporter of the moderate Girondins.
A nobleman and war hero who fought in the American Revolution. He was a key figure in the early revolution — helped draft the Declaration of Rights and designed the tricolour cockade.
Women played a crucial role in the French Revolution from its very beginning, yet their demands for equal rights were largely ignored by the revolutionary governments.
On 5 October 1789, thousands of women marched from Paris to Versailles demanding bread. This march forced the king to leave Versailles and come to Paris, a major turning point in the revolution. Women were also active in the fall of the Bastille and street protests.
Women formed their own political clubs, the most famous being the Society of Revolutionary and Republican Women (1793). Through these clubs, women demanded:
Women demanded equal access to schooling and education, which was mostly denied to them under the Old Regime.
Women demanded the right to vote and to be elected to the Assembly. The 1791 Constitution classified them as "passive citizens" with no voting rights.
Women demanded equal pay for equal work and the right to own property and conduct business independently.
Women argued that the Declaration of Rights should apply equally to both men and women.
Olympe de Gouges was a playwright and activist who wrote the Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen (1791). She argued that women are born free and remain equal to men in rights. Key points of her declaration:
| Achievements | Limitations |
|---|---|
| New laws introduced requiring state schools for all girls | Women could not vote or hold political office |
| Marriage became a contract, not a religious sacrament — women could initiate divorce | Women's political clubs were shut down in 1793 by the Jacobins |
| Women could train for jobs, run businesses, and inherit property | Leading female activists like Olympe de Gouges were executed |
| Women played a critical role in demonstrations and political life | French women finally got the right to vote only in 1946 — more than 150 years later |
Playwright and activist. Wrote the Declaration of the Rights of Woman (1791). Executed in 1793 for her political views and opposition to the Jacobins.
A leading Girondin (moderate republican) who hosted a famous political salon. Arrested and guillotined in November 1793. Her famous last words: "O Liberty, what crimes are committed in thy name!"
A young woman from Normandy who assassinated the radical journalist Jean-Paul Marat in his bath (July 1793). She believed killing him would save France from more bloodshed. She was executed four days later.
A revolutionary activist who participated in the storming of the Bastille and the march on Versailles. She openly wore men's clothing and carried weapons, challenging gender norms of the time.
One of the most important yet often overlooked aspects of the French Revolution was its impact on slavery (Daasta Pratha). The slave trade was a major part of the French economy, and the revolution eventually led to its abolition — though it was a long and uneven process.
The slave trade followed a triangular route across the Atlantic:
European ships carried manufactured goods (cloth, guns, alcohol) from ports like Bordeaux and Nantes to the west coast of Africa, where they were exchanged for enslaved people.
Enslaved Africans were packed into ships under horrific conditions and transported to French Caribbean colonies — mainly Martinique, Guadeloupe, and Saint-Domingue (Haiti).
Sugar, coffee, indigo, and tobacco produced by slave labour in the colonies were shipped back to Europe, generating enormous profits for French merchants.
In the French Caribbean, slavery was extremely brutal. By the 18th century, there were an estimated 700,000 enslaved people in French colonies. Enslaved people worked on sugar plantations under harsh conditions — long hours, whipping, branding, and separation of families were common.
There was little criticism of slavery in France initially. The National Assembly did not pass any laws against the slave trade because many members of the Assembly were merchants whose wealth came from the slave economy of the Caribbean.
In 1794, the Convention legislated to free all enslaved people in the French overseas colonies. This was a historic decision, making France the first European nation to officially abolish slavery during the revolutionary period. However, this was partly driven by the massive slave revolt in Saint-Domingue (Haiti) led by Toussaint Louverture.
After Napoleon came to power, he reintroduced slavery in 1802 to restore the profitable plantation economy. Thousands of enslaved people were returned to bondage. This is considered one of the most regressive acts of Napoleon's rule.
Slavery was finally and permanently abolished in all French colonies in 1848, during the Second Republic. This was largely the result of continued activism and pressure from abolitionists and the enslaved peoples themselves.
French slave ships made over 4,200 voyages between the 17th and 19th centuries, transporting over 1.2 million enslaved Africans to the Americas.
By the 1780s, the French colony of Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti) produced about 40% of all the sugar and 60% of all the coffee consumed in Europe — all through slave labour.
Toussaint Louverture led the enslaved people of Saint-Domingue in a successful revolution beginning in 1791. Haiti became the first free Black republic in 1804 — inspired by the French Revolution's own ideals of liberty and equality.
Napoleon Bonaparte (1769–1821) was a military officer from Corsica who rose to power during the turmoil of the French Revolution and eventually became the ruler of France. His impact on European history was immense.
Napoleon took advantage of the political instability under the Directory. On 9 November 1799 (18 Brumaire), he staged a coup d'état (military overthrow of the government) and seized power. He was initially named First Consul and later, in 1804, crowned himself Emperor of France in a grand ceremony at Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris.
Before his coup, Napoleon had already proven himself as a brilliant military commander. His campaigns in Italy (1796-97) and his expedition to Egypt (1798-99) made him a national hero. The French people, tired of the Directory's corruption, welcomed a strong leader.
In a famous act of supreme confidence, Napoleon took the crown from the Pope's hands during his coronation ceremony and placed it on his own head. This symbolized that his power came from himself and the French people, not from the Church or any higher authority.
One of Napoleon's most lasting contributions was the Napoleonic Code (also called the Civil Code), introduced in 1804. Its key provisions:
All citizens were equal before the law, regardless of birth or social status. Feudal privileges were permanently abolished.
The right to private property was secured and protected by law. This benefited the middle class and peasants who had acquired land during the revolution.
The Code replaced the patchwork of feudal, royal, and local laws with a single, clear, written legal system applicable to all of France.
The Code reduced the rights won by women during the revolution. Women were classified as minors, subject to the authority of their fathers and husbands. They could not own property, sign contracts, or vote independently.
Napoleon expanded French territory through a series of brilliant military campaigns. By 1812, he controlled much of continental Europe, including the Netherlands, Belgium, parts of Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, and Poland. In the territories he conquered, Napoleon introduced many reforms:
However, the people of conquered territories were not always grateful. Many saw Napoleon not as a liberator but as a foreign conqueror. His forced conscription (drafting citizens into the army), heavy taxation, and censorship bred resentment and fueled nationalist movements across Europe.
Napoleon's downfall came through two disastrous military campaigns:
Napoleon invaded Russia with over 600,000 soldiers. The Russians used a scorched-earth policy, burning crops and retreating. The harsh Russian winter destroyed the French army. Only about 100,000 soldiers returned.
After being exiled to the island of Elba, Napoleon briefly returned to power (the "Hundred Days"). He was finally defeated at the Battle of Waterloo in Belgium on 18 June 1815 by a coalition led by Britain's Duke of Wellington and Prussia's Marshal Blücher. He was exiled to Saint Helena, where he died in 1821.
The Napoleonic Code became the basis of civil law in many countries worldwide. His administrative and legal reforms modernized Europe. The ideas of the revolution — liberty, equality, and nationalism — spread across the continent.
Napoleon was a dictator who suppressed freedom of speech and press. His endless wars caused millions of deaths. He reintroduced slavery. He curtailed the rights of women. His imperial ambitions contradicted the revolutionary ideals of liberty.
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Born | 15 August 1769, Ajaccio, Corsica (shortly after France acquired Corsica from Italy) |
| Rise to Power | Coup of 18 Brumaire (9 November 1799) — became First Consul |
| Emperor | Crowned himself Emperor on 2 December 1804 at Notre-Dame, Paris |
| Greatest Achievement | The Napoleonic Code (Civil Code of 1804) — still the basis of civil law in many countries |
| Greatest Defeat | Invasion of Russia (1812) — lost over 500,000 soldiers to the Russian winter |
| Final Defeat | Battle of Waterloo, 18 June 1815 |
| Exile & Death | Exiled to Saint Helena (a remote island in the South Atlantic). Died on 5 May 1821, aged 51. |
A visual journey through the key events of the French Revolution, from the reign of Louis XVI to the defeat of Napoleon. Follow the chronological sequence of events that transformed France — and the world — forever.
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Ancien Régime | The Old Regime — the political and social system in France before the revolution (monarchy + three estates) |
| Taille | A direct tax paid only by members of the Third Estate to the state |
| Tithe | A religious tax of one-tenth of agricultural produce, paid by peasants to the Church |
| Livre | The unit of currency in France, discontinued in 1794 |
| Estates General | A political body with representatives of all three estates; had not met since 1614 before being called in 1789 |
| National Assembly | The body formed by the Third Estate representatives who broke away from the Estates General in June 1789 |
| Sans-culottes | "Without knee-breeches" — the radical working-class revolutionaries who wore long trousers |
| Jacobins | The most radical political club; led by Robespierre; named after a convent of St Jacob in Paris |
| Guillotine | A device for beheading; became the primary method of execution during the revolution |
| Convention | The National Convention — the revolutionary government that abolished the monarchy and declared the Republic in 1792 |
| Directory | A five-member executive body that governed France from 1795 to 1799, after the fall of Robespierre |
| Coup d'état | A sudden, forceful seizure of government power, especially by the military |
| Subsistence Crisis | A situation where basic means of livelihood are endangered (food scarcity + high prices + low wages) |
| Napoleonic Code | The Civil Code of 1804 introduced by Napoleon — established equality before law and right to property |
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Before the revolution, French society was divided into three estates under the Old Regime (Ancien Régime):
First Estate (Clergy): Made up about 0.5% of the population but owned approximately 10% of the land. They collected tithes (one-tenth of agricultural produce) from the peasants and were exempt from all taxes. The higher clergy (bishops, abbots) lived luxuriously, while lower clergy (parish priests) were often poor.
Second Estate (Nobility): Comprised about 1.5% of the population and owned around 20% of the land. They enjoyed numerous feudal privileges — the right to collect feudal dues from peasants, exemption from taxes, and exclusive access to high positions in the army and government.
Third Estate (Common People): This was the largest group, making up about 97% of the population. It included peasants, artisans, small traders, servants, and the educated middle class (lawyers, doctors, merchants). Despite being the majority, they bore the entire burden of taxation — including the taille (direct tax), tithe (to the Church), feudal dues (to the nobility), and indirect taxes on salt and tobacco.
This extreme inequality created deep resentment. The middle class, educated by Enlightenment thinkers like Locke, Rousseau, and Montesquieu, demanded a society based on equal laws, equal taxation, and merit rather than birth. The peasants suffered from a subsistence crisis — rising population, poor harvests, and bread prices they could not afford.
When Louis XVI called the Estates General in 1789 to raise taxes, the Third Estate's demand for voting by head was rejected. This led them to form the National Assembly and take the Tennis Court Oath, setting the revolution in motion. Thus, the unjust estate system was a primary cause of the revolution.
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, adopted by the National Assembly on 26 August 1789, is one of the most important documents in the history of human rights. It was heavily influenced by the ideas of Enlightenment philosophers, particularly Rousseau and Locke.
Key Principles:
(a) Natural Rights: It declared that men are born and remain free and equal in rights. The natural rights included liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression.
(b) Popular Sovereignty: The source of all sovereignty resides in the nation. No individual or group could exercise authority that did not come from the people.
(c) Rule of Law: Law was defined as the expression of the general will. All citizens had the right to participate in making laws, either directly or through their representatives.
(d) Freedom of Expression: Every citizen had the right to free communication of thoughts and opinions, establishing the foundation for freedom of speech and the press.
(e) Taxation by Consent: All citizens had the right to decide, through their representatives, the necessity, amount, and duration of taxes.
Impact:
(a) It became the preamble to the French Constitution of 1791.
(b) It inspired democratic movements across Europe and the world, including independence movements in Latin America.
(c) It formed the basis of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) adopted by the United Nations.
(d) However, its limitations must be noted — it did not include women, enslaved people, or the poorest sections of society. Olympe de Gouges rightly challenged this by writing the Declaration of the Rights of Woman in 1791.
The Reign of Terror (1793-1794) was one of the most violent and controversial phases of the French Revolution, led by Maximilien Robespierre through the Committee of Public Safety.
Causes:
(a) France was at war with Austria, Prussia, and other European monarchies that wanted to crush the revolution.
(b) Internal enemies — royalists, counter-revolutionaries, and traitors — threatened the revolution from within.
(c) Economic crisis, food shortages, and inflation required drastic measures.
(d) Robespierre believed that terror was necessary to protect the "Republic of Virtue" from its enemies.
Key Features:
(a) The Revolutionary Tribunal was set up to conduct quick trials. Those found guilty — or even suspected — were sentenced to death.
(b) The guillotine became the symbol of the Terror. Over 17,000 people were officially executed, including Queen Marie Antoinette, former nobles, clergy, and even revolutionaries like Danton who questioned Robespierre's methods.
(c) Maximum price controls were imposed on wages and essential goods. Hoarding was punished severely.
(d) Churches were closed, the Christian calendar was replaced with a new republican calendar, and all citizens had to eat "equality bread."
End of the Terror:
By mid-1794, even Robespierre's supporters feared for their lives. On 27 July 1794 (9 Thermidor), he was arrested by the Convention and executed by guillotine the next day. This event, known as the Thermidorian Reaction, ended the Reign of Terror.
The moderate leaders then established the Directory (1795-1799), a five-member executive body. However, the Directory was weak and unstable, eventually paving the way for Napoleon's rise to power in 1799.
Women played a vital and active role throughout the French Revolution, yet the revolution ultimately failed to deliver equal rights to them.
Women's Participation:
(a) Women's March to Versailles (5 October 1789): Thousands of women marched from Paris to Versailles, demanding bread and accountability from the king. They forced the royal family to return to Paris — a major turning point.
(b) Women participated in street demonstrations, political debates, and the storming of the Bastille.
(c) Women formed political clubs, most notably the Society of Revolutionary and Republican Women (1793), to demand their rights.
Key Figure — Olympe de Gouges:
In 1791, Olympe de Gouges wrote the Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen, arguing that women were born free and equal to men. She demanded the right to vote, hold public office, and free speech for women. Tragically, she was executed in 1793 by the Jacobin government.
Rights Gained:
(a) New laws required state schools for all girls.
(b) Marriage became a civil contract (not religious); women could initiate divorce.
(c) Women could train for jobs, run businesses, and become heirs to property.
Rights Denied:
(a) The 1791 Constitution classified women as "passive citizens" without voting rights.
(b) Women's political clubs were banned in 1793.
(c) The Napoleonic Code (1804) further reduced women's rights, making them legally subordinate to fathers and husbands.
French women finally won the right to vote only in 1946 — more than 150 years after the revolution. This shows that while the revolution advanced many democratic ideals, it failed to extend true equality to half its population.
Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) is one of the most debated figures in history. He rose to power during the revolution and reshaped France and Europe, but whether he upheld or betrayed revolutionary ideals remains a complex question.
Arguments that Napoleon upheld revolutionary ideals:
(a) Napoleonic Code (1804): This civil code established equality before the law, abolished feudal privileges, and secured the right to property. It became the foundation of modern civil law in many countries.
(b) Administrative Reforms: Napoleon modernized the administrative system of France, introduced a centralised bureaucracy, reformed the tax system, and established the Bank of France.
(c) Spread of Revolutionary Ideas: In the territories he conquered (Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Switzerland), Napoleon abolished serfdom, introduced the Napoleonic Code, and established equality before the law.
(d) Merit-based System: Positions in government and the military were based on ability rather than birth, reflecting the revolutionary ideal of careers open to talent.
Arguments that Napoleon betrayed revolutionary ideals:
(a) Dictatorship: Napoleon crowned himself Emperor in 1804, effectively ending the republic. He concentrated all power in his own hands, contradicting the revolutionary principle of popular sovereignty.
(b) Censorship: He suppressed freedom of speech and press, controlling newspapers and publications — the very freedoms the revolution had fought for.
(c) Women's Rights Reversed: The Napoleonic Code classified women as minors under the authority of fathers and husbands, reversing gains made during the revolution.
(d) Slavery Reintroduced: In 1802, Napoleon reintroduced slavery in French colonies, reversing the Convention's 1794 abolition.
(e) Imperial Conquest: His wars of conquest, forced conscription, and heavy taxation in occupied territories bred resentment and were seen as foreign oppression rather than liberation.
Conclusion: Napoleon was both a product of the revolution and a betrayer of some of its core ideals. He preserved certain revolutionary principles (legal equality, end of feudalism) while abandoning others (democracy, liberty, women's rights). His legacy is therefore mixed — he modernized Europe but at a tremendous human cost.
The famous quote "Let them eat cake" (Qu'ils mangent de la brioche) is often attributed to Queen Marie Antoinette, but there is no historical evidence she ever said it! The phrase was first recorded by Rousseau in a book written when Marie Antoinette was only a child. Still, it became a powerful symbol of royal indifference to the starving poor.
The revolutionaries were so radical they created a brand-new calendar! It had 12 months of 30 days each, with names based on nature — Germinal (seed), Thermidor (heat), Brumaire (fog). Each week had 10 days instead of 7. Napoleon abolished it in 1806 and returned to the Gregorian calendar.
The French national flag — the tricolour (blue, white, red) — was born during the revolution. The blue and red were the colours of Paris, while white was the colour of the Bourbon monarchy. The Marquis de Lafayette designed the cockade combining them. It has been France's flag ever since (except during the Bourbon restoration).
Dr. Joseph-Ignace Guillotin did not actually invent the guillotine! He merely proposed that executions should be carried out by a swift and painless machine rather than by clumsy sword or axe. The device was actually designed by Dr. Antoine Louis and was initially called the "Louisette." Dr. Guillotin was embarrassed that it bore his name!
Napoleon was not actually short! He stood about 5 feet 7 inches (170 cm) — slightly above average for a Frenchman of his time. The "short Napoleon" myth likely came from confusion between French inches (which were longer than English inches) and British propaganda caricatures that mocked him.
As Marie Antoinette was led to the guillotine on 16 October 1793, she accidentally stepped on the executioner's foot. Her last recorded words were: "Pardon me, sir. I did not do it on purpose." Even in her final moments, she maintained her composure and manners — a detail that humanizes this often-vilified queen.
Abbé Sieyès wrote a revolutionary pamphlet in January 1789 titled "What is the Third Estate?" His answer: "Everything." What has it been until now? "Nothing." What does it want to be? "Something." This pamphlet electrified France and became a rallying cry for the revolution.
The metric system — the system of metres, litres, and kilograms that we use in India and most of the world — was created during the French Revolution! The revolutionaries wanted a rational, universal system of measurement to replace the confusing local units used across France. It was officially adopted in 1795.
The Louvre, now the world's largest art museum, was originally a royal palace. The revolutionary government opened it as a public museum in 1793, declaring that art and culture belonged to the people, not the king. Today it houses the Mona Lisa and over 380,000 objects!
The terms "left-wing" and "right-wing" in politics come directly from the French Revolution! In the National Assembly, supporters of the revolution sat on the left side of the president, while supporters of the king sat on the right side. This seating arrangement gave us the political terms we still use today.
Revise the entire chapter in just a few points before your exam: