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    SOCIAL Women’s role in the FRENCH REVOLUTION Women not invited to the assembly of estates general  On 5 May‚ 1789‚ Louis XVI called a meeting of the estates meeting and women were not invited. However‚ their grievances were drafted in the 40000 letters. The modesty of most of these complaints and demands demonstrates the depth of the prejudice against women’s separate political activity. Women could ask for better education and protection of their property rights‚ but even the most politically

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    independence. Goodwin states‚ the aim of the French philosophers‚ of the eighteenth century‚ was to liberate mankind from the fitter of ignorance and from subservience of outmoded practices. D. Richard further illustrated that philosophers such as‚ Rousseau‚ Voltaire‚ Monesquieu and the encyclopedias have contributed to the uprising of the third estate‚ within the revolution. In fact‚ Voltaire’s‚ influence within the revolution was mainly directed towards the corrupt

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    Nationalism can be defined as devotion to the interests or culture of one ’s nation. Nationalism is shown everywhere‚ sometimes examples as small as Independence Day in the United States‚ or some as big as the French Revolution. Nationalism comes in both negative‚ and positive forms. The French Revolution‚ though many people were killed‚ helped France get to the way it is today‚ so can be considered a more positive form. A more negative example of nationalism is ultra nationalism. Ultra nationalism

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    The Revolution it was one of the most controversial for terror and killed innocent people for any reason.they abused of the power they have for torture and take over their religion.However they do`t count with the people the trons around against the Revolutionaries so‚ the Jacobin leaders were power hungry Tyrants because of the events of the Reign of terror;beheading at the guillotine‚the attempt to protect the Revolution and the proposal of a ‘Republic of virtues’ First of all‚the Jacobin

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    Essay #2: Burke & Paine - Two Views on the French Revolution The French Revolution became a pivotal moment in the history of governmental rule in the late eighteenth century. Two very educated men‚ Edmund Burke and Thomas Paine‚ gave their arguments on whether or not a revolution was necessary or acceptable due to the violation of rights. Burke‚ who believed in hereditary succession and traditional ways‚ opposed Paine who wanted citizens to have liberty under a just government. Together they

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    loaf‚ two of which were required daily to feed a family of four‚ cost eight sous. Due in large part to poor weather and low crop yields‚ by February 1789 the price had nearly doubled to fifteen sous. In his book Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution‚ Simon Schama notes: "The average [daily] wage of a manual laborer was between twenty and thirty sous‚ of a journeyman mason at most forty. The doubling of bread prices--and of firewood--spelled destitution." Urban workers‚ especially those in

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    course of the French Revolution‚ the revolutionaries wrote three constitutions which were all reactions to what was happening at the time in which they were written. The Constitution of 1791 set up a limited monarchy under Louis XVI because the revolutionaries were more conservative at this point and did not want to be rid of Louis‚ but rather to just control his power. The Constitution of 1793 set up a republic because the revolutionaries discovered Louis plotting counter revolutions‚ so they want

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    The Downward Spiral of the French Revolution The country’s debt‚ excessive taxation‚ food shortages‚ and people’s frustration with the king as a weak ruler were a catalyst that led to the downward spiral of the French Revolution. France was the most powerful and populous nation in Europe. In the early 1700s‚ France had a population around 19 million‚ about three times that of England‚ approximately six times that of the United Netherlands‚ and six times the number of Finns and Swedes ruled by

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    1. As most wars back then the French and American Revolutions were created from the want of rights and having everyone be equal to eachother. It has always been a problem and it still is in America. In both of these revolutions people realized that the government controlled them too much and they needed to get power in order to have their rights as a human and equal things out with the government. Money of course also played a big role in these two things. The differences is that France had just

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    Jackson Spielvogel said‚ “Yet for all of its obvious impact‚ the American Revolution proved in the long run to be far less important to Europe than the French Revolution. The French Revolution was more complex‚ more violent‚ and far more radical in its attempt to construct both a new political order and new social order.” The French Revolution was extremely influential to the rest of Europe because it proved that a country could benefit from a republic. It also showed just how brutal a monarch could

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