"Legacy of the french revolution" Essays and Research Papers

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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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    The French Revolution was heavily inspired by the ideas and writings of philosophers during the Enlightenment. These great thinkers‚ including Voltaire‚ Mary Wollstonecraft‚ and John Locke‚ contributed their different ways of thinking to the ideas that became the Revolution. One of the most important was Jean-Jacques Rousseau‚ whose works were particularly influential. Jean-Jacques Rousseau was born in Geneva in 1712. He was raised solely by his father‚ after his only sibling ran away from

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    forty thousand people executed in a reign of terror‚ they ultimately protected the future of the revolution and its values through their increased legitimacy and their encouragement of fraternity and equality. By increasing their legitimacy‚ the Committee of Public Safety removed the chance of a counter-revolution by publishing the “Law of Suspects” and executing all the defined enemies of the revolution within France. In the months after the Committee was commissioned by the National Convention‚ they

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    Poverty‚ crime‚ and death were all apart of a terrible reality in the French Revolution. During the 1700s‚ France was known as modern. It was seen as the center of the Enlightenment‚ yet there were many economical problems going on at the time that led to the French Revolution. The three most important causes of the Revolution were the feudal dues‚ inequality of the estates‚ and the new emerging middle class. Feudal dues were harsh on the lower class‚ causing them to go in crisis. Poor people‚ such

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    and cultural change so they called revolution because is the changing and adapting time period. A revolution is the overthrowing if a government or ruler by the governed and then substituting another. In this case this the revolution took place in two countries France and England during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The Enlightenment and the political leaders commanded France in that time France to financial problems‚ causing the French Revolution. People wanted to change and brought

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    The French Revolution By Philip Dawson The French Revolution was a period of political and social clash between the three estates of France. The first was the clergy. The second was the nobility. The third was the bourgeoisie. The clergy consisted of rich and poor. There were wealthy abbots who were members of aristocracy and lived off of wealthy church land‚ as well as poor priests. The nobility was made up of wealthy land owners who prospered on inheritance. Most enjoyed the wealth and

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    The French Revolution is a prominent subject for discussion in means of historical and multiple causation in Cultures of the West by Clifford Backman. Backman addresses the French Revolution as the “prime divider of European history” (Backman‚ p. 621)‚ and begins to go in depth about the causes of this great revolution. As a matter of fact‚ Backman’s structure follows what Conal Furay described as the onion of history‚ peeling back one layer at a time. The author poses a question to the reader before

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    ROMANTICISM: Romanticism evolved in response to the French Revolution and the Age of Enlightenment that followed. Rather than focus on reason and rationality to explain man‚ romanticism focused more on emotions and feelings to explain nature and portray them. Inspired by the ideas of Jean Jacques Rousseau romanticism emerged as a reaction to 18th-century values‚ asserting emotion and intuition over rationalism‚ the importance of the individual over social conformity‚ and the exploration of

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    King Louis XIV was on the throne and the ‘Revolution was born in blood’; the French Revolution had begun. The French Revolution began in 1789 on July 14th (Bastille Day) where the commoners of Paris stormed the prison‚ murdered the Governor and the Mayor of Paris. They were not standing for the mismanagement and tyranny of the French monarchy any longer. The Revolution that followed was a bloody massacre of torture and new ideas. Although the French Revolution only caused the people to go from King

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    British Reactions to the French Revolution As much as it was both reactionary zeal and genuine concern‚ much of Great Britain’s Parliament felt compelled to restrict certain civil liberties (such as freedom of assembly and speech) in order to preserve the greater peace and thus saving England from the fate of France’s failed revolution‚ whose Reign of Terror inspired fear in many European countries around it. English aristocrats and the Monarchy were very concerned over the course of events in

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