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What were the causes of the downfall of Louis XVI?

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What were the causes of the downfall of Louis XVI?
During 1780s to 1790s France was in total chaos. France was ruled by the Bourbon family King Louis XVI from 1754 to 1793, it was an absolute monarch and they had absolute power and did not share it with a legislature. The situation was already bad before Louis XVI began his reign, but situation got worse. In the end, there was a revolution in France and a vast amount changes to the society and the government of France. Louis XVI himself was executed and killed; while France was established as a democratic country. There were different reasons for Louis's downfall: social, economic, political conditions. Also reasons such as the Age of Enlightenment when some philosophers had new ideas of how the country should be ruled, the inequalities between estates, the bankruptcy of the government, the attitude and behaviour of Louis XVI, and the bad economic of France. All of these factors had caused the anger of the people. Although Louis XVI couldn't help with some of the cause that led to his downfall, he was partly responsible for his own destructions.

Louis's family caused the bankruptcy of the government, and his indecisiveness, his act of treason and his attempt to escape, were all the causes that led to his own downfall. The income of the government mainly came from heavy taxation on the citizens and several incidences led to the bankrupt of government. One of the main reasons was Louis and his family, mainly due to his wife, Marie Antoinette, who spent a lot of money in luxuries such as clothes, jewelry, and gambling. She even spent lots of money in creating beautiful gardens structured like a real peasant village around her palace, in which many people found it pointless and silly. (Brooman, 1992, p.15,16, 19) Louis, as a king, was a bad decision maker and couldn't control the government and his people. His characters were not suitable to be a king. He preferred the leisure life of a king, especially hunting, instead of attending assemblies and governing the



Bibliography: Books - Gilbert, Adrian, (1995) The French Revolution, England: Wayland (Publishers) LTD - Brooman, Josh, (1992), Revolution in France, England: Longman Group UK Limited - World Book 2002 F7 (2002) - Mantin, Peter. (1992) The French Revolution. Oxford: Heinemann Educational - Hetherton, Greg - Janowitz, Neil. (2006) SparkNote on the French Revolution (1789-1799). Retrieved 25 March, 2006 from . - Landry, Peter. (1997-2004). Blupete - Literature - Biographies - John Locke. Retrieved 25 March, 2006 from - Bok, Hilary - Kemerling, Garth. (1998-2002). Philosophypages - Enlightenment II - Rousseau - General Will. Retrieved 25 March, 2006 from

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