Thursday, October 10, 2019
Especially the French Revolution and Napoleonic Era
French Revolution/ Napoleonic Era WHEN THE KING TOOK FLIGHT * National ââ¬Å"Constituentâ⬠Assembly, the new assembly not only set to work drawing up Franceââ¬â¢s first constitution, but engineered a wholesale transformation of French political and social structures that went far beyond anything most of them had requested in their grievance lists. * During theà French Revolution, theà Legislative Assemblyà was the legislature of France from 1 October 1791 to September 1792.It provided the focus of political debate and revolutionary law-making between the periods of theà National Constituent Assemblyà and of theà National Convention. * The Legislative Assembly was driven by two opposing groups. The members of the first group were primarily moderate members of the bourgeoisie that favored aà constitutional monarchy, represented by theà Feuillants, who felt that the revolution had already achieved its goal. [1]à The second group was the democratic faction, for whom theà kingà could no longer be trusted, represented by theà newà members of theà Jacobin club. 2]à This group claimed that more revolutionary measures were necessary. [ * the citizens of Varennes had been asked to elect their own municipal and regional governments and to participate directly in the day-to-day implementation of new laws * Louis XVI fleeing the very constitution he had sworn to defend * Appearance of soldiers in Varennes had led to enormous tensions. We know that this action was part of the general movement of troops intended to protect the kingââ¬â¢s escape, a conspiracy in which Bouille was intimately involved. The kingââ¬â¢s flight had dangerous conspiracies involving foreign soldiers and perhaps foreign armies * The night the king suddenly appeared in a small town in northeastern France is arguable one of the most dramatic and poignant moments in the entire French Revolution. * Local inhabitants=reshape their lives * Louisââ¬â¢ most perva sive impact on the train of events probably came less from what he did than from what did not do: from his very lack of leadership, his indecision and inconsistency WATERLOO: JUNE 18, 1815 The errors made by Napoleon and other French commanders during the Waterloo campaign were severe, indeed perhaps even decisive * His own destiny was almost more important to Napoleon than the thousandsââ¬âand finally millionsââ¬âof lives that were lost in the course of his pursuit of it * Hundred Days (stage four) FRENCH REVOLUTION APP * Directory, a body of five directors that held executive power in France
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