Friday, September 9, 2011

1014 ch 1 power point

*Chapter 19
*A Revolution in Politics:
*The Era of the French Revolution and Napoleon
*North America, 1763-1783
*The American Revolution
*Reorganization, Resistance, and Rebellion
*Britain’s victory in the Seven Years’ War
*50% of adult male population can vote
*Indirect political representation in England
*“No taxation without representation”
*Boston Tea Party
*War for Independence
*Thomas Paine, Common Sense, 1776
*Declaration of Independence, 1776
*Battle of Saratoga, 1777
Commitment of European aid
*Battle of Yorktown, 1781
*Peace of Paris, 1783
*The American Revolution (cont)
*Forming a New Nation
*Articles of Confederation, 1781-1789
*Constitution, 1789
Bill of Rights, 1791
*Impact of the American Revolution on Europe
*Concept of freedom
*Concept of rights
*Background to the French Revolution
*Social Structure of the Old Regime
First and Second Estates
sFirst Estate = clergy (130,000)
sSecond Estate = nobility (350,000)
*The Third Estate
Commoners
sPeasants = 75-80% of the population
sPeasants own 35-40% of the land
Skilled artisans, shopkeepers, and wage earners
Bourgeoisie (middle class)
sOwn 20-25% of the land
sMiddle class without power
*Other Problems Facing the French Monarchy
*Bad harvests in 1787 and 1788
*One-third of the population is poor
*Privileges of the clergy and nobility
*Financial crisis
*Summoning the Estates General
*The French Revolution
*300 delegates each to the First and Second Estate
*600 delegates to the Third Estate
*Strong legal and urban presence
*Cahiers de doléances
*Estates General meets May 5, 1789
*Question of voting by order or head
*Abbé Sieyès “What is the Third Estate?”
*National Assembly
*Constituted, June 17
*Tennis Court Oath, June 20
*Intervention of the Common People
*Attack on the Bastille, July 14
*Peasant rebellions, July 19-August 3
*Great Fear
*Destruction of the Old Regime
*Seigneurial rights abolished, August 4, 1789
*Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
*August 26
*Does this include women?
*Olympe de Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen, 1791
*The Women’s March to Versailles
*October 5, 1789
*Return the king to Paris
*The French Conquests during the Revolutionary Wars
*After the Revolution
*The Catholic Church
*Civil Constitution of the Clergy, July, 1790
*A New Constitution Power in the Legislative Assembly
*Self-denying ordinance
*Flight of the king, June 1791
*Opposition from abroad
*Declaration of war on Austria, April 20, 1792
*The Radical Revolution
*Paris Commune
Georges Danton (1759-1794)
*Post-Revolutionary Crises
*National Convention, September 1792
*Universal male suffrage
*Abolish the monarchy, September 21
*Domestic Crisis
*Factions
Girondins
The Mountain
*Execution of Louis XVI, January 21, 1793
*Counterrevolution
*Foreign Crisis
*Military losses
*A Nation in Arms
*Mobilization of the nation
*The Reign of Terror & Its Aftermath
*Committee of Public Safety and Reign of Terror
*July 1793-July 1794
*Olympe de Gouges
*Vendée
*“Republic of Virtue”
*Price controls
*Women
*Dechristianization and a New Calendar
*New calendar
*Equality and Slavery
*Revolt in Saint Dominigue
*Decline of the Committee of Public Safety
*Execution of Maximilien Robespierre, July 28, 1794
*Revolt in Saint Dominique
*Reaction and the Directory
*Age of Napoleon
*Rise of Napoleon
*Born in Corsica, 1769
*Commissioned a lieutenant, 1785
*Promoted to brigadier general, 1794
*Victory in Italy, 1797
*Defeat in Egypt, 1799
*Napoleon’s Grand Empire
*The Republic and the Empire
*Republic of France proclaimed, 1799
*First Consul
*First Consul for life, 1802
*Crowned Emperor Napoleon I, 1804
*Domestic Policies of Emperor Napoleon
*Napoleon and the Catholic Church
Concordat of 1801
*A New Code of Laws
Code Napoleon (Civil Code)
*The French Bureaucracy
Centralization of administration 
*Napoleon’s Empire and the European Response
*Peace of Amiens, 1802
*Renewal of war, 1803
*Military victories, 1805-1807
*Napoleon’s Grand Empire
*Failure of the Grand Empire
Problems: Great Britain and Nationalism
sSurvival of Britain
sSeapower
sContinental System, 1806-1807
sNationalism
*The Fall of Napoleon
*Invasion of Russia, 1812
*Defeat of Napoleon, April 1814
*Exiled to Elba
*Escape, 1815
*Battle of Waterloo, June 18, 1815
*Exile to St. Helena
*Island of Elba
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*Napoleon’s retreat

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