The French Revolution and Napoleon

  • Beginning of The Usa and French Revolution

    Beginning of The Usa and French Revolution
    The French Revolution
    established both a new political order and a new social
    order.
  • Tennis court oath

    Tennis court oath
    Third Estate boldly declared that it was the National
    Assembly and would draft a constitution.
    Three days later, on June 20, its deputies
    arrived at their meeting place, only to
    find the doors had been locked. They
    then moved to a nearby indoor tennis
    court and swore that they would continue
    meeting until they had a new constitution.
  • Declaration of the Rights Of Man

    Declaration of the Rights Of Man
    The
    declaration proclaimed that all men were free and equal before the law, that appointment to public office should be based on talent, and that no group should be exempt
    from taxation. Freedom of speech and of
    the press were affirmed.
  • New Constitution

    New Constitution
    The new Constitution of 1791 set up a
    limited monarchy. There was still a king,
    but a Legislative Assembly would make
    the laws.
  • The move to Radicalism

    The move to Radicalism
    By August of 1792, the monarchy was over. Rallied
    by the newly appointed minister of justice, Georges Danton, the
    sans-culottes attacked the palace, and the royal family had to seek
    protection from the Legislative Assembly.
  • The First Republic

    The First Republic
    In September 1792, the newly elected National Convention
    began meeting, the National Convention’s first major step on September 21 was to abolish the
    monarchy and establish a republic, the French Republic.
  • Republic Virtue

    Republic Virtue
    Two women founded the Society for Revolutionary Republican Women in Paris. Most members were working-class women who asserted that they were ready to defend the republic. Most men, however, believed that women should not participate in either politics or the military.
  • The Kings End

    The Kings End
    Citizens had enthusiastically
    formed political clubs of varying social and
    political views. Many deputies belonged to
    these clubs.In early 1793, the Mountain convinced the Convention to pass a decree condemning Louis XVI to death. On January 21, the king was beheaded on the guillotine. Revolutionaries had adopted this machine because it killed quickly and they believed, humanely.
  • Reign of Terror

    Reign of Terror
    For roughly a year during 1793 and 1794, the Committee of Public Safety took control of the government. To defend France from domestic threats, the Committee adopted policies that became known as the
    Reign of Terror.
  • Rise of the Revolutionary Army

    Rise of the Revolutionary Army
    In less than a year, the new French government had raised a huge army—by September 1794, it had over a million soldiers. It was the largest army ever seen in Europe,and it pushed the invaders back across the Rhine.
  • End of the Terror

    End of the Terror
    By the summer of 1794, the French had largely defeated their foreign foes. There was less need for the Reign of Terror, but it
    continued nonetheless.After the death of Robespierre, the Jacobins lost power and more moderate middle-class leaders took control. The Reign of Terror came to a halt. In August
    1794, the Law of 22 Prairial was repealed
    and the release of prisoners began.
  • The Age of Napoleon

    The Age of Napoleon
    Napoleon Bonaparte dominated French and European history
    from 1799 to 1815. During his reign Napoleon built and lost an
    empire and also spread ideas about nationalism in Europe.
  • Peace with the Church

    Peace with the Church
    In 1801 Napoleon came to an agreement with the pope, which recognized Catholicism as the religion of a majority of the French people. In return, the pope would not ask for the return of the church lands
    seized in the revolution.
  • Changes, Emperor

    Changes, Emperor
    In 1802 Napoleon was made consul for life. Two years later, he crowned himself Emperor Napoleon I.Napoleon brought stability to France and established a single law code that recognized the
    equality of all citizens before the law.
  • Great Britain

    Great Britain
    Napoleon was never able to conquer Great Britain because of its sea power, which made it almost invulnerable. Napoleon hoped to invade Britain, but the British defeated the combined French Spanish fleet at Trafalgar in 1805. This battle ended Napoleon’s plans for invasion.
  • Building the Empire

    Building the Empire
    From 1807 to 1812, Napoleon was the
    master of Europe. His Grand Empire was
    composed of three major parts: the French
    Empire, dependent states, and allied states.
    The French Empire was the inner core of
    the Grand Empire. It consisted of an
    enlarged France extending to the Rhine in
    the east and including the western half of
    Italy north of Rome.
  • The Fall of Napoleon

    The Fall of Napoleon
    After major losses in Russia and Austria, Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo.
  • Final Defeat

    Final Defeat
    The new king had little support, and the French people
    were not ready to surrender the glory of empire. Nor was
    Napoleon ready to give up. At Waterloo in Belgium on June 18, 1815, Napoleon met a combined British and Prussian army under the Duke of Wellington and suffered a bloody defeat. This time, the
    victorious allies exiled him to St. Helena, a small island in
    the south Atlantic. Napoleon remained in exile until his
    death in 1821, but his memory haunted French political
    life for many decades.
  • Revolutionary Ideas

    Revolutionary Ideas
    Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was an important
    spokesman for the civil rights movement in the United
    States in the 1960s. The purpose of the civil rights
    movement was to gain equal rights for African
    Americans.