The French Revolution was when the ideas of the Enlightenment came into sudden and violent conflict with the Absolute Monarchy that existed in France. Unlike the American Revolution, where the revolution resulted in the relatively smooth development of a constitutional democracy, the French Revolution began a violent struggle within France as the society fought about what type of government should be formed after the fall of the monarchy. This expanded into a conflict that resulted in nearly twenty-five years of war between France and the other countries of Europe. The conflict over whether France would be a monarchy or democracy flared in France for almost a century.
The events that caused French Revolution began in the late 1780’s when France became bankrupt (ran out of money) because of the high cost of supporting the grandiose palace of Versailles and fighting wars against England (like the American Revolution). A large part of this problem was that the nobility, the wealthiest part of the population, paid no taxes. The commoners paid all of the taxes to support the government, which was becoming more difficult because poor harvests and a poor economy had pushed many poor commoners to the point of starvation. The king of France, Louis XVI, called for a meeting of the Estates General, which was made up of representatives of the whole of French society (both nobles and commoners), to deal with the problem of government’s bankruptcy. The commoners, inspired by the Enlightenment wanted to use the meeting of the Estates General to make the taxes burden more equal and fair.
The Estates General had not met for over a hundred years and under an absolute monarchy of Louis XIV, the people of France had not been able to change their government. However, during that time the French people were influenced by the ideas of the Enlightenment and the examples of the English Glorious Revolution and the American Revolution. Many of the French commoners admired the British form of government in which a Parliament limited the power of the king and had supported the American Revolution. For example, the Frenchman Marquis de Lafayette had fought in the American Revolution and supported changing the government of France. They wanted to make the French government more democratic like those of England and the United States.
At the meeting of the Estates General in 1789, Louis XVI who desperate for more tax money came into conflict with the demands of the French commoners who wanted a say in their government. This was a collision of the ideas of absolute monarchy with those of the Enlightenment. At first, Louis XVI and the nobles refused to give into the demands of the commoners. However, after the commoners formed themselves into a group called the National Assembly that swore to write a constitution for a new government for France, Louis XVI and the nobles gave in and agreed to work together to develop a new government that would represent the French people. The success of the National Assembly inspired people. However it also created a fear that Louis XVI might use his army to crush the National Assembly before it could develop a new government. This fear drove the people of Paris to attack the Bastille, the king’s fortress in the center of the city, to get gun powder and weapons. At the same time the country began to slip into chaos as peasants attacked nobles across France in an event called the Great Fear. In spite of the chaos, the National Assembly was able to organize a new government due to strong moderate leaders, such as the Marquis de Lafayette, who organized a new army under the control of the National Assembly called the National Guard. The National Assembly’s passed the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen, which stated the goals of the French Revolution was to develop a new government for France where everyone would be equal, where the government would be democratic and it would protect the rights of the people. The Declaration of the Rights of Man, which begins with the phrase, “Men are born and remain free and equal in rights” reflects the ideals of the Enlightenment.
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen began the process of writing a constitution for France. This was the first time that the powers of the French government were written into law. A new constitution which was accepted in 1791 changed France so the monarch would no longer have absolute powers and instead have his powers limited by an elected group called the Legislative Assembly. Elections were held across France to elect the members of the Legislative Assembly. In these elections all male citizens of France were allowed to vote which resulted in the Legislative Assembly being more radical and wanting to get rid of the monarchy and make France into a representative democracy called a republic. Louis XVI did not clearly support this new constitution and opposed the work of the Legislative Assembly. After Louis XVI and his family caught as they attempted to escape from France, the Legislative Assembly moved to end the monarchy. The king and his family were put under arrest and France became a republic. The new French Republic went to war with the other European countries around it as a way of spreading the democratic ideals of the revolution. These other countries were monarchies and they feared that the ideas of the French Revolution would cause their own populations to rebel. In the first part of the war, the French Army did very badly because it was disorganized and had poor leadership. France began to lose the war and was invaded by the armies of the other European countries. This invasion threatened to undo the French Revolution because if these other countries won the war they would end the republic and put Louis XVI back in power as an absolute monarch. At the same time groups that opposed the revolution and the republic rose up in rebellion across France.
In response to all of these threats, radical French revolutionaries, like Maximilian Robespierre, took power with the goal of saving the revolution from both foreign and internal threats. Robespierre and the other radicals viewed anyone who threatened the survival of the revolution as an enemy and needed to be stopped at all cost. Robespierre and the other radial revolutionaries began a Reign of Terror in which anyone who was considered to be an enemy of the revolution was arrested, given a short trial and then executed. During the Reign of Terror more than 40,000 people were killed – including Louis XVI and is wife Marie Antoinette. While the Terror was effective in silencing the critics of the revolution, it also killed many supporters of the revolution. For example, the Marquis de Lafayette, the moderate revolutionary leader, had to flee France. This was because Robespierre and other radical revolutionary leaders went beyond just trying to protect the revolution; they saw this as an opportunity to create an ideal democratic society, which Robespierre called a “Republic of Virtue”. However, for many supporters of the revolution, this was too far. As the revolutionary French armies became more organized under the leadership of generals like Napoleon Bonaparte and began to win victories against the armies of the other European countries, the French people began to see Robespierre’s actions as too extreme and turned on Robespierre, arresting him and executing him.
After the death of Robespierre, more conservative forces took over the revolution and enacted a “counter-revolution” to push back against the extreme parts of the revolution. They established a small government of wealthy commoners called the Directory which discouraged democracy. While this government stabilized France, it was not popular with most of the people of France. There were many popular revolts against the Directory, and the Directory became dependent on Napoleon Bonaparte, who used the French army to violently put down the rebellions.