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History is said to be written by the winners, but is it possible to
rewrite history? In a way, the French, like many who have preceded them, and many who will
proceed them have done the impossible, rewriting history. From trivial folklore, such as
George Washington chopping down a cherry tree, to the incredibly wrong, the African slave
trade; peoples views of history can be shaped and molded. The French have done a
superb job of instilling all of us with the concept that their Revolution was a fight for
liberty, justice and the good of all Frenchmen everywhere. Their glorification of the
Bastille with its depictions in painting and sculpture and how the Revolution was
the beginning of a new age pales to some of the events during this period. In fact, the
storming of the Bastille was merely a hole in the dike, and more would follow. The
National Guard, the Paris Commune, the September Massacre, are all words that the French
would prefer us not to hear. These events were a subtle d�nouement to an climax that was
filled with both blood and pain. The Reign of Terror, or the Great Terror, was a massive
culmination to the horror of the French Revolution, the gutters flowing with blood as the
people of Paris watched with an entertained eye. No matter what the French may claim, if
one chooses to open his eyes and read about this tragedy, they are most certainly welcome.
The revolution begins quietly in the fiscal crisis of Louis XVIs
reign. The government was running deeply into bankruptcy, and at the urging of his
financial advisors, he called the Estates General. The governing body had not been called
for almost two centuries, and now its workings seemed outdated. A small number of
people said that the Third Estate, that which was drawn from the towns, should have power
to equal the other Estates. Clubs of the bourgeoisie, the middle class, were formed,
proclaiming, "Salus populi lex est." It was a simple cry meaning "the
welfare of the people is law." To these people, the Estates General was like a pair
of shoes that no longer fit. Reformed seemed iminent, the phrase, "The Third Estate
is not an order, it is the nation itself" began to circulate.1
With much fanfare and circumstance, the three estates were called
together. However, on trying to meet, the Third Estate found the doors to their meeting
place locked. Moving to the tennis court, with much deliberation, an oath was sworn
between the delegates and some clergy, proclaiming themselves as the National Assembly.
They swore to remain indivisible until a constitution had been formed. As they met at the
church of St. Louis, the King was delayed in his attempt to end this display of
independence. Finally, he informed them, that he would not allow any reforms to be made,
unless he approved of them. Unfortunately, their will would not be easily undone, and in a
vote to four hundred ninety three to ninety four, the National Assembly declared that
serious action would be taken against the King. With such an resounding opposition, on
June 27th, 1789, Louis XVI gave into their demands.
Educated in Paris, a young man of twenty six years, would be one of the
first to set off the spark of revolution. Jumping on top of a table at the Palais Royale,
a social gathering place in Paris, he spoke out against the enemies of the people in a
well scripted oration. The crowd quickly fawned over their new found hero, marching
through the streets of Paris, even interrupting a performance at the Paris opera. Military
forces were required to remedy the situation, yet Paris only had six thousand troops with
which to defend itself against the rampaging mob. At the Place Vendome, the cavalry
attempted to control the riot, only to find their horses surrounded and unmovable through
the dense crowd.
The officers of the Swiss and Turkish armies attacked the rioters
outright, but the garde-nationale was called in to stop this massacre. This chaos caused
the Hotel de Ville to demand each tocsin, or summoning bell, cannon, drum, and church bell
be used to summon the people of Paris. Drawing from the electoral populace of each
section, four thousand and eight hundred men were given the task of protecting Paris, now
named the Paris commune. They wore the colors of red and blue, symbolizing the colors of
Paris. Armed with cannons and muskets, they had little powder with which to defend Paris.
The Bastille was a prison, built of stone, it had eight round towers,
with its highest tower being seventy-three feet. It was built as a defensive fort
against the British, and was not converted into a prison until under the rule of Charles
VI. To the authors, sculptors and painters who glorified the taking of the Bastille, it
was a dark and secret castle, where prisoners never returned from. Each prisoner hung from
shackles until their dried bones were pushed into a corner, but the Bastille was nothing
like that in reality. It was a prison for nobility, clergy, the occasional scandalous
author, and juvenile delinquents whose parents had asked for them to be kept there. Most
prisoners had more money spent on them, then it took for an average Parisian to subsist.
The living quarters were octagonal rooms, sixteen feet in diameter. Pets were allowed to
deal with the vermin, and prisoners were allowed furnishings, clothes, and other personal
belongings. Even one of the most infamous criminals, the demented Marquis de Sade, made
his home their, receiving his wife and other visitors on a regular basis.
With only a few prisoners, the Bastille was an ideal place to store
large amounts of ammunition. Bernard-Rene de Launay was in control of a force of just over
a hundred men that were given the task of defending more then thirty-thousand pounds of
powder. In the event of a siege, the Bastille would not be able to hold out long, only
containing a two day food supply, and no internal water. The morning of July 14th, a large
crowd of over eight hundred people set before the Bastille, calling for its
surrender. Delegates were sent in to speak with de Launay, yet he refused to capitulate
until orders from the Hotel de Ville were presented to him.
As the orders were being fetched, the crowd grew less patient, until
finally a carriage-maker cut the lines of the drawbridge, allowing them access to the
inner courtyard. As shots were fired on both side, the siege became imminent. For a day,
desperate attempts on both sides finally ending in the surrender of the guards. The guards
were then rounded up, decapitated, and their heads were paraded on pikes like the wax
busts of French heroes. De Launay was stabbed, rolled into a gutter, then shot before his
head was taken as a trophy. By the end of November of 1789, Palloy, a labor leader who had
jumped the gun to begin demolition, the crews of Palloy had nearly finished destruction of
the Bastille.
The church had become split over those who did or did not support the
revolution. The Papacy was on the side of the counter-revolutionaries, and could not
support the Kings signing of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy in 1791. The
seasons since 1789 had been quiet, violence sporadic and viewed as behind the new way of
life in France. Unfortunately, the King did not appreciate his stay in the Tuilleries, and
in the summer of 1791, an escape attempt was expected. The palace was surrounded with
guards at every gate, river front, and over six hundred national guardsmen watching every
possible escape route. Among the servants, a few were informants, and leaving the royal
quarters required a pass.
An extremely generous young cavalier, Count von Fersen, was willing to
do anything to assist the King and Queen, and so on the night of June 20, 1791, they made
their escape. They made it out of the palace, disguised, and made it as far as the town of
Varennes in the north east. The ride back to Paris was an ordeal, followed by a mob and
the National Guard.
Riots began occurring in Paris, as the sans cullotes, or the poor of
Paris, sued for their rights. Some sides wished for the kings freedoms, while the
left sought to radicalize the revolution even further. The journalists Jacque Hebert and
Jean-Paul Marat, they wrote the journals, Le pere Duchesne, and LAmi du Peuple,
respectively. Their attacks on established French Institutions were biting with much venom
in their arguments. Marat suffered from a strange skin disease that gave him horrible
lesions that reeked and sickened those that were around him. Of the two, he was the more
violent insisting that, "Let the blood of the traitors flow. That is the only
way to save the country."
In June of 1791, as the King attempted escape from the Tuilleries, the
sans culottes armed themselves. Holding aloft a calfs heart they claimed to be the
heart of an aristocrat, they found Louis, forcing him to wear a liberty cap and drink with
them. As the weeks past, in the early days of August, the National Assembly declared that
Paris would become the Insurrectionary Commune. They removed the royalists from any
positions of power, along with replacing lawyers with artisans, and on August the 9th,
they began their normal deliberations. A huge crowd of twenty thousand sans cullotes
called for the King and Queen who had taken refuge with the National Assembly. A crowd
broke through the gates, demanding that liberty and equality be maintained. In response,
the National Assembly declared that the King be imprisoned and replaced by six ministers.
The mood of Paris changed quite suddenly as stores closed and
dignitaries left. Many attempted to escape from the city, fearing what would come.
Paranoia in Paris reached a feverous pitch, as the sans cullotes feared that royalists,
church spies, and counter revolutionaries would endanger the revolution. This fear
extended into the government as vigilance committees were setup, passports were revoked,
and hundreds were imprisoned if they were a suspected enemy of the revolution. When news
of a recent military defeat reached Parisian ears, it was believed that treachery from
inside the ranks had been the cause. Danton was a man of action and power, a lawyer, he
was described as a "vehement tribune of the people", and "voice of the
revolution." In Paris, with scarred facial features due to accidents upon the farm as
a boy, Danton had become very powerful in the Insurrectionary Commune, becoming the
minister of Justice. His power added to that of the Girondists, a party of lawyers and
atheists, who were now the ruling party.
By the beginning of September, Danton was calling for all able men of
Paris to arm themselves and search every house to find any "enemy of the
people". In his paper, Marat supported the execution of all counter revolutionaries.
Rumors around Paris circulated that the prisons would be raided, and those inside would be
killed. On the afternoon of September 2nd, the violence began as a mob surrounded a number
of coaches filled with priests to be brought to the prison of L'Abbaye. The leader leapt
onto the coach, thrusting and slicing with his rapier. He shouted to the shocked crowd
that watched on, "So, this frightens you, does it, you cowards? You must get used to
the sight of death." The words were quite prophetic, the even beginning the September
Massacres.
Within the next five days over twelve hundred people would be brutally
slaughtered by the mass of armed Parisians. The next to be slaughtered was a group of one
hundred and fifty priests. As they were decapitated, one of the priest's demanded a fair
trial. A mock tribunal was set up, and the priests were decapitated one by one, their
body's thrown into a well. Every prison, save for the ones that contained the prostitutes
and debtors, was broken into as the semptembriseurs, named for the month, slaughtered
those in side. They stopped only to eat and drink, sometimes on the naked corpses that
littered the ground. Strangely enough, a few lives were spared, by either compassion of
sheer luck, but it was nothing compared to the disgusting brutality with which many of the
murders were committed. One woman, charged with mutilating her lover, had her breasts cut
off as she was nailed to the ground, a bonfire set under her spread legs. One
septembriseur sliced open the chest of a noble, removing the heart, squeezing it into a
glass, and after drinking a sip, and forced Mme de Sombreuil to drink to save her father.
Undoubtedly, one of the most gruesome acts was that of the Princess de Lamballe. She was
raped, her body mutilated and her breasts sliced off. Her legs were shot of a cannon, and
her genitals were cut off and paraded around Paris on a pike. The man who had cut off her
genitals had also supposedly cooked and eaten her heart. Her head was placed upon a bar at
a cafe' where those there were asked to drink to her death, before her head was placed on
a pike and paraded under the Queen's window.
At Bicetre, it was claimed that the prisoners were revolting, and that
they had to be put down. However, the prison held a large number of adolescents who were
detained there by their parents wish. Forty three people were killed, all under the
age of eighteen, of the one hundred and sixty two prisoners. By the end, the
septembriseurs were not pursued, in fact, some in the commune commended their deeds as a
necessary culling. To the outlying Provinces, the killing of nearly half of the prisoners
of Paris, was a clear message. In the two weeks proceeding the deaths, members of the
church and supporters of the king were executed.
However, these troubles were soon followed by the battle of Valmy,
which the army of France had defeated the Prussians. If the leader of the Prussian army,
the Duke of Brunswick, would have moved swiftly enough, Paris might have been taken,
ending the revolution. However, reports have it that Danton paid Brunswick to retreat back
into Germany. The citizens in Paris left their thoughts of murder and celebrated the great
victory. Goethe, a German novelist, concluded that, "Here and today begins a new era
in the history of the world." as he watched the battle from a hill side. The
statement found its truth in Frances use of the citizen as a soldier, and the
mobilization of such a massive force.
A new force met at Paris, the next day. On September 21st, 1792, the
National Convention met. It looked like its predecessors, composed of mostly the
middle class with a few clergy and nobility, endorsing the Girondin. However, the more
conservative Girondin were prevented from voting in Paris, allowing the radical Jacobin to
gain power.
However, one of the first acts of the Convention was to abolish the monarchy, and began
the New Republic, with its own strange calendar. However, the Convention was deeply
divided, as the Girondin repeatedly tried to attack the Mountain, the highest seats in the
convention that belonged to the Jacobin leadership. Yet the Girondin blatantly opposed the
Parisians, their septembriseurs, and their Commune. They were in support of the trying the
king, but the Montagard, the Mountain, along with Danton, would chose only to condemn him.
Their deliberations on his fate lasted until the winter months of the year.
By January, the King was in trial. On the 20th of the new year, the
King was tried, found guilty, and was sentenced to be executed the following day. The
Girondins hoped to save the king from death by proposing a bill to the people of France.
However, their attempts were futile, and only served to anger the sans culottes. Those
that gathered to watch the guillotining were mainly the angry poor, and when the blade
came down, they threw their hats in the air shouting, "Vive la Nation! Vive la
Republique!"
Yet, not all was as well as it seemed for the Revolution. The enemies
of the people had extended into foreign borders as European nations condemned the
execution of Louis XVI. The value of their money had lessened, food was becoming more and
more scarce, and the cost of living rose. The Convention took a united stand against the
violence of the sans culottes but still persecuted the counter revolutionaries. The
problems they faced were no small matter, especially the peasant rebellion occurring in
the Vendee. The peasants were loyal to the King, and anti-republican, not wishing to
participate in the drafting for the National Guard. Attacking government offices and
forcing the National Guard to retreat. The force of some ten thousand peasants were
quickly move to Rochefort to open the port for a British Invasion fleet. The Vendee was
not the only spot of counter revolution, as troops were sent to Lyons, Nantes, Bordeaux
and Marseille to crush anti-revolutionary support.
They dealt with the enemies of the people by setting up a Revolutionary
Tribunal, with which to try those who would otherwise have been killed by the sans
culottes. Despite the objections of Vergniaud, a member of the Convention who shouted
"Septembre" as they deliberated, the Tribunal began its operations. The
Convention decided to form the Committee of Public Safety, as foreign invasion became a
more real threat. This cabinet would soon become the most powerful governing body, and
Danton held one of the nine positions.
Yet the Girondins had no support from the people of Paris, making the
mistake of bringing Marat, a prominent Jacobin, before the Revolutionary Tribunal. Marat
was easily acquitted, but they summoned him again. The argument was over corn prices, and
the Jacobin stand of lowering them only won them more favor with the sans culottes. On
Sunday June 2nd, a few days after a protest by the sans culottes, the Convention arrested
the leading Girondins in the Convention, as the Tuilleries was surrounded by an angry mob
of tens of thousands of sans culottes.
The Committee seemed unfit to deal with the new problems that quickly
became evident. The Austrians were quickly advancing into French territory, and counter
revolutionaries in Lyons had seized control, executing Republican leaders. Toulon, the
royalists were handing over twenty six of Frances sixty one frigates over the Lord
Hood, commander of the British navy. However, Maximilien Robespierre joined the Committee
and would soon become the dominant revolutionary force. A man known for his virtue and
upright moral standing, his rise to through the Jacobin club and the Assembly was that his
ideas were supported by the Assembly and the people.
In Paris, the Enrage, a group of those who wanted death to all who
opposed the revolution and had guided the now abolished Insurectionary Commune, still
troubled the government. Varlet still cried out for the needs of the poor and spurred them
to riot against the price of food. The Committee was forced to deal with these problems
when a supporter of the Girondin, Charlotte Corday, assasinated Marat as he lay in his
therapeutic bath on July 13th. His death caused him to become a martyr to the radicals,
much to Ropespierres envy, and the Committee was forced by the prodding of the
Enrages to institute warehouses to store the grain in Paris and give the death penalty to
those that hoarded.
The Committee also had to worry about its critics that followed
Danton, who was now President of the Convention after losing his seat to Robespierre. The
Hebertists followed the freed journalist, who accused the Jacobins of ignoring him after
he helped them overthrow the Girondin. With so much pressure, the Committee authorized the
destruction of all federalists, royalists, and other counter revolutionaries. Those
rebelling in the provinces were quickly dealt with. Still, the opposers wanted more, and a
revolution on the Hotel de Ville, forced the Convention to allow the Hebertists, Varenne
and Herbois into the Committee, and they declared that "Terror be the order of the
day."
Along with the Queen, the twenty two Girondin leaders that had been
arrested were also brought to the guillotine in the same month. The former president of
the Convention, and converted noble, the Duc dOrleans, more commonly known as
Philippe Egalite was sentenced to death by the Tribunal also. The once mayor of
Paris, Jean Bailly was also executed.
The purpose of these killings that lasted in and out through the fall
and winter of 1793 was the Committees ruthless drive to destroy any and all enemies
of the people, royalists and federalists alike. All in a effort to gain support from the
sans culottes to continue their one handed control of France. The guillotine had struck
over seventeen thousand necks in the Terror, and three thousand of those belonged to
Parisians. Those who survived lived through the Terror fearing a knock on the door that
would be their arrest. Robespierre himself said, "We must rule by iron those who
cannot be ruled by justice
You must punish not merely traitors but the indifferent as
well." Yet, those who were brought before the Tribunal were not just the enemies of
the people, they were women, children, families, the elderly, and every social class was
represented. Those who shed tears for the loss of their family were executed also, those
who dared make the smallest misstep were dealt with harshly, the penalty death. The
innocent lost their lives through clerical error, and some were killed being falsely
accused by neighbors or enemies who wanted vengeance.
In the Provinces, the guillotine could not work fast enough for some,
and Joseph Fouche, a Jacobin representative, killed over three hundred with cannon
fire. At Toulon, they were shot, at Nantes, thousands died in the disease ridden prisons,
and thousands more were sunk in barges, causing ships that anchored to pull out corpses.
To the sans culottes of Paris, it was a lively entertainment. They drank and ate, some
placed bets, while others knitted. They eagerly anticipated the sounds of the execution,
and death was a trivial thing.
A young and eloquent opponent of the Girondins, Chaumette, led the
movement of de-Christianization. He pushed for the republican calendar, likening its
divisions to the divisions of the highest Reason. Religious holidays and services were
suspended, treasures of the church were seized, images of Mary replaced with Marat, and
any religious paraphernalia was strictly prohibited. Festivals of Reason were celebrated,
with prostitutes or others such women playing the head of all Reason, the Goddess of
Reason. Towns, streets, squares all changed their names. Revolutionary names were much
more popular then saintly names in some districts. Yet, religion could not be easily
undone, and still its hold was seen on France as threatening "acts of God"
would force peasants back into the churches to ask for forgiveness.
The war of a political nature raged silently, as the different factions
of the Convention dared not fight openly. Upon returning to Paris, Danton immediately took
the side of Robespierre, condemning the Enrages and the Hebertists. However,
Robespierre would not be easily won over by Danton. He believed that Danton wished to
separate the Committee and the sans culottes to protect himself and his friends.
Ropespierres course of action was to crush both factions by use of the Tribunal.
The Hebertists fell easily, many of their members being accused of a
foreign plot. When they planned a journee to revolt, this gave the Committee
its final nail, and drove it into the coffin of the Hebertists. Hebert and his
followers were put to the guillotine March 14th, 1794.
As for Danton, he had made many powerful enemies, all of which ardently
spoke out against him. In spite of this Danton had little fear from these men, taunting
and threatening them, believing that Robespierre would stick by him no matter what. Soon,
their friendship grew weak, and on March 30th, the Committees of Public Safety and General
Security met together. Saint-Just, a cold and calculating follower of Robespierre,
produced the document to arrest Danton. At the trial was Camille Desmoulins, and many
other accused. On April 3rd, they were sent to the guillotine, and eighteen men were put
under the blade.
Following in their path was Chaumette and even the widow of Camille,
Lucille Desmoulins. The bloodshed only increased as the law of Prairial was passed, and
the Tribunal no longer needed to bother with a trial. Of the fifteen hundred that died in
the final eight weeks of the terror, only a small portion of the beheaded were noblemen
are clergy, the remaining eighty five percent coming from the people, the peasants, and
those who had begun the revolution. Ropespierre was far to virtuous to watch the
executions, but he stated that, "At the point where we are now, if we stop too soon
we will die. We have not been too severe
Without the revolutionary Government the
Republic cannot be made stronger. If it is destroyed now, freedom will be extinguished
tomorrow." As Danton had shouted at the Tribunal, "You will follow us,
Robespierre.", the Revolution would soon be over.
By Autumn of the same year, the Revolution turned decidedly to the
right as the Robespierrists were sent from the Convention. He had gradually lost control
of both Committee and Convention, and by July 27th, in the month of Thermidor, we was
arrested. After being badly beaten, he was brought to the guillotine, and a newspaper
reported, "The tyrant is no more." The government changed hands throughout the
next year as the Jacobins were disbanded, and the Girondin returned to the Convention. It
too was altogether disbanded as the Directory was set up in a rather feeble attempt to
retain control of the republic. Even though Napoleon did not gain control until one year
before the next century, the people of France no longer wanted their revolution.
For my conclusion, I would like to step back and deliver my own
opinion. In my brief time on this planet, I have never come across a more brutal depiction
of man at his worst. The sad truth is that events of this nature have occurred with
amazing regularity. Perhaps if the Reign of Terror was just one appalling moment of human
cruelty, the world would be a different place. With such things as the Gulag, the
Holocaust, the African Slave Trade, and even returning back to ancient times of the
Assyrians and the Crusades, man has been known to slaughter his brethren wholesale. We are
a race, bred with violence coursing through our veins, and we can do little about it.
Perhaps my speculations are wrong, but if such tragedies have occurred over and over, can
we truly ever change. The Reign of Terror is just the culmination to the bloodiness and
the atrocities of the French Revolution. It is quite ironic that a Revolution based on the
ideals of Reason and the fight for the people, would kill over thirty thousand of their
countrymen. In conclusion, the Reign of Terror was the climax of this terrible Revolution.
The violence and paranoia of the sans culottes, the lust for political power in the
convention, and the petty differences of one person to another finally reached a head,
exploding into a mass execution.
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