The French Revolution Class 9 CBSE Important Notes

 Important Notes of The French Revolution:
Chapter 1 Class 9

CONCEPTS
The French Society during the Late 18th Century
The French Society Comprised:1st Estate: Clergy, 2nd Estate: Nobility, 3rd Estate: Big businessmen,merchants,
court officials, peasants, artisans, landless labourers, servants, etc.
Some within the Third Estate were rich and some were poor.
The burden of financing activities of the state through taxes was borne by the Third Estate alone.
The Struggle for Survival: Population of France grew and so did the demand for grain. The gap between the rich
and poor widened. This led to subsistence crise
s.
The Growing Middle Class: This estate was educated and believed that no group in society should be privileged
by birth. These ideas were put forward by philosophers such as Locke English philosopher and Rousseau French
philosopher. The American constitution and its guarantee of individual rights was an important example of
political theories of France. These ideas were discussed intensively in salons and coffee houses and spread among
people through books and newspapers. These were even read aloud.

THE OUTBREAK OF THE REVOLUTION:
The French Revolution went through various stages. When Louis XVI became king of France in1774, he inherited a
treasury which was empty. There was growing discontent within the society of the Old Regime.
1789, Convocation of Estates General. The Third Estate forms National Assembly, the Bastille is stormed, peasant
revolts in the countryside.
1791 A constitution is framed to limit the powers of the king and to guarantee basic right to all humanbeings.
1792-93France becomes a republic. Jacobin Republic overthrown, a Directory rules France.
1795 A new Convention appointed a five-man Directorate to run the state from 26 October, 1795.
1799 The Revolution ends with the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte.
Time Line: The French Revolution
1770s-1780s — Economic decline: French Government in deep debt.
1788-1789 — Bad harvest, high prices, food riots
1789, May 5 — Estates-General convened, demands reforms.
1789, July 14 — National Assembly formed. Bastille stormed on July 14. French Revolution starts.
1789, August 4 — Night of August 4 ends the rights of the aristocracy.
1789, August 26 — Declaration of the Rights of Man
1790 — Civil Constitution of the Clergy nationalises the Church.
1792 — Constitution of 1791 converts absolute monarchy into a constitutional Monarchy with limited powers.
1792 — Austria and Prussia attack revolutionary France
1793 — Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette are executed.
1792-1794 — The Reign of Terror starts. Austria, Britain, the Netherlands, Prussia and
Spain are at war with France.
— Robespierre’s Committee of Public Safety repels back foreign invaders. Executes many “enemies of the people”
in France itself.
1794 — Robespierre is executed. France is governed by a Directory, a committee of five men.
1799 — Napoleon Bonaparte becomes the leader.

WOMEN’S REVOLUTION
From the very beginning, women were active participants in the events which brought about so many changes in
the French society. Most women of the third estate had to work for a living.Their wages were lower than those of
men. In order to discuss and voice their interests, women started their own political clubs and newspapers. One
of their main demand was that women must enjoy the same political rights as men. Some laws were introduced
to improve the position of women. Their struggle still continues in several parts of the world.It was finally in 1946
that women in France won the right to vote.

THE ABOLITION OF SLAVERY

There was a triangular slave trade between Europe, Africa and Americas. In the 18th century, there was little
criticism of slavery in France. No laws were passed against it. It was in 1794 that the convention freed all slaves.
But 10 years later slavery was reintroduced by Napoleon. It was finally in 1848 that slavery was abolished in the
French colonies.

THE REVOLUTION AND EVERYDAY LIFE

The years following 1789 in France saw many changes in the lives of men, women and children. The revolutionary
governments took it upon themselves to pass laws that would translate the ideals of liberty and equality into
everyday practice. One important law that came into effect was the abolition of censorship. The ideas of liberty
and democratic rights were the most important legacy of the French Revolution. These spread from France to the
rest of Europe during the 19th century.

NAPOLEON
In 1804, Napoleon crowned himself emperor of France. He set out to conquer neighbouring European countries,
dispossessing dynasties and creating kingdoms where he placed members of his family. He saw his role as a
moderniser of Europe. He was finally defeated at Waterloo in 1815.I. ASSESSMENT

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