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Where we left off in the last video, we saw that things were
already starting to get ugly.
As early as October of 1789 we saw the Women's March where
there were these suspicions that the royals were
hoarding the grain.
So they marched to Versailles and they essentially stormed
Versailles and forced the royals, forced Louis XVI and
Marie-Antoinette to move back to Paris.
Then things continued to be tense.
There were uprisings.
The king didn't know what to do.
He obviously didn't like the situation.
People became more and more suspicious of the king.
Nobles were leaving the country, they were emigrating
out of France.
The king and queen themselves started to get paranoid that,
gee, you know, maybe people have even more radical notions
than this constitutional monarchy.
Maybe we ourselves should escape.
So then we saw in 1791-- and let me write this all down in
a timeline.
We're now in 1791.
And this is review of the last video.
June, we saw the royals try to escape.
But they're captured in Varennes and they're sent back
to Paris to essentially to be in house
arrest in the Tuileries.
This is the building right here, it
doesn't exist anymore.
But if you go to Paris and if you visit the Louvre, you'll
see the Louvre opens across the street into
the Tuileries Garden.
And this is where that building used to be.
So the royals end up in house arrest at the Tuileries.
This was in June.
Then, in July in 1791, once again, all review from the
last video.
People said, hey they tried to escape, that's equivalent to
abdication of the throne.
They don't even want to be our king and queen and we don't
need kings and queens to begin with.
So the most radical elements, the most radical leftist
elements, in particular the Jacobins, they started getting
petitions in the Champ-de-Mars to essentially get people to
say, we don't need a royalty anymore.
We just need a republic.
We need a state without kings and queens.
But then, the National Assembly sent in some troops.
Things got ugly.
Rocks were thrown, shots were fired, 50 people died.
And you have the Champ-de-Mars Massacre.
So things are really, really heating up.
And then we saw at the end of 1791, to make things even
worse, we're not even at the end.
In August, we had the Declaration of Pillnitz, which
we saw was the rulers of Austria and Prussia saying
that they don't like what's happening to
the royals in France.
And for obvious reasons.
Well one, Leopold II was the brother of Marie-Antoinette.
But even more profound, they didn't like this notion of
people rising up against royalty.
That might give people in their own empires, or in their
own countries ideas about what to do with them.
So even though this might have not been taken seriously, this
was just a declaration by these guys.
This made people in France even more paranoid.
Now, while all of this was happening, you might have
remembered the Tennis Court Oath that occurred
several years ago.
Where they said we promise to create a constitution.
And so a constitution does get created.
So in 1791, the National Assembly, or the constituent
assembly, actually does create a constitution of 1791, which
establishes France as a constitutional monarchy.
So they're saying, yeah, we'll still have a king.
But it'll be more of a figure head.
Not necessarily someone who can create laws.
The National Assembly will be responsible for that.
The king will get a few abilities to veto legislation
and whatnot.
But most of their powers are removed.
So this was a constitutional monarchy.
And it's really along the lines of what was already
going on in Great Britain.
But this, on some levels, it's a major achievement.
They had that oath to create a constitution.
But on a whole other level, things are getting so ugly in
France, and in particular, in Paris.
The Revolution was really focused on what was going on
in Paris and Versailles.
Things were getting so ugly that this is the starting to
become a sideshow.
And to some degree, the revolutionaries have gone
beyond wanting just a constitutional monarchy.
They're starting to think about wanting a republic.
We saw that during the Champ-de-Mars Massacre.
People started signing signatures to
actually have a republic.
And then were fired on, which probably makes them want to
have a republic even more.
Now the other thing you might remember from the very first
video, is the thing that really precipitated this whole
Revolution.
Or at least in my mind, one of the main things that
precipitated this whole Revolution is
that France was broke.
And people are going hungry.
This is happening the whole time while all these
politicians and revolutionaries and royalties
are moving around and trying to kind of
strategize their position.
No one has solved either of these
problems the entire time.
There is no money in France.
There is a famine, people are going hungry.
And so pretty much everyone, whether you look at Louis XVI,
let me look at him again, it's always nice to remember what
he looked like.
Whether you're talking about Louis XVI, who's now in house
arrest. Or whether you're talking about many of the
revolutionaries, everyone starts to say, gee, how can we
solve this problem?
People are going to throw us out if we don't solve this
problem of hunger and being broke.
So as you'll see in history many times, the best solution
for that, or the perceived best solution,
is to start a war.
So they declare war on Austria.
And if you think about it from Louis XVI's point of view, he
thought of it as kind of a win-win situation.
If the war is successful, and he kind of through his weight
behind the war.
And this happened-- let me write down the dates.
That always helps me frame where it happens.
So this was kind of ending 1791, and then war is declared
in April, this is now 1792.
And then this, right here, is in April.
And if you think about it, this was a win-win, or at
least from Louis XVI's point of view, it was a win-win.
If they did will well in the war, it might make him more
popular, might make him stronger.
They might be able to plunder the wealth of other countries
to help to build France's coffer.
If the war goes badly and France loses, then what's
going to happen?
Then you're going to have Austria and probably the other
people you're at war with.
We'll see very quickly, France is going to be at war with
most of the powers of Europe.
But if you lose the war, these powers, which are controlled
by monarchs, they're going to essentially get rid of the
revolutionaries and probably put Louis XVI back in power.
So from Louis XVI's point of view, it was a good idea.
And for a lot of the revolutionaries, they wanted
to solve these two problems. So they said, hey yeah, that
would be good if we could plunder other countries.
If we could steal grain from other countries to make at
least the French less hungry.
And maybe we can spread the Revolution.
We can topple all of these other kings.
This won't just be a French Revolution, this will be an
all of Europe Revolution.
So they declared war on Austria.
Very quickly, they tried to attack the Austrian
Netherlands, which was kind of disjoint
from the rest of Austria.
So they attacked right there into the Austrian Netherlands.
Although they got kind of bogged down there.
It wasn't as successful as they thought it would be.
And Prussia, which as you might remember, participated
in the Declaration of Pillnitz, decided to enter the
war on the side of Austria.
So Prussia attacks and at first, it's pretty, pretty
successful.
It's able to make some headway into France.
And then the general in charge of the Prussian army, the Duke
of Brunswick, he makes the Brunswick Manifesto.
Let me write that down.
Which is essentially just like the Declaration of Pillnitz,
but it has a lot more teeth behind it now.
Because this dude, the Duke of Brunswick, he's actually, he's
got an army invading France.
And he declares, his manifesto is saying, I intend to
overthrow this whole revolutionary government.
And I intend to install the king again.
All of this happened in April of 1792.
Declare war on Austria seemed like a win-win for the king.
The revolutionaries wanted to spread the Revolution and
plunder other countries.
And then immediately, Prussia jumps in, starts attacking
France, and says we're going to install the king.
So you could imagine, this is making the revolutionaries
even more paranoid about what the king is up to.
They think that the king has some type of secret deal with
the Prussians, or with the other enemies that they're
going up against. So in August of 1792, it's only a few
months later, four or five months later.
In August of 1792, you essentially had
the Commune of Paris.
And when I say the Commune of Paris, it's really the
government of Paris at this time.
And it's been taken over by even more revolutionary
people, mainly Jacobins.
And they storm where the royal family is staying, at the
Tuileries, which is that building right here.
And this painting right here is a depiction of the
revolutionaries, mainly Jacobins, who are actually
storming the Tuileries.
And they imprison Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette.
Because they're like, hey the Prussians have an army, and
they've already declared the intention to install the king.
We're going to imprison the king because we don't know
what he's up do.
So they imprison-- my spelling-- imprison Louis XIV
and Marie-Antoinette.
And they're also able to do some machinations within the
actual National Assembly.
And there's actually a rump session of the National
Assembly, which means that a lot of the
opponents weren't there.
So it was a session where it was mainly the leftists, the
radicals, the Jacobins were there.
And so in August at that rump session, the assembly declares
a republic.
Which is equivalent to saying that Louis XVI
is no longer king.
And this nation we have, or this country we now have, will
never have a king.
It is now a republic.
It as a government without a king.
And while all of this was happening, you have these
gangs kind of going around the region around Paris.
And they're just trying and killing people that just seem
to be suspicious, seem to be allied in some way with the
nobility or with the king, or in someway a royalist. They
want eventually for the monarchy to come back.
And in those riots, in those arbitrary executions and
killings, they actually ended up killing over 1,400 people.
1,400 executed at this time.
So you can see, things are getting uglier
and uglier and uglier.
The king is imprisoned.
And you're going to see that he's not going to be
imprisoned long.
But it's not going to end well for him.
And essentially, the revolutionaries have said
France is now a republic.
All while they're at war with two major powers, with the
Austrians and the Prussians.
Now they are eventually able to hold off, and when I say
they, I'm talking about armies of France.
They are eventually able to hold off the
invading Prussian army.
They call it the Stalemate of Valmy, not clear who won.
The Prussians weren't that eager to go into France.
So they didn't push too hard or send too many more troops.
So for at least temporarily, the external threat was
diffused, if you want to call it that way.
And so the National Assembly went forth and said-- they got
rid of-- I mean, they had already declared a republic.
But they went even further.
So this is now, we're in September of 1792.
You had the Stalemate at Valmy.
And then the National Assembly, or the National
Convention said, hey, we're going to create a new
constitution.
So that constitution of 1791 did not last too long.
It lasted about a year.
So a new constitution.
The intent is to create a new constitution.
Now, while all that's said, this bloodshed that we saw
after they imprisoned Louis XVI, these kind of riots in
Paris and these arbitrary killings, this is just a
foreshadowing of much worse that's going to come in the
very next year.
By 1793-- let me write this down in a bloody color.
So 1793 we're in now.
So the National Assembly, the first thing that they do, or
maybe I should say even more particular.
In January of 1793, remember they've already deposed the
king, they have him imprisoned, they're at war
with these other countries that have stated the intention
to put the king back into power.
So the first thing they do is they execute Louis ZVI.
And this is a picture of the execution.
He was guillotined.
And this right here is Doctor Guillotine.
And it was actually invented, this right here is the
guillotine, and it was actually invented as a more
humane way to kill people.
At the time they said, when we kill people, it's not for them
to feel pain, it's more to just kill them.
So we'll use this very humane instrument called the
guillotine.
Where you use a blade to very quickly chop
off someone's head.
And it was invented by this physician right here.
But, the one of the first important people they got to
try it out was Louis XVI, guillotined in January.
And then in February, remember people are still going hungry,
they're still eager to spread the Revolution, they still
want to plunder other countries.
So in February, the National Assembly, or the National
Council, the revolutionary government, declares war on
Britain and the Dutch Republic.
You don't know who this is, I'm going to
tell you in a second.
And Dutch Republic.
Now you're probably saying, gee, how does France, this one
country right here, how is it able to have war against
Austria, Prussia?
Now declaring war against the Dutch and Great Britain.
And actually the month before, Spain and Portugal had
declared war, had kind of jumped in on the side of
Austria and Prussia.
So how does this one country, France, how does this one
revolutionary government fend itself off against the armies
of so many nations?
And the answer to that is that the revolutionary government
declared in February what they called the Levee en Masse.
And I'm not French, so I'm saying it wrong, I'm sure.
Which was essentially the first version of what we now
call the draft.
And they were able to actually, they actually said
every able-bodied young man in France who was unmarried will
now be in the army.
And so they were able to immediately raise several
hundreds of thousands of soldiers.
And actually within a couple of years, there's several
accounts of it, but it might have been over one million
plus soldiers.
Which is very different from how many of these other
kingdoms would raise their armies.
They would pay salaries to professional soldiers.
So these at the time were smaller armies than what
France was able to muster up through the revolutionary
government saying look, this is a government for the people
by the people.
So now you're not fighting for a king, you're
fighting for yourself.
You're fighting for your own representation so you don't
get so subjected by foreign kings.
So everyone jumped in the war effort.
So they essentially had the largest army in Europe.
But I keep repeating, all of this was in the context of
unrest throughout France.
There were royalists out there wanting to be counter
revolutionaries.
People were going hungry.
So to kind of, I guess, clamp down on things, in April of
1792, the National Assembly created the Committee of
Public Safety, which sounds like a very nice committee.
And they essentially become the default government, or we
can say the de facto government.
And it was put in control of this nice looking gentleman
right here, Maximilien Robespierre.
Seems like a very civilized fellow.
But really what the Committee of Public Safety was good at
was being hugely political, hugely paranoid.
And under especially Maximilien Robespierre's
control, who was especially paranoid, anyone-- if they
just caught a whiff of someone being not radical enough, or
maybe too radical, or someone I just didn't like, or someone
who might help depose me-- they just started
guillotining people.
So this is really the start of the Reign of Terror.
So roughly over the next year, on the order of, give or take,
16,000 people are guillotined.
They go to Doctor Guillotine's humane invention.
And they are only estimates of this.
There wasn't good accounting of this.
But it's believed that as many as 40,000 people were
summarily executed.
Which essentially means you're guilty of this, I know you're
guilty, hey, you over there with a gun, please shoot this
person for me.
So this was an extremely bloody time.
And just so you imagine, most of this was occurring in and
around Paris.
So all of a sudden, in one little city, it was a major
city, but you have tens of thousands of people being
massacred, just if this guy, or the people who are plotting
with this guy, or the people who are plotting against this
guy, thought or caught a whiff of you being not completely
loyal to the Revolution.
Now eventually, people eventually got suspicious of
Maximilien Robespierre.
They're saying, hey, all your paranoia is hurting the
Revolution more than helping it.
So then in the Thermidorian Reaction-- it sounds like it's
some type of a refrigerator or heater.
Now this right here, this is in July of 1794.
And it's called the Thermidorian Reaction, and I
might do a whole video on this, because the
revolutionary government, they actually
created a new calendar.
Where they renamed the month Thermidor, which was
essentially July, it was shifted a little bit.
And actually, it changed the number of hours in the day.
They would have 10 hours a day, 100 minutes an hour, 100
seconds a minute.
They would have three 10-day weeks per month.
So they had this whole calendar.
But Thermidor was the month of July.
So it was really the July Reaction, where people got
sick of Maximilien Robespierre.
So in 1794, July 1794, he too.
So what goes around comes around.
So this right here, this is 1794, July.
This right here is this nice-looking gentleman, and
he, too, gets guillotined.
Now, there's two other things that I want to point out.
I'll take a few steps back into 1793.
Just as a maybe a bit of a footnote.
We saw that in January Louis XVI was executed for, I guess,
depending on your opinion whether it was a
good or a bad thing.
In October Marie-Antoinette also executed.
So this is in 1793, also executed.
So nine months after her husband, executed.
And then as one kind of small footnote at this point, as you
can imagine, all of France was in unrest at the time.
And then in 1793, there was a revolt.
This was in July of 1793.
So it's a year before the end of the Reign of Terror, really
during the Reign of Terror.
In the port of Toulon, there was a revolt against the
revolutionary government.
And it was put down, mainly with the help of an aspiring
artillery captain.
An artillery captain is someone who's essentially in
charge of the cannons.
And that artillery captain, who was able to help put down
that revolt, and get a lot of, I guess, cred with the
revolutionary government, his name was-- I need to write it
someplace nice and new, and this is for foreshadowing of
the next video-- so in July of 1793, in Toulon, a new
artillery captain started to look like he really knows what
he's doing.
And his name is Napoleon Bonaparte.
And he's going to have a lot to do with the next video.