In late July and early August 1789, a wave of anxiety known as The Great Anxiety (French: la Grande Peur) enveloped the French countryside during the French Revolution. Click for PDF and Google Slides worksheets.
This week (July 19) in 1789, five days after the infamousstorming of the Bastille prison by a...Kauffmann, Bruce
A Case Study: Storming the Bastille Events of the night of July 13, 1789 Reasons for the attack on the Bastille the next morning The stubbornness of the governor of the fortress Celebrations on the night of July 14th Sparks tremendous popular revolution all over France G. “The Great Fear...
法国大革命[英文] The French Revolution TheFrenchRevolution -KeyConcepts- I.RevolutionaryIdeas -IdeologicalFoundationforPoliticalLiberalism- A.Liberty Thenotionofindividual humanrightsAnewtypeofgovernmentinwhichthepeoplearesovereignTheimportanceofarepresentativeassemblyTheimportanceofawritten...
and the Great Fear. As a result of this revolution there many effects , immediate and long term. The immediate effects were the declaration of rights of man, abolishing of olds reign, execution of king and queen, the reign of terror, and war and forming of the citizen-army. The long te...
Destruction of the prison, people were in search of weapons, seen as the true start of the French Revolution. July 14th, 1789 The Great Fear A wave of senseless panic that spread through the French countryside after the storming of the Bastille in 1789 ...
Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité: The French Revolution * 3. The Bastille and the Great Fear Shortly after the National Assembly formed, its members took the Tennis Court Oath, swearing that they would not relent in their efforts until a new constitution had been agreed upon. The National Assembl...
Libert, Egalit, Fraternit: FrenchRevolution GreatFear Shortly after NationalAssembly formed, its members took TennisCourt Oath, swearing effortsuntil newconstitution had been agreed upon. NationalAssembly’s revolutionary spirit galvanized France, manifesting differentways. TennisCourt Oath Jacques-LouisDavid ...
Georges Lefebvre (1874–1959) was one of the most important twentieth-century historians of the French Revolution. His books include The Great Fear of 1789: Rural Panic in Revolutionary France (Princeton). 原文摘录 ··· "The patricians began the Revolution," wrote Chateaubriand; "the plebeian...
Several other regions of France followed this event and a revolutionary movement was started. There was chaos all over. Peasants burned downcastlesof the nobles; some wealthy people left their privileges and ran away. There was a wave of violence across Europe known as the Great Fear. The viol...