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What caused the French Revolution? - Tom Mullaney

  • 0:07 - 0:11
    What rights do people have,
    and where do they come from?
  • 0:11 - 0:14
    Who gets to make decisions for others
    and on what authority?
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    And how can we organize society
    to meet people's needs?
  • 0:19 - 0:22
    These questions challenged
    an entire nation
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    during the upheaval
    of the French Revolution.
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    By the end of the 18th century,
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    Europe had undergone a profound
    intellectual and cultural shift
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    known as the Enlightenment.
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    Philosophers and artists promoted
    reason and human freedom
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    over tradition and religion.
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    The rise of a middle class
    and printed materials
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    encouraged political awareness,
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    and the American Revolution had turned
    a former English colony
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    into an independent republic.
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    Yet France, one of the largest and richest
    countries in Europe
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    was still governed by an ancient regime
    of three rigid social classes
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    called Estates.
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    The monarch King Louis XVI
    based his authority on divine right
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    and granted special privileges
    to the First and Second Estates,
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    the Catholic clergy, and the nobles.
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    The Third Estate, middle class merchants
    and craftsmen,
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    as well as over 20 million peasants,
    had far less power
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    and they were the only ones
    who paid taxes,
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    not just to the king,
    but to the other Estates as well.
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    In bad harvest years,
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    taxation could leave peasants
    with almost nothing
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    while the king and nobles lived lavishly
    on their extracted wealth.
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    But as France sank into debt due to
    its support of the American Revolution
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    and its long-running war with England,
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    change was needed.
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    King Louis appointed
    finance minister Jacques Necker,
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    who pushed for tax reforms
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    and won public support by openly
    publishing the government's finances.
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    But the king's advisors
    strongly opposed these initiatives.
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    Desperate for a solution, the king called
    a meeting of the Estates-General,
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    an assembly of representatives
    from the Three Estates,
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    for the first time in 175 years.
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    Although the Third Estate represented
    98% of the French population,
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    its vote was equal to each
    of the other Estates.
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    And unsurprisingly, both of the upper
    classes favored keeping their privileges.
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    Realizing they couldn't
    get fair representation,
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    the Third Estate broke off,
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    declared themselves
    the National Assembly,
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    and pledged to draft a new constitution
    with or without the other Estates.
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    King Louis ordered the First
    and Second Estates
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    to meet with the National Assembly,
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    but he also dismissed Necker,
    his popular finance minister.
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    In response, thousands
    of outraged Parisians
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    joined with sympathetic soldiers
    to storm the Bastille prison,
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    a symbol of royal power
    and a large storehouse of weapons.
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    The Revolution had begun.
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    As rebellion spread
    throughout the country,
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    the feudal system was abolished.
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    The Assembly's Declaration
    of the Rights of Man and Citizen
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    proclaimed a radical idea for the time --
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    that individual rights and freedoms
    were fundamental to human nature
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    and government existed
    only to protect them.
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    Their privileges gone,
    many nobles fled abroad,
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    begging foreign rulers to invade France
    and restore order.
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    And while Louis remained as the figurehead
    of the constitutional monarchy,
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    he feared for his future.
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    In 1791, he tried to flee the country
    but was caught.
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    The attempted escape shattered
    people's faith in the king.
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    The royal family was arrested
    and the king charged with treason.
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    After a trial,
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    the once-revered king
    was publicly beheaded,
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    signaling the end of one thousand
    years of monarchy
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    and finalizing the September 21st
    declaration of the first French republic,
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    governed by the motto
    "liberté, égalité, fraternité."
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    Nine months later,
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    Queen Marie Antoinette,
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    a foreigner long-mocked
    as "Madame Déficit"
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    for her extravagant reputation,
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    was executed as well.
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    But the Revolution would not end there.
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    Some leaders, not content
    with just changing the government,
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    sought to completely transform
    French society --
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    its religion,
    its street names,
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    even its calendar.
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    As multiple factions formed,
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    the extremist Jacobins
    lead by Maximilien Robespierre
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    launched a Reign of Terror
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    to suppress the slightest dissent,
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    executing over 20,000 people
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    before the Jacobin's own downfall.
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    Meanwhile, France found itself
    at war with neighboring monarchs
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    seeking to strangle the Revolution
    before it spread.
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    Amidst the chaos, a general named
    Napoleon Bonaparte took charge,
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    becoming Emperor as he claimed to defend
    the Revolution's democratic values.
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    All in all, the Revolution
    saw three constitutions
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    and five governments within ten years,
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    followed by decades
    alternating between monarchy and revolt
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    before the next Republic formed in 1871.
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    And while we celebrate
    the French Revolution's ideals,
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    we still struggle with many
    of the same basic questions
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    raised over two centuries ago.
Title:
What caused the French Revolution? - Tom Mullaney
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-caused-the-french-revolution-tom-mullaney

What rights do people have, and where do they come from? Who gets to make decisions for others, and on what authority? And how can we organize society to meet people’s needs? Tom Mullaney shows how these questions challenged an entire nation during the upheaval of the French Revolution.

Lesson by Tom Mullaney, animation by Sashko Danylenko.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:33
  • The English transcript was updated on 12/2/2016. 10 subtitles were altered, between 03:45 and 04:11, to reflect changes in the video. The subsequent subtitles were retimed and synchronized with the rest of the video (with no content changes).

English subtitles

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