Everything about Reign Of Terror totally explained
» This article is about of the French Revolution. For other uses, see Reign of Terror (disambiguation).
The Reign of Terror (
5 September 1793 –
28 July 1794) or simply
The Terror (
French:
la Terreur) is a period fifteen months after the onset of the
French Revolution when struggles between rival factions led to mutual
radicalization. This led to violence and mass executions of enemies of the revolution.
The Reign of Terror started on
5 September 1793. The repression accelerated in June and July 1794, a period called
la Grande Terreur (The Great Terror), which ended
the coup of 9 Thermidor Year II (
27 July 1794), in which several key leaders of the Reign of Terror were executed, including
Saint-Just and
Robespierre. The Terror took the lives of about 40,000 French men and women.
In the Summer of 1794, France was threatened by internal enemies, conspirators and by foreign
European
monarchies fearing that the terror would spread. Almost all European governments in that era were based on
monarchy rather than the
popular sovereignty asserted by the revolutionary French. Foreign powers wanted to stifle the
democratic and
republican ideas, which they feared would pose a threat to their respective regimes' stability. Their armies were pressing on the border of France, leading the new Republic into a series of
wars against its monarchist neighbors.
Foreign powers threatened the
French population with retaliation if they didn't free King
Louis XVI and reinstate him as a monarch. The
Prussian
Duke of Brunswick threatened to "pilfer" Paris if the Parisians dared to touch the royal family, which infuriated Paris. Louis XVI was suspected of conspiring with foreign powers who wished to invade France and restore
absolute monarchy.
The former
French nobility, having lost its inherited privileges, had a stake in the failure of the Revolution. The
Roman Catholic Church as well was generally against the Revolution, which (through the
Civil Constitution of the Clergy) had turned the clergy into employees of the state and required they take an oath of loyalty to the nation. About half of the clergy, mainly in western France, refused the oath, making themselves known as
refractory priests or
non-jurors.
Members of the Catholic clergy and the former nobility entered into conspiracies, often invoking foreign military intervention. In the western region known as the
Vendée, priests and former nobles led
an insurrection, which began in spring 1793 and was supported by
Great Britain. The pacification of the region was so brutal that some historians claim the actions of the revolutionaries constitute
genocide and
crimes against humanity. The extension of civil war and the advance of foreign armies on national territory produced a political crisis, and increased the rivalry between the
Girondins and the more radical
Jacobins; the latter were eventually grouped in the parliamentary faction called
the Mountain, and had the support of the Parisian population.
The Terror
On
2 June Paris sections — encouraged by the
enragés ("enraged ones")
Jacques Roux and
Jacques Hébert — took over the
Convention, calling for administrative and political purges, a low fixed price for
bread, and a limitation of the electoral
franchise to
sans-culottes alone. With the backing of the
National Guard, they convinced the Convention to arrest 31
Girondin leaders, including
Jacques Pierre Brissot. Following these arrests, the Jacobins gained control of the
Committee of Public Safety on
10 June, installing the
revolutionary dictatorship. On
13 July the assassination of
Jean-Paul Marat — a Jacobin leader and
journalist known for his bloodthirsty
rhetoric — by
Charlotte Corday, a Girondin, resulted in further increase of Jacobin political influence.
Georges Danton, the leader of the
August 1792 uprising against the
King, was removed from the Committee. On
27 July Robespierre, self-styled as "the Incorruptible", made his entrance, quickly becoming the most influential member of the Committee as it moved to take radical measures against the Revolution's domestic and foreign enemies.
Meanwhile, on
24 June the Convention adopted the first republican constitution of France, the
French Constitution of 1793. It was ratified by public
referendum, but never put into force; like other laws, it was indefinitely suspended by the decree of October that the government of France would be "revolutionary until the peace". The eventual constitution under the
Directory was quite different.
Facing local revolts and foreign invasions in both the East and West of the country, the most urgent government business was the war. On
17 August the Convention voted for general
conscription, the
levée en masse, which mobilized all citizens to serve as soldiers or suppliers in the war effort. On
5 September the Convention institutionalized
The Terror: systematic and lethal repression of perceived enemies within the country.
On
25 December 1793 Robespierre stated:
5 February
1794 he stated, more succinctly:
9 September the Convention established
sans-culottes paramilitary forces, the
revolutionary armies, to force farmers to surrender grain demanded by the government. On
17 September the
Law of Suspects was passed, which authorized the charging of counter-revolutionaries with vaguely defined
crimes against liberty. On
29 September the Convention extended
price-fixing from grain and bread to other essential goods, and also fixed wages. The guillotine became the symbol of a string of executions: Louis XVI had already been guillotined before the start of the terror;
Marie-Antoinette, the Girondins,
Philippe Égalité,
Madame Roland and many others lost their lives under its blade. The
Revolutionary Tribunal summarily condemned thousands of people to death by the guillotine, while mobs beat other victims to death. Sometimes people died for their political opinions or actions, but many for little reason beyond mere suspicion, or because some others had a stake in getting rid of them. Most of the victims received an unceremonious trip to the guillotine in an open wooden cart (the
tumbrel). Loaded onto these carts, the victims would proceed through throngs of jeering men and women.
The victims of the Reign of Terror totaled approximately 40,000. Among people who were condemned by the revolutionary tribunals, about 8 percent were aristocrats, 6 percent clergy, 14 percent
middle class, and 70 percent were workers or peasants accused of hoarding, evading
the draft,
desertion, rebellion, and other purported crimes. Of these social groupings, the clergy of the Roman Catholic church suffered proportionately the greatest loss.
Another
anti-clerical uprising was made possible by the installment of the
Revolutionary Calendar on
24 October. Against Robespierre's concepts of
Deism and
Virtue, Hébert's (and Chaumette's)
atheist movement initiated a religious campaign in order to
dechristianize society. The program of dechristianisation waged against
Catholicism, and eventually against all forms of
Christianity, included the
deportation of clergy and the condemnation of many of them to death, the closing of churches, the institution of revolutionary and civic
cults, the large scale destruction of religious monuments, the outlawing of public and private worship and religious education, forced marriages of the clergy and forced abjurement of their
priesthood. The enactment of a law on
21 October 1793 made all suspected priests and all persons who harbored them liable to death on sight. On
7 June Robespierre, who had previously condemned the
Cult of Reason, advocated a new state religion and recommended that the Convention acknowledge the existence of
God. On the next day, the worship of the deistic
Supreme Being was inaugurated as an official aspect of the Revolution. Compared with Hébert's somewhat popular festivals, this austere new religion of Virtue was received with signs of hostility by the Parisian public.
The End
The repression brought thousands of suspects before the Paris
Revolutionary Tribunal, whose work was expedited by the
Law of 22 Prairial (
10 June 1794) which had led to the Terror. As a result of Robespierre's insistence on associating Terror with Virtue, his efforts to make the republic a morally united
patriotic community became equated with the endless bloodshed. Finally, after
26 June's decisive military victory over
Austria at the
Battle of Fleurus, Robespierre was overthrown by a conspiracy of certain members of the Convention on
9 Thermidor (
27 July).
The fall of Robespierre had been a combination of those who wanted more power for the Committee of Public Safety, and a more radical policy, than he was willing to allow, with the moderates who opposed the Revolutionary Government altogether. They had, between them, made the Law of 22 Prairial one of the charges against him, and after his fall, advocating Terror would mean adopting the policy of a convicted enemy of the Republic, endangering the advocate's own head.
The reign of the standing Committee of Public Safety was ended. New members were appointed the day after Robespierre's death, and term limits were imposed (a quarter of the committee retired every three months); its powers were reduced piece by piece.
This wasn't an entirely or immediately conservative period; no government of the Republic envisaged a Restoration, and Marat was reburied in the
Pantheon in September, although he'd been more extreme than Robespierre. But politicians united in opposing the Jacobins, and the period has become known as the
Thermidorian Reaction.
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