User:Mathglot/sandbox/Section structure of Révolution française

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This is not an article, or a draft of an article. This is a User space subpage created as an addendum to this discussion at Talk:French Revolution, and intended for the improvement of the French Revolution article by providing a comparative view on how French Wikipedia has approached this topic in their article: Révolution française. See Talk:French Revolution for discussion and details. Compare the Table of Contents of the English and French articles:

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  • Compare with: French Revolution#toc – the Table of Contents of our en-wiki article

This page preserves the original hierarchy and section titles (translated into English) of the French article, but without any body content. Only the lead has been translated. The intent is, for editors at the French Revolution article to be able to see how the French article organization compares with the structure of the en-wiki article. Specifically, this page contains three types of content:

  • the lead of the French article, translated into English
  • all of the original section headers from the French article, translated into English (but no section content)
  • {{Main}} and {{Further}} links, added to most of the sections.

The first two types are translated content from the French article. The third type involves new content not in the original: since the sections below are empty, I added some Main/Further links to give a sense of some of the central points of the content of those sections in the original. But only the first two types faithfully represent content at the French article.

The translated lead and section structure of the French article follows:

The French Revolution was a period of large-scale social and political upheaval in France, in its colonies and in Europe at the end of the eighteenth century. The period usually included extends from the opening of the Estates General of 1789 on 5 May 1789, to, at the latest, the coup d'État of Napoleon I on 9 November 1799. This period in the history of France put an end to the Ancien Régime by replacing the absolute monarchy with a series of more or less defined regimes, including the French First Republic a little more than three years after the storming of the Bastille.

The French Revolution brought forth completely new political forms, notably via the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789 which proclaimed the equality of citizens before the law, fundamental liberties, and the sovereignty of the Nation, and formed around a State. As a "national myth", French revolutionary values and institutions still dominate French political life. The Revolution led to the suppression of the society of orders (feudalism, and its attendant seigneurial privileges), a greater division of land ownership, limitations of the exercise of political power, the rebalancing of relations between Church and state, and the redefinition of family structures.

It was marked by periods of great violence, notably during the Reign of Terror, during the attempted counterrevolution of the Vendee uprising in which several hundred thousand people died, during the federalist revolts of 1793, or in the struggles between rival revolutionary factions, which resulted in the deaths of the main revolutionary figures one after another.

The French Revolutionary Wars, which affected a large part of continental Europe, propagated revolutionary ideas and contributed to the abolition of the society of orders in Western Europe, in the "sister republics" and then throughout Europe.[1]

The French Revolution "differs from other revolutions in its universalist demands in that it is destined to benefit all humanity".[2][page needed][a] From its inception, the universal scope of the ideas of the French Revolution [fr] was proclaimed by its supporters and the extent of its consequences was emphasized by its detractors.[b].

The Revolution remained an object of debate[3][page needed] as well as a controversial point of reference throughout the two centuries that followed it, in France and in the world.[c] It created immediate and lasting divisions between the supporters of revolutionary ideas and the defenders of the old order, as well as between anti-clericalism and the Catholic Church. It is considered by the majority of historians to be one of the major events in world history.[7][8]

It marked the beginning of a period of great institutional instability in France and in Europe during which three constitutional monarchies, two short-lived republics, and two empires succeeded one another until the definitive birth of the French Republic in the 1870s. Contemporary history is marked by the legacy of the French Revolution, as the historical event which most revolutionary movements perceive as a precursor event.[1] Its lofty words and cultural symbols became the banners of other major upheavals in modern history, including that of the Russian Revolution more than a century later.[9]

Chronology and periodization edit

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France in the 1780s edit

French society edit

Resistance to absolute monarchy and desire for reform edit

Further information: Precursors of the French Revolution [fr] and French Pre-Revolution [fr]

1789: end of the absolute monarchy and the Ancien Regime edit

Further information: Precursors of the French Revolution [fr]

Revolution in law (May 1789 – early July) edit

Electoral campaign for deputies to the Estates General edit

Deputies of the Third Estate oppose the king edit

Summer 1789 edit

July Crisis edit

Further information: Paris riots of 12 July 1789 [fr]

Storming of the Bastille – July 14 edit

Municipal uprisings edit

Fear in the French countryside and night of August 4, 1789 edit

Women's march on Versailles – 5 and 6 October 1789 edit

Rebirth of France edit

Administrative reorganization edit

The religious question edit

Further information: Decree against refractory clergy [fr]

Failure of the Constitutional Monarchy edit

Festival of the Federation edit

Varennes and its aftermath edit

Constitution of 1791 edit

Legislative Assembly edit

Social and religious unrest edit

Declaration of war edit

Royal vetos edit

10 August 1792 edit

Forces present at the Convention edit

French First Republic edit

Girondists and montagnards edit

Trial and death of Louis XVI edit

Vendée wars edit

End of the girondists edit

Republic in Danger – 1793 edit

Reign of Terror edit

Laws, popular movements and governmental consolidation of power edit

Victories and repressions edit

Defeat of the Vendée edit

Government stabilization and popular crisis edit

Revolutionary Government edit

Dechristianization edit

Struggle among the factions edit

Conflict of Germinal, Year II – March 1794 edit

Outcome and consequences edit

Robespierre and the Terror edit

Thermidorian Reaction 1794 – 1795 edit

The Directory (October 26, 1795 - November 9, 1799) edit

Notes and References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Aulard: "differs from other revolutions..." – diffère des autres révolutions par ses exigences universalistes en ce qu'elle est destinée à bénéficier à toute l'humanité.
  2. ^ This was the case in Edmund Burke's influential work, "Reflections on the Revolution in France" published in London in 1790.[full citation needed]
  3. ^ In particular, in those works which looked into the question of revolutionary violence. See for example, Furet (2013)[4] Martin (2006)[5], or Hanson (2009).[6]

References edit

Appendixes edit

Bibliography edit

  • Aulard, François Alphonse (1901). "II L'Idée républicaine et démocratique au début de la Revolution". Histoire politique de la révolution française. Origines et développement de la Démocratie et de la République (1789-1804). Par A. Aulard (in French). Armand Colin. p. 47. OCLC 421840138.

About the period edit

Work instruments edit

Major issues edit

Historiographical aspects edit

Revolution and culture edit

Revolution and science edit

Musical comedy edit

Related Articles edit

General edit

Lists edit

External links edit