THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

 It is the year 1789 Europe is in the midst of many endless wars. The field has changed, hundreds of thousands of people have died, and the harvest has not been good recently. War is bad for agriculture, for one thing, but also the climate has not been very cohesive. Reformers in all the Dutch provinces and Habsburg Netherlands want to be like the new United States, while the Poles want the abolition of their homeland to end. And one empire was the hero of all foreign rebels because of its support for the rebels in the thirteen colonies of North America. France stands for freedom and democracy and brotherhood - in North America, however. At home, he remained a perfect monarch, and he had no money in all the wars. His homeland was full of beggars - as was the case in many rural parts of Europe as the nobility grew up in wealth. And the poor and middle class paid almost every tax deduction to support the ongoing war. All in all, by 1789, France - the largest and most populous country on the continent - was in crisis. [Introduction] In 1789 Louis XVI ruled France.

He loved to hunt and click on machine tools, especially locks. His wife Marie Antoinette was the daughter of Maria Theresa of the Habsburg Empire and the sister of Joseph II, their current ruler. In a world where the marriage of two powerful monarchs has long been regarded as a key factor in their stability and prosperity, what could be at stake? Marie Antoinette was a large consumer who had a problem with regard to the poor France had many. As poor yields increased the price of bread, many families could not afford to eat, or they could only eat 50% cut bread. Responding to the affordable bread, Marie-Antoinette reportedly said, “Qu'ils mangent de la brioche,” which is a good opportunity to express my amazing French way of life. And again, talking about brioche, inland today. In English, the line is often translated "let them eat cake," but as you can see, brioche is not a direct cake. It is just a different kind of delicious bread. Mmm! It's fun. Fluffy, eggy, is really simple. I don't understand why farmers can't just eat these things ... Stan says I'm hopeless, that is, can I get one of those brioche? In any case, the whole of France was shattered. Now, its reformers were trying to revise the tax system so that the church and its nobles could pay at least some of the taxes. But you will recall that there was a panel of judges, Parliament, who had to register royal laws, and they refused to do so. On the other hand, the bankers refused to give the State any additional loans. Which led to a financial crisis.

Let's go to the Thought of Thought. 1. In response to this problem, Louis XVI was forced to call the Estates-General 2. - that is, a group of clergy representatives (first estate), 3. aristocracy (second place), 4. and the common people. people (third inheritance). 5. In cities, towns and villages across the state, people would gather to present their grievances through cahiers or registration documents 6. so that their representatives could take them to this historic meeting. 7. Meanwhile, dissatisfaction grew as Marie-Antoinette pretended to be a shepherd 8. on a virtual farm built in the suburbs of Versailles 9. so she could absorb the natural atmosphere and play at work so many were forced to do what she did. 10. On May 5, 1789 the members of the Estates-General met at a grand ceremony in Versailles to begin negotiations. 11. Louis XVI wrote of events on that day: “Nothing happened. He went hunting. ” 12. It just goes to show you that history is about perspective. 13. Members of the Third Party have already protested that their single vote as a party will always be won by two votes in the first two rounds. 14 So the members of the third building retreated to a nearby tennis court, calling themselves the National Assembly 15. and claiming to represent all the people of France better than the Estates General. 16. These representatives swore (called the Tennis Court Oath) that they would not disperse until they formed a nation for each citizen instead of a monarchy.

Therefore, the National Council's decision to suspend the reform process was supported by ordinary people — many of whom were outraged by injustice and poverty. On July 14, the people of Paris seized the Bastille fortress — a barracks full of weapons and a symbol of imperial authority to imprison anyone unjustly. And in the countryside the farmers took chateaux and destroyed the titles of world officials and farmers' services. The frightened nobles met on August 4, 1789, and relinquished their rights as ruling kings.

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