1 00:00:06,792 --> 00:00:10,501 What rights do people have, and where do they come from? 2 00:00:10,501 --> 00:00:14,310 Who gets to make decisions for others and on what authority? 3 00:00:14,310 --> 00:00:19,209 And how can we organize society to meet people's needs? 4 00:00:19,209 --> 00:00:21,868 These questions challenged an entire nation 5 00:00:21,868 --> 00:00:25,019 during the upheaval of the French Revolution. 6 00:00:25,019 --> 00:00:27,409 By the end of the 18th century, 7 00:00:27,409 --> 00:00:31,441 Europe had undergone a profound intellectual and cultural shift 8 00:00:31,441 --> 00:00:33,800 known as the Enlightenment. 9 00:00:33,800 --> 00:00:37,409 Philosophers and artists promoted reason and human freedom 10 00:00:37,409 --> 00:00:40,070 over tradition and religion. 11 00:00:40,070 --> 00:00:42,830 The rise of a middle class and printed materials 12 00:00:42,830 --> 00:00:45,209 encouraged political awareness, 13 00:00:45,209 --> 00:00:48,749 and the American Revolution had turned a former English colony 14 00:00:48,749 --> 00:00:51,450 into an independent republic. 15 00:00:51,450 --> 00:00:55,259 Yet France, one of the largest and richest countries in Europe 16 00:00:55,259 --> 00:00:59,969 was still governed by an ancient regime of three rigid social classes 17 00:00:59,969 --> 00:01:02,052 called Estates. 18 00:01:02,052 --> 00:01:06,769 The monarch King Louis XVI based his authority on divine right 19 00:01:06,769 --> 00:01:11,040 and granted special privileges to the First and Second Estates, 20 00:01:11,040 --> 00:01:13,781 the Catholic clergy, and the nobles. 21 00:01:13,781 --> 00:01:17,021 The Third Estate, middle class merchants and craftsmen, 22 00:01:17,021 --> 00:01:21,390 as well as over 20 million peasants, had far less power 23 00:01:21,390 --> 00:01:24,461 and they were the only ones who paid taxes, 24 00:01:24,461 --> 00:01:28,632 not just to the king, but to the other Estates as well. 25 00:01:28,632 --> 00:01:30,013 In bad harvest years, 26 00:01:30,013 --> 00:01:33,370 taxation could leave peasants with almost nothing 27 00:01:33,370 --> 00:01:39,190 while the king and nobles lived lavishly on their extracted wealth. 28 00:01:39,190 --> 00:01:43,272 But as France sank into debt due to its support of the American Revolution 29 00:01:43,272 --> 00:01:45,680 and its long-running war with England, 30 00:01:45,680 --> 00:01:47,542 change was needed. 31 00:01:47,542 --> 00:01:50,767 King Louis appointed finance minister Jacques Necker, 32 00:01:50,767 --> 00:01:52,381 who pushed for tax reforms 33 00:01:52,381 --> 00:01:57,432 and won public support by openly publishing the government's finances. 34 00:01:57,432 --> 00:02:00,713 But the king's advisors strongly opposed these initiatives. 35 00:02:00,713 --> 00:02:05,132 Desperate for a solution, the king called a meeting of the Estates-General, 36 00:02:05,132 --> 00:02:07,902 an assembly of representatives from the Three Estates, 37 00:02:07,902 --> 00:02:12,091 for the first time in 175 years. 38 00:02:12,091 --> 00:02:16,583 Although the Third Estate represented 98% of the French population, 39 00:02:16,583 --> 00:02:20,102 its vote was equal to each of the other Estates. 40 00:02:20,102 --> 00:02:25,462 And unsurprisingly, both of the upper classes favored keeping their privileges. 41 00:02:25,462 --> 00:02:28,021 Realizing they couldn't get fair representation, 42 00:02:28,021 --> 00:02:29,913 the Third Estate broke off, 43 00:02:29,913 --> 00:02:32,003 declared themselves the National Assembly, 44 00:02:32,003 --> 00:02:37,503 and pledged to draft a new constitution with or without the other Estates. 45 00:02:37,503 --> 00:02:39,972 King Louis ordered the First and Second Estates 46 00:02:39,972 --> 00:02:41,782 to meet with the National Assembly, 47 00:02:41,782 --> 00:02:45,912 but he also dismissed Necker, his popular finance minister. 48 00:02:45,912 --> 00:02:48,833 In response, thousands of outraged Parisians 49 00:02:48,833 --> 00:02:53,183 joined with sympathetic soldiers to storm the Bastille prison, 50 00:02:53,183 --> 00:02:57,447 a symbol of royal power and a large storehouse of weapons. 51 00:02:57,447 --> 00:03:00,103 The Revolution had begun. 52 00:03:00,103 --> 00:03:02,385 As rebellion spread throughout the country, 53 00:03:02,385 --> 00:03:04,724 the feudal system was abolished. 54 00:03:04,724 --> 00:03:07,994 The Assembly's Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen 55 00:03:07,994 --> 00:03:10,614 proclaimed a radical idea for the time - 56 00:03:10,614 --> 00:03:15,675 that individual rights and freedoms were fundamental to human nature 57 00:03:15,675 --> 00:03:19,494 and government existed only to protect them. 58 00:03:19,494 --> 00:03:22,775 Their privileges gone, many nobles fled abroad, 59 00:03:22,775 --> 00:03:26,864 begging foreign rulers to invade France and restore order. 60 00:03:26,864 --> 00:03:30,694 And while Louis remained as the figurehead of the constitutional monarchy, 61 00:03:30,694 --> 00:03:32,984 he feared for his future. 62 00:03:32,984 --> 00:03:37,135 In 1791, he tried to flee the country but was caught. 63 00:03:37,135 --> 00:03:41,126 The attempted escape shattered people's faith in the king. 64 00:03:41,126 --> 00:03:45,405 The royal family was arrested and the king charged with treason. 65 00:03:45,405 --> 00:03:46,986 Queen Marie Antoinette, 66 00:03:46,986 --> 00:03:51,507 a foreigner long mocked as Madame Deficit for her extravagant reputation, 67 00:03:51,507 --> 00:03:54,066 was publicly beheaded. 68 00:03:54,066 --> 00:03:57,235 After a trial, so was the once revered king, 69 00:03:57,235 --> 00:03:59,333 ending 1,000 years of monarchy 70 00:03:59,333 --> 00:04:02,406 and launching the first French republic 71 00:04:02,406 --> 00:04:07,625 governed by the motto, "Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite." 72 00:04:07,625 --> 00:04:09,977 But the Revolution would not end there. 73 00:04:09,977 --> 00:04:13,099 Some leaders, not content with just changing the government, 74 00:04:13,099 --> 00:04:16,396 sought to completely transform French society - 75 00:04:16,396 --> 00:04:17,796 its religion, 76 00:04:17,796 --> 00:04:18,909 its street names, 77 00:04:18,909 --> 00:04:20,356 even its calendar. 78 00:04:20,356 --> 00:04:22,226 As multiple factions formed, 79 00:04:22,226 --> 00:04:26,416 the extremist Jacobins lead by Maximilien Robespierre 80 00:04:26,416 --> 00:04:28,726 launched a Reign of Terror 81 00:04:28,726 --> 00:04:33,226 to suppress the slightest dissent executing over 20,000 people 82 00:04:33,226 --> 00:04:36,026 before the Jacobin's own downfall. 83 00:04:36,026 --> 00:04:39,817 Meanwhile, France found itself at war with neighboring monarchs 84 00:04:39,817 --> 00:04:43,726 seeking to strangle the Revolution before it spread. 85 00:04:43,726 --> 00:04:48,237 Amidst the chaos, a general named Napoleon Bonaparte took charge 86 00:04:48,237 --> 00:04:53,537 becoming Emperor as he claimed to defend the Revolution's democratic values. 87 00:04:53,537 --> 00:04:56,857 All in all, the Revolution saw three constitutions 88 00:04:56,857 --> 00:04:59,876 and five governments within ten years, 89 00:04:59,876 --> 00:05:03,657 followed by decades alternating between monarchy and revolt 90 00:05:03,657 --> 00:05:06,927 before the next Republic formed in 1871. 91 00:05:06,927 --> 00:05:09,716 And while we celebrate the French Revolution's ideals, 92 00:05:09,716 --> 00:05:12,977 we still struggle with many of the same basic questions 93 00:05:12,977 --> 00:05:15,498 raised over two centuries ago.