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The French Revolution History Channel #1

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    Male Narrator: At the height of the 18th century
    the most glorious kingdom in Europe would
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    face a mighty foe – the power of its own
    people.
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    One man would rise to inspire the nation to
    cast aside a reluctant King and a hated Queen.
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    And a new Republic would be born in blood.
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    The blood of the French Revolution.
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    1794, Francis Conciergerie prison.
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    An impenetrable fortress on the banks of the
    Seine River.
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    Dank, rat-infested.
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    It is known as deaths antechamber.
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    Inside the voice of a young nation is about
    to be silenced.
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    As his hair is shorn and his neck laid bare
    for the blade of the guillotine, Maximilien
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    Robespierre prepares to pay for the cataclysm
    left in his wake.
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    [explosion] The explosion of events that became
    the French Revolution.
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    Man: French Revolution is this extraordinary
    moment when people began to believe that you
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    could actually recreate almost everything
    in a society that you could not only change
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    the politics, the institutions, but you could
    change human nature itself through political
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    action.
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    Man: The French Revolution really does constitute
    the crossroads of the modern world where everything
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    begins to turn in a different direction.
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    Narrator: The Revolution saw a feudal land
    turn its back on aristocratic tradition and
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    chart a violent new course for the future.
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    It would shake the very foundation of Europe
    and its impact would be felt across the seas.
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    Man: The French Revolution is the most important
    event in Western history.
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    There are developments that can rival it like
    the Industrial Revolution, like capitalism,
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    but if you mean an event, I can't think of
    anything more important.
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    Man: It was the Revolution that upset things
    the most.
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    I mean, again, when you consider that it got
    rid of the Catholic Church.
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    It got rid of Christianity.
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    It got rid of the nobility.
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    It got rid of the King.
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    It got rid of all these things.
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    Narrator: The French Revolution would bring
    bread to the poor, democracy to France, and
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    would establish a whole new order of society.
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    But progress would come at a price.
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    Man: It was really a moment of extraordinary
    hope, extraordinary ambition, and then it
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    turned into this most horrific tragedy.
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    Narrator: Now broken and defeated, Robespierre,
    not two days before, stood atop his world
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    presiding over the greatest and bloodiest
    revolution Europe had ever known.
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    So true to its ideals, he was called the incorruptible.
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    So powerful, his slightest utterance could
    cloak an entire city in fear.
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    A master orator, Robespierre's words were
    his weapon.
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    Now silenced by a bullet to the jaw he awaits
    the same swift and brutal end he has brought
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    down upon so many others.
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    The Revolution is about to eat its own.
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    ♪ ♪ No one could have foreseen the turbulent
    times ahead.
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    On one spring day in 1770, the Chateau of
    Versailles fills to its gilded rafters with
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    the glittering crowds of the Royal Court.
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    Completed in 1682, Versailles was the crowning
    masterpiece of King Louis the 14th.
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    To put some distance between himself and his
    subjects, Louis the 14th transplanted the
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    capital of France to this small town twelve
    miles west of Paris where he had built the
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    most magnificent palace in all of Europe.
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    For nearly 100 years, it has been the seat
    of the nation's unwavering monarchy.
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    And today it is host to a very important wedding.
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    King Louis the 15th's grandson, Prince Louis
    Capet, next in line for the throne, is about
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    to take a bride.
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    Just 15-years-old on the eve of his wedding,
    Louis Capat is bashful and hesitant with few
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    of the characteristics expected of a future
    king, much less a husband.
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    Man: Louie was this pudgy, shy, painfully
    inadequate 15-year-old with absolutely no
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    social graces at all.
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    Louie the 15th's mistress Madame du Barry
    called him a fat, ill-bred boy.
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    Basically he was just a schlub.
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    Man: It was very hard for Louie to come to
    decisions.
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    He dithered incessantly.
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    He was always ready to be persuaded by the
    last person he had talked to.
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    Again, those are usually not considered good
    leadership qualities.
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    Narrator: Louie's marriage is a political
    union between Austria's royal family, the
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    Habsburgs, and his own, the Bourbons.
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    The wedding symbolizes the end of an ancient
    rivalry and the beginning of new regional
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    ties.
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    The young bride-to-be arrives in France a
    wide-eyed and pretty fourteen-year-old girl…
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    ….Marie Antoinette.
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    Man: Marie Antoinette is an archduchess of
    Austria.
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    She's the youngest daughter of the empress
    Maria Theresa and she comes to France as part
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    of a marriage deal which represents a great
    reversal of alliances whereby for the first
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    time in living memory France and Austria become
    allies rather than enemies.
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    Narrator: Marie comes to France as a political
    gesture, but as a teenager, she has little
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    interest in political affairs.
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    Man: Well, when Marie Antoinette came to Versailles
    she was very young.
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    She didn't know a great deal about the country
    she was coming to.
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    She didn't know about the customs.
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    She didn't know about the court.
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    She was certainly a headstrong girl; a very
    lively girl, but she was still a girl.
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    [female interpreter] When Marie Antoinette
    comes to Versailles, she is just a teenager.
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    She is blonde with blue eyes.
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    She is pretty and she likes being attractive
    to people.
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    And she comes with the intention of winning
    over her husband and her new family.
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    [thunder crashes] Narrator: On the night of
    the wedding, there is an ominous storm.
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    But inside, the grandeur of the ceremony lights
    up the palace as the newlyweds make their
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    way to the Royal bedroom.
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    ♪ ♪ In an age-old ceremony, to encourage
    the conception of an heir, the King's couriers
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    are present as the awkward young couple is
    revealed in the marriage bed for the first
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    time.
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    [crowd clapping] The crowd is delighted and
    expectations are high, but once the curtains
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    are drawn it's clear that an heir will not
    be so easily produced.
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    Man: Louis was not only not interested in
    ruling, Louis wasn't particularly interested
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    in loving either.
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    And he paid her no attention on the first
    nights or even further into their marriage.
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    Narrator: Many years will pass before the
    marriage is finally consummated.
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    The lack of an heir will soon spark gossip
    all across the kingdom that will continue
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    to plague the couple for years to come.
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    The grand wedding gala continues for days,
    but outside the gates of Versailles, there
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    is hardly cause for celebration.
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    Years of mismanagement by the monarchy have
    left the French people deprived and hungry.
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    Nearly a decade earlier, King Louis the 15th
    lost the Seven Years War battling Great Britain
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    over territory in North America.
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    The ill-fated conflict all but bankrupted
    France of money and prestige leaving the country's
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    coffers drain even as its population is growing
    bigger everyday.
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    With diseases like the plague a distant memory,
    fewer people are dying, but more and more
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    of them are hungry.
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    Man: France grew from 20 million to 26 million
    in the 18th century after having rung only
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    1 million in the preceding two centuries.
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    That put tremendous strain on what was there
    and so there was a lot of anxiety.
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    Narrator: Four years after the royal wedding,
    Prince Louis's grandfather loses his final
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    battle with smallpox.
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    Louis the 15th dies a defeated and unpopular
    king and leaves behind a country on the brink
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    of chaos.
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    In a lavish ceremony, young Prince Louis inherits
    the throne and is crowned King Louis the 16th.
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    Despite his insistence on a grandiose coronation,
    Louis is all too aware that he is woefully
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    unprepared for the job.
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    Man: Louis the 16th, the moment his grandfather
    dies and it suddenly is clear that he's king,
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    he doesn't know what to do.
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    He feels as if the world is falling in upon
    him.
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    So, although he's been educated in the full
    expectation of becoming king, he doesn't feel
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    ready for it.
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    ♪ ♪ Narrator: For a kingdom in crisis,
    Louis the 16th is the worst man to have on
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    the watch.
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    The twenty-year-old king prays, 'protect us
    Lord for we reign too young.'
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    ♪ ♪ Ensconced in their royal apartments
    in Versailles, Louis and Marie begin their
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    promising new lives as young monarchs while
    only 12 miles away, in the city of Paris,
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    another new era is dawning.
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    One that is on a collision course with the
    monarchy itself.
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    It is a dangerous new age of ideas: The Age
    of Enlightenment.
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    [majestic music] As the royal carriage approaches
    the esteemed Louis-le-Grand College, crowds
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    gather for a glimpse of grandeur.
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    It is a day to welcome the newly crowned king,
    Louis the 16th, and his lovely Austrian wife
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    to the city of Paris.
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    And at the head of the welcome party, is a
    promising young law student, Maximilien Robespierre.
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    Man: When Robespierre was a school boy, the
    king visited the college and Robespierre gave
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    a Latin address to the king.
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    So he actually spoke to Louis the 16th when
    he was a teenager.
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    Narrator: As Robespierre respectfully delivers
    his Latin soliloquy, the King hardly notices
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    the boy.
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    But years later, their fates will again intertwine
    under very different, much darker circumstances.
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    Man: It was one of these rituals that take
    place in every school and yet of course it
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    was charged with irony because here you have
    the young Robespierre reading this discourse
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    in honor of the man he would later kill.
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    Narrator: For now, the welcome is warm and
    the flattery sincere.
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    The visit from the Royals may have won the
    hearts of the people, but their minds are
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    leaning increasingly in an entirely different
    direction.
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    Since the Middle Ages, European society had
    been broken into three distinct classes dictated
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    by birth.
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    There was a great divide between the wealth
    of the nobility and the clergy and the poverty
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    of the peasants.
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    Then, at the blossoming of the 18th century,
    reason and science began to challenge this
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    age-old tradition.
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    Swept up on a current of innovation and new
    literature, Paris now radiates as the philosophical
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    center of the world.
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    The city pulses with a great flourishing of
    knowledge.
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    A shining beacon of possibility.
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    It is the Age of Enlightenment.
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    Man: The Enlightenment is a movement which
    says don't trust authority.
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    Don't trust anything that you've been told
    by anybody else at all.
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    Think it out for yourself.
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    Test it for yourself.
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    Woman: In old regime Europe, you were told
    what to think.
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    You were given information from above by your
    rulers, by your priests.
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    And so the idea that you could map out all
    of human knowledge and then have access to
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    it was revolutionary.
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    Narrator: In elite salons across Paris, aristocrats
    gathered to discuss Enlightenment authors
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    in the burgeoning Age of Reason.
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    Voltaire.
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    Rousseau.
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    Fresh voices who championed liberty, control
    of one's own destiny and above all equality.
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    The passion for this new literature is highest
    among the upper-class, But as Enlightenment
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    ideas take root at all levels of society,
    the drive for equality will begin to threaten
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    the aristocratic way of life.
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    Woman: What makes it dangerous is it means
    you will eventually question why are aristocrats
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    the ones with privilege and can't we change
    the world to make it a better place?
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    Isn't progress possible?
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    All of that will eventually undermine the
    idea that monarchy is natural.
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    Aristocracy is natural and hierarchy is natural.
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    Narrator: To see enlightenment ideals in action,
    one need only look across the Atlantic where
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    the Americans are fighting for freedom from
    France's old nemesis Great Britain.
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    Young King Louis wants revenge for his grandfather's
    defeats and he sees an opportunity in the
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    American War of Independence.
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    Louis commits to the cause a total of 2,000
    million livre enough to feed and house 7 million
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    French citizens for a year.
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    His investment would mark the beginning of
    financial collapse for France.
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    Man: America bankrupts France in effect, because
    the debt which the French monarchy incurs
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    in order to fight the American War of Independence
    turns out to be absolutely crucial in the
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    financial situation of the French monarchy
    because the French monarchy cannot pay those
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    debts.
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    ♪ ♪ Narrator: While Louis sends money
    and troops across the Atlantic, Marie is busy
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    incurring debts of her own.
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    Life at Versailles is a never-ending routine
    of archaic ritual and formality.
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    There are ceremonies for the waking of the
    king and queen; for dressing; for dining;
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    for retiring to bed.
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    To keep herself amused amidst the ritual drudgery,
    Marie Antoinette presides over a parade of
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    increasingly outrageous fashions.
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    Man: Marie was obsessed with fashion especially
    these towering hairdos that were several feet
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    high, that took hours and hours in the construction
    and fit all sorts of ornaments and fruits.
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    And to many people, they seemed like an obscenity.
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    They came to represent all that was wrong
    with her and with Versailles and that culture.
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    Narrator: Marie occupies herself with court
    gossip, gambling, and the staging of plays.
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    As her expenses accumulate, Marie earns the
    nickname Madame Deficit.
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    Man: Marie is given the name Madame Deficit
    as the country is in economic chaos.
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    And she continues to spend as if nothing's
    happened, on dresses and jewels and shoes
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    and she was the Imelda Marcos of her day.
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    ♪ ♪ Narrator: Of all the debts Marie incurs,
    the greatest is what she owes her country,
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    an heir to the throne.
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    In the seven years since their marriage, Louis
    and Marie have yet to produce a child.
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    Marie finds herself in an increasingly humiliating
    position.
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    Man: The job of the queen is to produce a
    male heir.
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    It's absolutely essential for there to be
    a son.
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    And during that time, the people criticize,
    people are dissatisfied, people say, the king
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    should have never married this Austrian archduchess
    and now she can't even produce an heir to
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    the throne.
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    Narrator: Marie is desperate.
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    Louis appetite for food is unquestioned, but
    sex is clearly not on the menu. [female interpreter]
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    Maria Theresa, the mother to Marie Antoinette
    questions, if a girl as gorgeous as my daughter
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    cannot get him going, then what is going on?
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    Woman: Louis the 16th and his young wife were
    not able to conceive for seven years.
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    This cast a pall on the beginning of his reign
    and because his hobby as a locksmith was well
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    known, there were all sorts of salacious songs
    circulating to the effect that the locksmith
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    was having a hard time finding the keyhole.
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    Narrator: Louis's disinterest in sex is seen
    as a lack of bravado as a king.
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    Finally, after years of frustration and pressure
    from the court, Louis is diagnosed with a
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    treatable condition called phimosis.
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    Man: Louis had a deformity that made arousal
    extremely painful, therefore, there was no
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    consummation until there was a surgical procedure
    that could correct this, but he was scared
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    to death to have it.
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    And it took years for him to agree to have
    it.
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    And when he finally did….
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    voila! [baby crying] Narrator: After a simple
    surgery, the couple is able to have their
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    first child – Marie Thérèse.
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    But there is no easy fix for the years of
    damage to Marie's image.
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    Since the early 1780's, libelle has circulated
    throughout the country.
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    Pornographic satire of the king and queen,
    obscene pamphlets mock Louis's impotence and
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    portray Marie as a promiscuous harlot and
    a debauched and decadent court.
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    The people's view of the monarchy sours as
    conditions in the countryside worsen.
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    ♪ ♪ After a succession of bad harvests,
    deregulation has raised the cost of flour
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    leading to a shortage of the very heart of
    the French diet, bread.
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    But the hardships naturally stop at the gates
    of Versailles.
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    As the royals continue to live in extravagance,
    complaints are committed to paper.
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    One charge is leveled directly at the Royal
    Court.
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    Man: Do you know why there are so many needy
    people?
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    It is because your luxurious existence devours
    in one day the substance of a thousand men.
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    Narrator: The man behind this charge?
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    The same young man who just a few years earlier
    regaled the king and queen after their coronation,
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    Maximilien Robespierre.
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    In Robespierre, the people will soon gain
    a voice calling for liberty, equality, for
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    revolution.
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    Versailles in the late 1700's is an oasis
    of extravagance surrounded by a land in despair.
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    And with an uncertain King at the helm, France
    is charting a course for disaster.
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    After 19 years of marriage, Louis has sired
    four children.
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    Yet, as a king, he remains impotent.
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    In an attempt to demonstrate leadership, Louis
    dabbles in financial reforms.
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    But his misguided interfering burdens the
    poor with heavy taxes while the nobility pay
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    hardly at all.
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    With the economy in ruins and the people restless,
    it seems as if even the heavens are angry
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    smiting France with the most bitterly cold
    winter in 90 years.
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    Man: If ever God intervened to make a situation
    worse, the summer of 1788 and the spring of
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    1789 is a moment when that happens.
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    By the summer of 1788, you already have a
    burgeoning political crisis and it's developing
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    against a background of very serious food
    shortage.
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    Narrator: For the people of France in the
    18th century, flour is the essence of life
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    itself.
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    Bread, the measure of existence.
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    Woman: Most ordinary people in France ate
    at least two pounds a day of bread.
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    Bread was all-important.
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    Its price was immediately felt by everyone.
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    If the price doubled, you were in big trouble.
  • 21:35 - 21:42
    Narrator: Under Louis's financial mismanagement,
    the cost of flour skyrockets.
  • 21:42 - 21:44
    Sparse food supplies are hoarded.
  • 21:44 - 21:49
    The cost of a loaf of bread soon equals a
    month's earnings.
  • 21:49 - 21:57
    [people shouting] Hunger turns to raids.
  • 21:57 - 21:59
    Riots break out across France.
  • 21:59 - 22:02
    Homes are robbed.
  • 22:02 - 22:06
    [glass breaking] Bakeries are raided.
  • 22:06 - 22:16
    And shopkeepers suspected of stockpiling bread
    are lynched on the spot.
  • 22:16 - 22:22
    With the economy in shambles, the bank's forced
    Louis to hire a finance minister, Jacques
  • 22:22 - 22:23
    Necker.
  • 22:23 - 22:28
    An enlightened thinker, Necker is popular
    with the people in a way that Louis can only
  • 22:28 - 22:29
    envy.
  • 22:29 - 22:35
    Man: Jacques Necker was undoubtedly the most
    popular minister throughout the spring of
  • 22:35 - 22:43
    (17)89 because he's taken the line publicly
    in his writings that the government's duty
  • 22:43 - 22:49
    is to make sure that there is enough bread
    and grain for everybody.
  • 22:49 - 22:54
    Narrator: The nation in fiscal crisis, Necker
    urges Louis to call a meeting of the traditional
  • 22:54 - 23:00
    representative body of the kingdom, the Estates
    General.
  • 23:00 - 23:04
    It is the first time the representatives have
    been called together in a hundred seventy-five
  • 23:04 - 23:05
    years.
  • 23:05 - 23:09
    Man: France was politically organized in something
    called the Estates.
  • 23:09 - 23:11
    The First Estate was the clergy.
  • 23:11 - 23:13
    The Second Estate was the nobility.
  • 23:13 - 23:15
    And the Third Estate was everyone else.
  • 23:15 - 23:23
    And by contemporary reckoning, the first two
    Estates occupied 3% of the population and
  • 23:23 - 23:25
    the third estate 97% of the population.
  • 23:25 - 23:28
    Man: A lot of people felt it was very unfair
    for this Third Estate which was most of the
  • 23:28 - 23:31
    population to only have one-third of the deputies.
  • 23:31 - 23:36
    They felt it was very unfair that this should
    be a three chamber Parliament where two chambers,
  • 23:36 - 23:39
    the nobility and the clergy, could always
    out vote the commoners.
  • 23:39 - 23:47
    Narrator: May 4, 1789, a skilled young lawyer
    and politician arrives at Versailles.
  • 23:47 - 23:53
    Maximilien Robespierre comes to stand before
    the Estates General as a deputy to fight for
  • 23:53 - 23:58
    a fair voice for the people he represents,
    the Third Estate.
  • 23:58 - 24:05
    An orphan from the provinces, Robespierre
    had risen to academic prominence on a prestigious
  • 24:05 - 24:08
    scholarship becoming an eloquent speaker.
  • 24:08 - 24:15
    Prim appearance with never a hair nor a phrase
    out of place.
  • 24:15 - 24:19
    Back home in the small town of Arras, the
    Enlightenment ideas he had absorbed in the
  • 24:19 - 24:26
    salons of Paris found a powerful voice as
    he became a hometown lawyer for the downtrodden.
  • 24:26 - 24:31
    Man: By the time he went back and started
    to practice as a lawyer he was reading very
  • 24:31 - 24:34
    widely in the Enlightenment and Robespierre
    was someone when he was practicing law in
  • 24:34 - 24:39
    Arras tried to actually bring the ideas of
    the Enlightenment into the cases he was fighting.
  • 24:39 - 24:44
    Narrator: At the Estates General, Robespierre
    and his colleagues are demanding that the
  • 24:44 - 24:47
    nobility and clergy pay taxes.
  • 24:47 - 24:52
    But Louis feels increasingly threatened by
    the growing radicalism of the Third Estate.
  • 24:52 - 24:57
    Then, on June 20th, after a six-week deadlock,
    the deputies arrived to find that they are
  • 24:57 - 24:58
    being silenced.
  • 24:58 - 25:03
    Woman: On June 20th, when the deputies come
    to their meeting and find the doors locked,
  • 25:03 - 25:05
    they suspect a plot.
  • 25:05 - 25:11
    They move next door to what we call a tennis
    court, which was really a handball court,
  • 25:11 - 25:17
    and gather together and swear they will not
    stop meeting until they have a new constitution.
  • 25:17 - 25:24
    Narrator: The deputies declare themselves
    a new National Assembly, the true representatives
  • 25:24 - 25:27
    of the people of France.
  • 25:27 - 25:32
    Man: The Tennis Court Oath is one of these
    great symbolic moments in the history of the
  • 25:32 - 25:33
    French Revolution.
  • 25:33 - 25:37
    You had these people assembled in this great
    open space of the tennis court, raising their
  • 25:37 - 25:42
    arms in this quasi Roman salute and for the
    National Assembly this was a moment when they've
  • 25:42 - 25:48
    realized something of their power and their
    dignity and saw that they really could defy
  • 25:48 - 25:49
    France's king.
  • 25:49 - 25:54
    Narrator: In one revolutionary stand of defiance,
    the National Assembly is born.
  • 25:54 - 26:00
    It will be a communion of voices from around
    the country, a Parliamentary body and acting
  • 26:00 - 26:02
    the people's will.
  • 26:02 - 26:08
    But resting power from the king would not
    be so easy as signing a simple proclamation.
  • 26:08 - 26:15
    Man: All of these early victories that take
    place at Versailles are largely paper victories
  • 26:15 - 26:17
    and they have no teeth to back them up.
  • 26:17 - 26:24
    And the fear that happens takes over the deputies
    at Versailles as we approach mid-July is that
  • 26:24 - 26:27
    the king is gathering his forces to disperse
    them.
  • 26:27 - 26:29
    To overthrow them.
  • 26:29 - 26:35
    Narrator: By early July, 30,000 of the King's
    troops are taking positions around Paris.
  • 26:35 - 26:41
    To defend themselves, the people form a new
    National Guard.
  • 26:41 - 26:50
    Rioters raid Paris's armors and make away
    with over 28,000 muzzles.
  • 26:50 - 26:57
    The only thing missing is gunpowder and the
    people know just where to get it.
  • 26:57 - 27:04
    In the center of Paris there looms a massive
    stone dungeon notorious as a symbol of feudal
  • 27:04 - 27:07
    rule, the Bastille.
  • 27:07 - 27:14
    The prison houses the city's stores of gunpowder
    and is legendary as a den of torture and unspeakable
  • 27:14 - 27:15
    deaths.
  • 27:15 - 27:20
    Man: The Bastille had been the great symbol
    of royal despotism; the great symbol of the
  • 27:20 - 27:25
    kings of France running beyond the just limits
    of their own power; a symbol of horror for
  • 27:25 - 27:27
    the people of France.
  • 27:27 - 27:31
    Narrator: Amidst the rioting, there is a stunning
    outrage.
  • 27:31 - 27:37
    Louis fires his finance minister, the people's
    beloved Jacques Necker, seen as too sympathetic
  • 27:37 - 27:39
    to the masses.
  • 27:39 - 27:44
    Hours after Necker is fired, word reaches
    Paris that their man on the inside has been
  • 27:44 - 27:45
    ousted.
  • 27:45 - 27:48
    There is nothing left but revolt.
  • 27:48 - 27:55
    On July 14th crowds band together identify
    themselves with a small cockade.
  • 27:55 - 28:02
    Red and blue for the colors of Paris, separated
    by white, the color of the House of Bourbon.
  • 28:02 - 28:04
    The tricolore is born.
  • 28:04 - 28:09
    From the feverish crowd a voice cries out
    to the Bastille.
  • 28:09 - 28:16
    Woman: Attacking the Bastille means that the
    people of Paris are saying you cannot get
  • 28:16 - 28:18
    rid of the new National Assembly.
  • 28:18 - 28:24
    The people are acting, they're arming themselves
    and they're basically saying we take the side
  • 28:24 - 28:26
    of the Revolution.
  • 28:26 - 28:31
    Narrator: At the sight of the approaching
    mob, the governor of the Bastille, Bernard
  • 28:31 - 28:34
    de Launay , attempts to lock down the prison.
  • 28:34 - 28:35
    He mounts a hopeless defense.
  • 28:35 - 28:41
    And the marauders storm the fortress and tear
    into the guards with knives and pikes.
  • 28:41 - 28:47
    Finally, de Launay surrenders, but the enraged
    mob engulfs him, dragging him through the
  • 28:47 - 28:48
    streets.
  • 28:48 - 28:53
    The jeering horde kicks and stabs at him until
    he shouts, "Let me die!"
  • 28:53 - 28:57
    The crowd eagerly obliges.
  • 28:57 - 29:00
    He is stabbed and shot.
  • 29:00 - 29:04
    And a Revolutionary tradition is born.
  • 29:04 - 29:10
    His severed head is paraded on a pike.
  • 29:10 - 29:18
    Woman: The deputies in the National Assembly
    do not immediately condemn this act of violence.
  • 29:18 - 29:20
    In fact, they accept it.
  • 29:20 - 29:28
    And it was this acceptance of popular violence
    that in some people's view created a pattern
  • 29:28 - 29:35
    that was to have catastrophic consequences
    for the unfolding of the revolution.
  • 29:35 - 29:41
    Narrator: With the smoke still clearing over
    the Bastille, Louis the 16th returns from
  • 29:41 - 29:43
    a hunting trip.
  • 29:43 - 29:46
    In his diary under the date July, 14, 1789,
    he writes… ….nothing.
  • 29:46 - 29:52
    A reference to his unsuccessful hunt.
  • 29:52 - 29:59
    An aide interrupts and breaks the news of
    the riots and the fall of the Bastille.
  • 29:59 - 30:07
    Louis the 16th asks, "Is it a revolt?"
  • 30:07 - 30:14
    "No, sire," he replies, "it is a Revolution."
  • 30:14 - 30:22
    [men shouting] Victory at the Bastille unleashes
    the irrepressible torrent of Revolution.
  • 30:22 - 30:26
    The people had defied their king and won.
  • 30:26 - 30:28
    There would be no turning back.
  • 30:28 - 30:34
    As a symbol of the defeat of tyranny, the
    people, men, women and children dig in with
  • 30:34 - 30:39
    bare hands and tear the Bastille apart brick
    by feudal brick.
  • 30:39 - 30:43
    They are beginning to dismantle the past itself.
  • 30:43 - 30:48
    Man: The French went about the process of
    tearing down the Bastille as quickly as they
  • 30:48 - 30:49
    could.
  • 30:49 - 30:55
    In the absence of powerful explosives, this
    was done very painstakingly but with a tremendous
  • 30:55 - 30:57
    amount of vigor.
  • 30:57 - 31:02
    And the bricks were given away, sold, as emblems
    of the demolition, of despotism.
  • 31:02 - 31:08
    Narrator: The energy of the streets invigorates
    the National Assembly.
  • 31:08 - 31:14
    A charter is panned within days called the
    Declaration of the Rights of Man.
  • 31:14 - 31:21
    Under this daring new document, archaic class
    distinctions are to be abolished and all men
  • 31:21 - 31:22
    considered truly equal.
  • 31:22 - 31:27
    Man: The Declaration of the Rights of Man
    was a declaration promulgated by the National
  • 31:27 - 31:31
    Assembly which said, in its text, that the
    sovereignty belongs to the people, belongs
  • 31:31 - 31:32
    to the nation.
  • 31:32 - 31:37
    The King is nowhere mentioned in this document,
    therefore, by issuing this document, the Assembly
  • 31:37 - 31:39
    was effectively seizing power for itself.
  • 31:39 - 31:44
    Narrator: With the new National Assembly as
    their voice, the citizens of France set out
  • 31:44 - 31:47
    to change the very fabric of their world.
  • 31:47 - 31:51
    They demand a constitutional monarchy.
  • 31:51 - 31:56
    Equal rights for all men and justice under
    reasonable laws.
  • 31:56 - 32:02
    To provide a greater voice for the call of
    Revolution, Robespierre demands increased
  • 32:02 - 32:07
    freedom for the press long muzzled under the
    old regime.
  • 32:07 - 32:16
    ♪ ♪ The resulting Free Press is spearheaded
    by L'Ami du peuple, The People's Friend.
  • 32:16 - 32:22
    A fiery newspaper full of vitriolic rants
    and provocation, it is the braindchild of
  • 32:22 - 32:26
    a former doctor, Jean-Paul Marat.
  • 32:26 - 32:33
    After a string of unsuccessful careers, Marat
    found himself living in poverty, for a time,
  • 32:33 - 32:37
    finding shelter in the sewers of Paris.
  • 32:37 - 32:42
    It was there he contracted a painful skin
    disease that now leaves him confined for long
  • 32:42 - 32:45
    periods to a medicinal bath.
  • 32:45 - 32:51
    A bitter and failed Marat finds in the Revolution
    the perfect outlet for his venom.
  • 32:51 - 32:56
    Woman: Jean-Paul Marat was just one of these
    professional malcontents.
  • 32:56 - 33:00
    And unfortunately Revolutions do offer opportunity
    to professional malcontents.
  • 33:00 - 33:07
    Marat took all of that bile, all of that resentment
    and funneled it in to a newspaper that became
  • 33:07 - 33:09
    extraordinarily successful.
  • 33:09 - 33:10
    L'Ami du peuple.
  • 33:10 - 33:14
    Man: Marat was a man possessed of extraordinary
    anger.
  • 33:14 - 33:18
    You just have to read the pages of his newspaper,
    The Friend of the People, to see this.
  • 33:18 - 33:22
    In every issue he displays a complete paranoid
    mentality.
  • 33:22 - 33:24
    He sees plots everywhere.
  • 33:24 - 33:27
    Everybody is plotting against the Revolution
    and the answer is very simple for them.
  • 33:27 - 33:28
    The answer is blood.
  • 33:28 - 33:30
    The answer is heads.
  • 33:30 - 33:37
    Narrator: Marat loathes the monarchies relentless
    extravagance. even as poverty grips France.
  • 33:37 - 33:42
    And needs only the slightest rumor to lambaste
    the king and queen in his newspaper.
  • 33:42 - 33:51
    On October 2, 1789, his anger boils over.
  • 33:51 - 33:54
    Word reaches Paris that the king has thrown
    a party at Versailles.
  • 33:54 - 34:01
    That the decadent Royals threw the new tricolour
    flag, symbol of the Revolution, to the ground
  • 34:01 - 34:04
    and trampled it under foot.
  • 34:04 - 34:06
    Marat is enraged.
  • 34:06 - 34:09
    He reports the insult in his paper.
  • 34:09 - 34:14
    Just as a new threat breaks, the king has
    again ordered troops to move into positions
  • 34:14 - 34:16
    around Paris.
  • 34:16 - 34:23
    [horse whinnies] With the coup at the Bastille's
    still smoldering in the minds of the people,
  • 34:23 - 34:26
    Marat frantically urges them to take action.
  • 34:26 - 34:29
    [voice-over] People of Paris, it's time to
    open your eyes.
  • 34:29 - 34:33
    Shake yourselves out of your torpor.
  • 34:33 - 34:34
    Wake up.
  • 34:34 - 34:37
    Once more, wake up!
  • 34:37 - 34:42
    Narrator: October 5th, dawn breaks to the
    furious ringing of bells.
  • 34:42 - 34:48
    [bells tolling] Women gather new City Hall
    to protest the shortage of bread and now fear
  • 34:48 - 34:53
    of the approaching royal troops mixes with
    anger as news of the king's offensive party
  • 34:53 - 34:56
    circulates through the crowd.
  • 34:56 - 35:02
    Soon thousands are marching to Versailles
    pikes and guns in hand.
  • 35:02 - 35:05
    The women are taking their complaints to the
    king.
  • 35:05 - 35:11
    Woman: The core of the crowd was made up of
    the famous poissarde, the fearsome fish ladies
  • 35:11 - 35:17
    of the central markets who were known for
    their brawny build and their fearlessness.
  • 35:17 - 35:20
    They were equipped with large knives for scaling
    fish.
  • 35:20 - 35:24
    They were hugely muscular because they carted
    boxes.
  • 35:24 - 35:26
    You didn't want to tangle with these ladies.
  • 35:26 - 35:29
    Man: These are women of the poor quarters.
  • 35:29 - 35:33
    These are poor women which are affected by
    the increased price of bread, by the scarcity
  • 35:33 - 35:38
    of products, who suddenly begin to realize
    that they must act.
  • 35:38 - 35:42
    It is quite extraordinary how these ordinary
    women, probably most of them couldn't even
  • 35:42 - 35:49
    write their name, suddenly act as the protagonists
    of this historical process.
  • 35:49 - 35:55
    Narrator: Inside the palace, word of the approaching
    crowd and angry women reaches the queen's
  • 35:55 - 35:56
    chambers.
  • 35:56 - 36:02
    Legend has it that it is at this moment that
    Marie Antoinette utters the most famous line
  • 36:02 - 36:03
    she never said.
  • 36:03 - 36:07
    Woman: Marie Antoinette did not say "let them
    eat cake."
  • 36:07 - 36:09
    That is a myth.
  • 36:09 - 36:15
    Marie Antoinette, unfortunately, probably
    never even noticed the poor people of her
  • 36:15 - 36:18
    country long enough to make such a statement.
  • 36:18 - 36:24
    Narrator: As the mob of women gathers outside
    the gates, Louis understands that the revolution
  • 36:24 - 36:26
    can no longer be ignored.
  • 36:26 - 36:28
    It is being brought to his front door.
  • 36:28 - 36:34
    He agrees to sign the Declaration of the Rights
    of Man yet the crowd continues to grow throughout
  • 36:34 - 36:36
    the night.
  • 36:36 - 36:40
    By morning, 20,000 people are camped outside
    the Royal palace.
  • 36:40 - 36:46
    To close the centuries of distance between
    the king and his subjects, the angry mass
  • 36:46 - 36:51
    demands that the king and queen move to Paris.
  • 36:51 - 36:54
    Indecisive as ever, Louis is weak to respond.
  • 36:54 - 37:00
    His hesitation would provoke a fury in the
    crowd and put the lives of the royal family
  • 37:00 - 37:05
    in grave danger Man: When they don't get instant
    compliance with what they want, it really
  • 37:05 - 37:09
    looks as if they're going to massacre the
    queen.
  • 37:09 - 37:17
    Narrator: A wave of women break into the Royal
    palace screaming for the blood of the queen.
  • 37:17 - 37:23
    They massacre the guards, decapitate and impale
    their heads on pikes.
  • 37:23 - 37:28
    Man: They were like banshees screaming throughout
    the palace, "Give me her entrails.
  • 37:28 - 37:29
    Give me her head.
  • 37:29 - 37:30
    I want a leg.
  • 37:30 - 37:31
    I want an arm."
  • 37:31 - 37:34
    I think that if they had grown so frenzied
    that if they had encountered her, they probably
  • 37:34 - 37:39
    would have torn her to pieces.
  • 37:39 - 37:47
    Narrator: Terrified for her life, Marie escapes
    to Louis's apartments only moments before
  • 37:47 - 37:50
    the women break into her chambers and tear
    her bed to shreds.
  • 37:50 - 37:58
    The
    king and queen are now at the mercy of the
  • 37:58 - 37:59
    mob.
  • 37:59 - 38:03
    What the mob wants is a little attention from
    their king.
  • 38:03 - 38:08
    Man: The only way the women can be pacified
    is for the Royal family to agree to go to
  • 38:08 - 38:13
    Paris because once they're there in Paris,
    then they can ultimately be made to do what
  • 38:13 - 38:15
    the people of Paris wanted.
  • 38:15 - 38:22
    Narrator: They march 60,000 strong leaving
    Versailles with carts and wagons, overflowing
  • 38:22 - 38:29
    with flour from the king's storehouses, flanking
    the Royal carriage all the way to Paris.
  • 38:29 - 38:35
    [female interpreter] The king and queen were
    forced to go back to Paris with the heads
  • 38:35 - 38:42
    of their guards who had been massacred in
    the Chateau.
  • 38:42 - 38:45
    Their heads had been cut off.
  • 38:45 - 38:51
    This is really a completely, unbridled violence.
  • 38:51 - 38:56
    The heads were then made up with makeup and
    paraded at the head of the cortege with the
  • 38:56 - 38:58
    king and queen following.
  • 38:58 - 39:05
    Narrator: The king and queen must make their
    new home in the Tuileries Palace.
  • 39:05 - 39:07
    They will never see Versailles again.
  • 39:07 - 39:12
    Man: Once the Royal family moves to Paris,
    they are the prisoners of Paris.
  • 39:12 - 39:14
    They know it.
  • 39:14 - 39:15
    Everybody else knows it.
  • 39:15 - 39:18
    There are great limits to what they can do
    or even dream of doing.
  • 39:18 - 39:20
    They are the prisoners of the capital city.
  • 39:20 - 39:21
    There's no doubt.
  • 39:21 - 39:27
    Narrator: Versailles is abandoned and the
    Assembly moves to Paris.
  • 39:27 - 39:32
    Power is now with the people.
  • 39:32 - 39:38
    France will have democracy, new laws and a
    remarkable and unforgiving form of justice
  • 39:38 - 39:49
    will make its debut on the revolutionary stage…
    …the guillotine.
  • 39:49 - 39:58
    ♪ ♪ May 1791, nearly two years have passed
    since the Royal family and the National Assembly
  • 39:58 - 40:01
    have moved to Paris.
  • 40:01 - 40:06
    Robespierre appears frequently at the Assembly
    and at the Jacobin Club, a debating society
  • 40:06 - 40:11
    named for the former Jacobin monastery where
    they gather.
  • 40:11 - 40:17
    Now, words are the very core of the Revolution
    and Robespierre speaks with an unfailing moral
  • 40:17 - 40:19
    compass.
  • 40:19 - 40:22
    His true north is always the people.
  • 40:22 - 40:27
    He soon earns the nickname 'The Incorruptible.'
  • 40:27 - 40:30
    France is now a constitutional monarchy.
  • 40:30 - 40:36
    The king forced to share power with the revolutionaries
    in the assembly, but it seems Louis's share
  • 40:36 - 40:42
    is growing smaller by the day as he is forced
    to sign law after law diminishing his own
  • 40:42 - 40:48
    authority and that of the other great feudal
    regime the Catholic Church.
  • 40:48 - 40:52
    Louis decides the time has come to escape
    the confines of the New Republic and mount
  • 40:52 - 40:55
    a campaign to reclaim his kingdom.
  • 40:55 - 41:01
    Woman: Louis had decided by 1791 that he needed
    to regain control of his country.
  • 41:01 - 41:06
    And he knew he could only do that with the
    help of a foreign army.
  • 41:06 - 41:14
    So the idea was to make a break from the Tuileries
    Palace and to head for the nearest border.
  • 41:14 - 41:22
    Narrator: June 21, 1791, the king and queen
    disguise themselves as servants and by cover
  • 41:22 - 41:27
    of darkness, slip out from under the watchful
    eye of Paris.
  • 41:27 - 41:30
    They make an ill-planned run for freedom.
  • 41:30 - 41:37
    It is long past midnight when the royal family
    arrives in the small town of Varenne, some
  • 41:37 - 41:39
    100 miles east of Paris.
  • 41:39 - 41:42
    They are close to the border of Austria.
  • 41:42 - 41:44
    Safety just a few miles away.
  • 41:44 - 41:52
    But their dash to freedom will go no further.
  • 41:52 - 42:02
    [bell dings] [footsteps] Rumors of the Royal's
    journey have preceded them to Varenne.
  • 42:02 - 42:18
    A town official stops the carriage demanding
    their passports.
  • 42:18 - 42:21
    The official suspicions are confirmed.
  • 42:21 - 42:24
    It is the signature of the king himself.
  • 42:24 - 42:30
    The townsmen is overcome at the sight of his
    king.
  • 42:30 - 42:34
    But revolutionary guards nearby show no reverence
    for the fleeing Royal's.
  • 42:34 - 42:40
    Woman: He keeps hoping that people will recognize
    him and there will be a kind of rebellion
  • 42:40 - 42:41
    in his favor.
  • 42:41 - 42:46
    And much to his horror and surprise they are
    not ecstatic to recognize him.
  • 42:46 - 42:51
    They see him as escaping and basically he's
    arrested and taken back to Paris.
  • 42:51 - 42:58
    Woman: The idea that the monarch had tried
    to abandon his people was psychologically
  • 42:58 - 43:00
    catastrophic.
  • 43:00 - 43:05
    That event really broke the bond between Louis
    and his subjects.
  • 43:05 - 43:11
    Now they had not only a king who was superfluous,
    they had a king who was obviously a traitor
  • 43:11 - 43:13
    as well.
  • 43:13 - 43:20
    Narrator: With the Royal family official turncoats
    to the Revolution, power shifts from Louis,
  • 43:20 - 43:25
    now a prisoner king, to the revolutionaries
    at the Assembly.
  • 43:25 - 43:28
    At the very heart of the young revolutionary
    government is Robespierre.
  • 43:28 - 43:34
    He shines at the podium calling for liberty,
    equality and fraternity.
  • 43:34 - 43:40
    He demands universal suffrage and an end to
    slavery in the French West Indies.
  • 43:40 - 43:48
    And most passionately he rails against the
    death penalty because in the New Age of Enlightenment,
  • 43:48 - 43:55
    Robespierre wants to discard all remnants
    of the medieval past.
  • 43:55 - 44:02
    Europe had inherited a maqam repertoire of
    execution techniques from the Dark Ages.
  • 44:02 - 44:07
    Unremittingly cruel deaths by drawing and
    quartering, hanging, drowning and burning
  • 44:07 - 44:09
    at the stake.
  • 44:09 - 44:15
    Man: Well, under the old regime, there was
    a whole panoply of very gruesome punishments
  • 44:15 - 44:20
    and decapitation was punishment reserved for
    the nobility and one of the things that the
  • 44:20 - 44:22
    revolution wanted from the start was to have
    everybody equal in death.
  • 44:22 - 44:27
    They wanted symbolically to have the same
    punishment available for anyone.
  • 44:27 - 44:34
    Narrator: Despite Robespierre's opposition,
    a new killing machine takes center stage in
  • 44:34 - 44:37
    Paris.
  • 44:37 - 44:45
    Physician inventor, Joseph-Ignace Guillotin,
    devises a ruthless beheading machine.
  • 44:45 - 44:50
    Turning old-fashioned decapitation into a
    humanitarian experience.
  • 44:50 - 44:55
    Dr. Guillotin describes his new device to
    the Assembly.
  • 44:55 - 44:58
    Man: The mechanism falls like thunder.
  • 44:58 - 45:01
    The head flies off.
  • 45:01 - 45:02
    Blood spurts.
  • 45:02 - 45:06
    The man is no more.
  • 45:06 - 45:12
    Narrator: Always a supporter of bloodshed,
    the journalist Marat prints an enthusiastic
  • 45:12 - 45:20
    rant in his paper announcing the device's
    new name… ….guillotine.
  • 45:20 - 45:23
    It will soon earn a nickname, The National
    Razor.
  • 45:23 - 45:29
    Man: The French revolutionaries believe in
    humane values.
  • 45:29 - 45:36
    They believe that unnecessary suffering should
    not be caused.
  • 45:36 - 45:44
    And what they like about the guillotine is
    that it is quick, it's efficient and as far
  • 45:44 - 45:49
    as we can tell, although no one has returned
    to tell the tale, it's painless.
  • 45:49 - 45:55
    Narrator: The guillotine will silence the
    Revolution's internal enemies, anyone suspected
  • 45:55 - 46:00
    of plotting to return Louis to the throne.
  • 46:00 - 46:05
    But it's the enemies surrounding France that
    most preoccupy the Assembly.
  • 46:05 - 46:10
    There is a fear that members of the extended
    Royal family, who fled to Austria, will launch
  • 46:10 - 46:14
    an armed counter-revolution.
  • 46:14 - 46:17
    The Assembly calls for a preemptive attack.
  • 46:17 - 46:21
    A Declaration of War on Austria.
  • 46:21 - 46:24
    But Robespierre argues against it.
  • 46:24 - 46:31
    Man: Robespierre is one of the lonely voices
    who is opposing war because he thinks the
  • 46:31 - 46:33
    enemy will win.
  • 46:33 - 46:37
    Robespierre is afraid that the country isn't
    ready, hasn't got an army that would be able
  • 46:37 - 46:38
    to defeat the enemy.
  • 46:38 - 46:42
    The enemy might therefore come in and destroy
    the Revolution.
  • 46:42 - 46:47
    Narrator: Robespierre loses the debate.
  • 46:47 - 46:54
    In April 1792, the Assembly declares war on
    Austria against a country ruled by Marie Antoinette's
  • 46:54 - 46:56
    own family.
  • 46:56 - 47:00
    A nationalist fervor grows.
  • 47:00 - 47:10
    If Austria defeats the Revolutionary army,
    Louis will undoubtedly reclaim his throne.
  • 47:10 - 47:17
    And Marie is suspected of aiding the enemy
    by corresponding with her relatives in Austria
  • 47:17 - 47:25
    giving away French troop movements with a
    stroke of her pen.
  • 47:25 - 47:29
    All the while, the king and queen feign adherence
    to the Revolution.
  • 47:29 - 47:34
    Man: Louis and Marie Antoinette are playing
    a double game.
  • 47:34 - 47:39
    They are seeming to go along with the Revolution
    many times at the same time as they are conspiring
  • 47:39 - 47:40
    against it.
  • 47:40 - 47:41
    They are trying to survive.
  • 47:41 - 47:47
    If you want to be generous, they're survivors,
    but if you want to be looking at it from the
  • 47:47 - 47:49
    revolutionary point of view is they're liars.
  • 47:49 - 47:57
    [explosion] Narrator: With the French army
    already suffering huge losses on the border,
  • 47:57 - 48:03
    word reaches Paris that Austria's ally, Prussia,
    has joined the invasion.
  • 48:03 - 48:10
    The enemy troops are mobilized under the command
    of the Duke of Brunswick, a Prussian general.
  • 48:10 - 48:12
    Tension pervades the streets of Paris.
  • 48:12 - 48:20
    And then the newspapers print a letter from
    the Duke of Brunswick, a manifesto threatening
  • 48:20 - 48:26
    the destruction of Paris if any harm comes
    to their Royal majesties, the king and queen.
  • 48:26 - 48:30
    The misguided threat wildly backfires.
  • 48:30 - 48:42
    August 10, 1792 27,000 armed citizens fueled
    by indignant rage head to the Tuileries Palace
  • 48:42 - 48:48
    and fall upon the king's guards in a savage
    attack.
  • 48:48 - 48:53
    By the end of the day, over 800 from both
    sides are dead.
  • 48:53 - 49:00
    The king flees to safety in the Assembly,
    but the monarchy is no more.
  • 49:00 - 49:02
    Louis is officially stripped of his title.
  • 49:02 - 49:05
    The French Republic is born.
  • 49:05 - 49:11
    [people cheering] The blade of the guillotine
    is christened with the blood of Louie's remaining
  • 49:11 - 49:24
    guards and Robespierre, once a staunch opponent
    of the death penalty, has had a change of
  • 49:24 - 49:26
    heart.
  • 49:26 - 49:33
    The birth of the New Republic can only begin
    with the death of a king.
  • 49:33 - 49:42
    Dr. Guillotine's chilling new device hangs
    over Paris like a warning, the penalty for
  • 49:42 - 49:46
    defying Revolutionary law and order.
  • 49:46 - 49:51
    Freshly christened with the blood of the king's
    guards, it will soon put an end to the king
  • 49:51 - 49:52
    himself.
  • 49:52 - 50:01
    By August 1792, with the king deposed and
    the Royal family secluded in the temple prison,
  • 50:01 - 50:06
    Robespierre and his Jacobin's are locked in
    a battle with the moderates of the Assembly,
  • 50:06 - 50:10
    the Girondin, for control of the national
    government.
  • 50:10 - 50:14
    And on the streets of Paris, a new political
    movement takes hold.
  • 50:14 - 50:19
    As a symbol of their rejection of aristocratic
    tradition, ordinary citizens refuse to wear
  • 50:19 - 50:22
    the knee breeches or culotte of the aristocrats.
  • 50:22 - 50:26
    They call themselves the Sansculotte, those
    without knee pants.
  • 50:26 - 50:30
    Man: The Sansculotte considered themselves
    the true people of France.
  • 50:30 - 50:33
    They were not the poorest of the poor.
  • 50:33 - 50:37
    They tended to be fairly well-off, artisans,
    shopkeepers, people like that.
  • 50:37 - 50:41
    But they were people who at least claim to
    work with their hands.
  • 50:42 - 50:45
    Not wearing the breeches, not wearing the
    culotte for the Sansculotte was simply symbolism
  • 50:45 - 50:48
    of being not an aristocrat.
  • 50:48 - 50:50
    Being an ordinary man of people.
  • 50:50 - 50:55
    Narrator: The Sansculotte seize control of
    Paris's city government.
  • 50:55 - 51:00
    While the Jacobin's and Girondin's steer the
    rest of the country from the National Assembly
  • 51:00 - 51:04
    now called The Convention.
  • 51:04 - 51:08
    The Convention struggles with the command
    of the beleaguered French Army which is swiftly
  • 51:08 - 51:12
    losing ground to Austria and Prussia.
  • 51:12 - 51:17
    [multiple gunshots] While fighting back incursions
    at the border, the Revolutionary Government
  • 51:17 - 51:20
    cracks down on enemies withing.
  • 51:20 - 51:25
    Royalists traitors who might deliver Paris
    into the hands of the invaders.
  • 51:25 - 51:29
    More than a thousand people are arrested and
    herded into prison.
  • 51:29 - 51:34
    Priests, journalists, ordinary men and women.
  • 51:34 - 51:40
    Robespierre concentrates on the internal crisis,
    but his friend, the Minister of Justice , George
  • 51:40 - 51:45
    Danton, motivates men young and old to join
    the war on the frontier.
  • 51:45 - 51:48
    He is gregarious and loud.
  • 51:48 - 51:50
    Everything that Robespierre is not.
  • 51:50 - 51:53
    Soon, Danton's name is heard throughout Paris.
  • 51:53 - 51:57
    Man: Danton is a bigger than life character.
  • 51:57 - 52:03
    A man full of life; full of bombast; tremendous
    drinker; and the barter who though he's from
  • 52:03 - 52:09
    the educated classes himself, is a guy who,
    unlike Robespierre can physically identify
  • 52:09 - 52:13
    with the working people in a way that Robespierre
    simply cannot.
  • 52:13 - 52:21
    Narrator: As the enemy closes in, Danton's
    fiery rhetoric mobilizes the people, inspiring
  • 52:21 - 52:22
    many to take to the battlefront.
  • 52:22 - 52:27
    Man: At one of the moments of greatest peril
    for the Revolution, the Austrian and Prussian
  • 52:27 - 52:31
    armies are invading, he gets up in front of
    the people of Paris and shouts, "il nous l'audace,
  • 52:31 - 52:35
    encore de l'audace, et toujours de l'audace
    et la Patrie sera sauvée!"
  • 52:35 - 52:38
    "Boldness, more boldness, forever boldness
    and the father land is saved."
  • 52:38 - 52:42
    He's really one of the people who manages
    to rally the country against the invader.
  • 52:42 - 52:43
    It's an extraordinary moment.
  • 52:43 - 52:49
    Narrator: With so many able-bodied men leaving
    for the front, Paris is left defenseless.
  • 52:49 - 52:52
    Its jails bursting with political prisoners.
  • 52:52 - 52:55
    An unsettling fear floods the city.
  • 52:55 - 53:00
    The growing mass of prisoners may be impossible
    to contain.
  • 53:00 - 53:06
    Marat puts out a bloodthirsty call for revolutionary
    citizens to descend upon the prisons and slaughter
  • 53:06 - 53:07
    all inside.
  • 53:07 - 53:11
    Man: The foreign armies were advancing on
    Paris.
  • 53:11 - 53:16
    Had they linked up in Paris, with these bitter
    enemies of the Revolutions in the prisoners,
  • 53:16 - 53:21
    of course, then the results would have been
    fairly horrific from the standpoint of the
  • 53:21 - 53:23
    people.
  • 53:23 - 53:30
    Narrator: In the first week of September,
    disastrous news arrives from the front.
  • 53:30 - 53:34
    Prussia has taken Verdun, a town on the road
    to Paris.
  • 53:34 - 53:37
    The enemy is now just miles away.
  • 53:37 - 53:39
    The feared, gripping Paris explodes.
  • 53:39 - 53:48
    [glass shattering] The Sansculotte break into
    the prisons and unleash a furious assault
  • 53:48 - 53:50
    on the city's inmates.
  • 53:50 - 53:51
    They will leave no traitor alive.
  • 53:51 - 53:56
    Man: And the Sansculotte went to the prisons,
    particularly the prisons where refractory
  • 53:56 - 54:01
    priests were being held; where nobles were
    being held; where political prisoners were
  • 54:01 - 54:06
    being held; and they started carrying out
    their own impromptu trials that were very
  • 54:06 - 54:11
    short and that very often simply ended with
    slaughter.
  • 54:11 - 54:17
    Narrator: Women are raped and brutalized.
  • 54:17 - 54:19
    Priests disemboweled.
  • 54:19 - 54:21
    Aristocrats hacked to pieces.
  • 54:21 - 54:28
    In a primeval slaughter, more than 1600 are
    left dead in a matter of days.
  • 54:28 - 54:35
    When word of the September massacre spreads
    throughout Europe, enemies of the Revolution
  • 54:35 - 54:42
    are sickened.
  • 54:42 - 54:46
    Across the English Channel, the London Times
    gives voice to the revulsion.
  • 54:46 - 54:49
    [voice-over] Are these "the Rights of Man?"
  • 54:49 - 54:52
    Is this the liberty of human nature?
  • 54:52 - 54:59
    The most savage four footed tyrants that range
    unexplored Africa rise superior to these two-legged
  • 54:59 - 55:02
    Parisian animals.
  • 55:02 - 55:07
    Narrator: The Revolution has taken an inalterable
    turn.
  • 55:07 - 55:10
    Even Robespierre understands that things have
    gone to far.
  • 55:10 - 55:13
    That the people cannot manage the Revolution
    on their own.
  • 55:13 - 55:17
    They need guidance, an iron hand.
  • 55:17 - 55:23
    And with the power of his words, the incorruptible
    rises to the forefront as the man who will
  • 55:23 - 55:26
    guide the Revolution.
  • 55:26 - 55:31
    Robespierre had once pushed for a Constitutional
    Monarchy.
  • 55:31 - 55:36
    Now he believes there is no longer room for
    the king.
  • 55:36 - 55:39
    A momentous decision is made.
  • 55:39 - 55:47
    France will put its own king on trial.
  • 55:47 - 55:53
    With the verdict a forgone conclusion, the
    only debate left is punishment.
  • 55:53 - 55:59
    The Moderates, the Girondin, call for sparing
    Louis's life which isolates them in the convention.
  • 55:59 - 56:03
    Man: The Girondin really crystallized as a
    faction in the Convention over the debate
  • 56:03 - 56:08
    over the king because while they certainly
    wanted a republic, they were less sure that
  • 56:08 - 56:10
    the king should actually have to die.
  • 56:10 - 56:15
    Narrator: But the Girondin are outnumbered
    by the Jacobin call for blood.
  • 56:15 - 56:18
    Man: Why did the Jacobin's want to kill the
    king?
  • 56:18 - 56:24
    I think they wanted to kill the king because
    as Robespierre brilliantly said, you have
  • 56:24 - 56:26
    to kill the king so the Revolution can live.
  • 56:26 - 56:30
    If the king is right, then the Revolution
    is wrong.
  • 56:30 - 56:37
    Man: In any system there had ever been, there's
    only on penalty for treason and that is death.
  • 56:37 - 56:47
    So, in this sense, if the king is guilty of
    betraying the country in a time of war then
  • 56:47 - 56:51
    the argument is that he must suffer the death
    of a traitor.
  • 56:51 - 57:00
    [gavel bangs] Narrator: On January 20, 1793,
    Louis the 16th is declared guilty.
  • 57:00 - 57:02
    The sentence is read.
  • 57:02 - 57:09
    The king must die.
  • 57:09 - 57:12
    That evening Louis is briefly reunited with
    his family.
  • 57:12 - 57:18
    Calm in the face of their tears, he promises
    to return the next morning to say a final
  • 57:18 - 57:19
    goodbye.
  • 57:19 - 57:21
    He will not.
  • 57:21 - 57:27
    He cannot bear his family's anguish and must
    not weaken on the way to the guillotine.
  • 57:27 - 57:36
    [crowd shouting] The next morning a closed
    carriage brings Louis to the scaffold.
  • 57:36 - 57:50
    And he stoically makes his way to the blade.
  • 57:50 - 57:59
    ♪ ♪ He attempts to give a speech.
  • 57:59 - 58:06
    [voice-over] I trust that my death will be
    for the happiness of my people, but I grieve
  • 58:06 - 58:11
    for France and I fear that she may suffer
    the anger of the Lord.
  • 58:11 - 58:32
    Narrator: But the guards drown him out with
    the drum roll.
  • 58:32 - 58:45
    At 10:22am, the man who once was king is no
    more.
  • 58:45 - 58:51
    [crowd cheering] In the temple prison Marie
    hears the cannons fire heralding the death
  • 58:51 - 58:53
    of her husband.
  • 58:53 - 58:55
    She collapses in despair.
  • 58:55 - 59:01
    [people laughing] The king's blood is spilt.
  • 59:01 - 59:04
    The revolutionaries victorious.
  • 59:04 - 59:09
    But the enemies of the Revolution will soon
    claim a victory of their own.
  • 59:09 - 59:10
    Their target?
  • 59:10 - 59:21
    The man who was calling for so many heads
    to roll, Jean-Paul Marat.
  • 59:21 - 59:26
    ♪ ♪ The execution of Louis the 16th marks
    ultimate victory for the revolutionaries.
  • 59:26 - 59:34
    A pivotal moment when a young nation, French
    Republic, is literally born in blood.
  • 59:34 - 59:40
    By the end of 1792, the radical Jacobin's,
    believing the young Revolution is in danger
  • 59:40 - 59:45
    of being sabotaged by traitors, are steering
    the Revolution with more and more violent
  • 59:45 - 59:46
    means.
  • 59:46 - 59:53
    But the Girodin, representing the people of
    the French countryside, want to slow the ascending
  • 59:53 - 59:57
    violence for fear it will lead to Civil War.
  • 59:57 - 60:04
    Their most vocal opponent, Jean-Paul Marat,
    strikes back at the Girodin with furious tirades
  • 60:04 - 60:10
    in his newspaper naming those he believes
    are plotting against the Revolution.
  • 60:10 - 60:17
    Marat who once called for the execution of
    200 now demands 200,000 heads fall.
  • 60:17 - 60:24
    Man: When you look at Marat's journalism it's
    got one basic principle which has been more
  • 60:24 - 60:29
    extreme than anybody else and called for people
    to be killed.
  • 60:29 - 60:34
    If you look at Marat's journalism all the
    time, he'd say, if only we chopped off a few
  • 60:34 - 60:37
    heads then things will be all right.
  • 60:37 - 60:42
    And when things aren't all right if only chop
    up a few more heads things will be all right.
  • 60:42 - 60:46
    Suddenly people in Paris being to massacre
    people and Marat is the first to claim credit
  • 60:46 - 60:47
    for that.
  • 60:47 - 60:53
    Narrator: But the radical movement hasn't
    taken hold everywhere.
  • 60:53 - 60:58
    People outside of Paris are furious at the
    spiraling brutality of the Jacobin's and call
  • 60:58 - 61:02
    for an end to the bloodline.
  • 61:02 - 61:07
    And the message reaches the lovely Charlotte
    Corday, an unassuming yet determined young
  • 61:07 - 61:09
    woman from the provinces.
  • 61:09 - 61:14
    Man: Charlotte Corday is an average person
    in the city of Caen.
  • 61:14 - 61:20
    She's appalled by the killing that's going
    on there and she perhaps rightly considers
  • 61:20 - 61:23
    Marat one of the chief authors of that.
  • 61:23 - 61:26
    He's been instrumental on the radical side
    of the Revolution.
  • 61:26 - 61:31
    His [speaking French] is still calling for
    heads.
  • 61:31 - 61:40
    Narrator: July 13, 1793, Charlotte Corday
    arrives in Paris.
  • 61:40 - 61:45
    She knows that the friend of the people has
    an open-door policy at his home where he can
  • 61:45 - 61:50
    be found at nearly any hour soaking in his
    medicinal bath.
  • 61:50 - 61:55
    Corday comes on the pretense that she carries
    a list of traitors, those collaborating with
  • 61:55 - 62:00
    foreign armies to put an end to the Revolution.
  • 62:00 - 62:04
    Marat asks for the list promising Corday that
    the traitors will be guillotined the next
  • 62:04 - 62:05
    day.
  • 62:05 - 62:18
    Man: Having given him that, she then produces
    a poignard, a little stiletto and stabs him
  • 62:18 - 62:24
    in the chest.
  • 62:24 - 62:26
    [suspensful music] Narrator: The so called
    'friend of the people' dies instantly.
  • 62:26 - 62:35
    The angry voice of his newspaper silenced.
  • 62:35 - 62:43
    Man: When the Revolution turns bloodthirsty,
    it's very easy to say it was his fault.
  • 62:43 - 62:49
    And that, of course, is what those who hated
    him or feared him did say.
  • 62:49 - 62:55
    And that's one of the reasons why Charlotte
    Corday actually murders him in 1793 because
  • 62:55 - 63:03
    she regards him as responsible for many of
    the bloody atrocities that have actually occurred.
  • 63:03 - 63:06
    Narrator: Corday makes no attempt to escape.
  • 63:06 - 63:10
    At her trial, she is unrepentant.
  • 63:10 - 63:18
    [male voice-over] What did you expect to achieve
    in assassinating Marat?
  • 63:18 - 63:20
    [Charlotte voice-over] Peace.
  • 63:20 - 63:24
    Now that he's dead, peace will return to my
    country.
  • 63:24 - 63:32
    Narrator: Charlotte Corday is swiftly executed
    and her dream of peace dies along with her.
  • 63:32 - 63:37
    She has killed Marat, the man, but she has
    created Marat the legend.
  • 63:37 - 63:43
    His death most famously depicted by the Revolutionary
    painter Jacques-Louis David.
  • 63:43 - 63:46
    Man: He became a martyr.
  • 63:46 - 63:50
    He became a kind of almost religious figure.
  • 63:50 - 63:53
    You had people offering a prayer that went
    heart of Jesus; heart of Marat.
  • 63:53 - 63:58
    You had these scenes at his funeral where
    the bathtub in which he was murdered was sort
  • 63:58 - 64:01
    of put up on the altar almost as if it was
    a kind of crucifix.
  • 64:01 - 64:09
    Woman: If you look at David's painting of
    Marat's death, Marat's body is draped in precisely
  • 64:09 - 64:17
    the same way as the body of Christ is depicted
    in classic representations of the Pietá,
  • 64:17 - 64:19
    the descent from the cross.
  • 64:19 - 64:26
    So clearly there's an identification of Marat
    with Christ, with Marat representing the new
  • 64:26 - 64:31
    kind of god of the Radical Republic.
  • 64:31 - 64:37
    Narrator: Robespierre is envious of the adoration
    lavished upon Marat, but ever the pragmatist
  • 64:37 - 64:43
    he turns his attention to pressing matters
    at hand.
  • 64:43 - 64:48
    Because though Marat is dead, there are still
    others calling for blood….
  • 64:48 - 64:49
    royal blood.
  • 64:49 - 64:57
    The Conciergerie, deaths dark antechamber,
    eight months after the execution of her husband
  • 64:57 - 65:03
    and just days after the killing of Charlotte
    Corday, Marie Antoinette is jailed here in
  • 65:03 - 65:08
    a hideous cell utterly alone.
  • 65:08 - 65:14
    Man: One of the worst things that happens
    to Marie after the execution of Louis is her
  • 65:14 - 65:16
    children are ripped away from her.
  • 65:16 - 65:21
    Her children were the most important thing
    to her and she knew that her son was going
  • 65:21 - 65:26
    to be subjected to terrible abuse to make
    him forget that he was ever royal by these
  • 65:26 - 65:28
    revolutionaries.
  • 65:28 - 65:29
    And it turns out she was right.
  • 65:29 - 65:37
    It only took a couple years after that her
    son died of terrible neglect and abuse.
  • 65:37 - 65:44
    Narrator: The once vain Marie Antoinette is
    38-years-old, but the Revolution has aged
  • 65:44 - 65:47
    her beyond her years.
  • 65:47 - 65:53
    [speaking French] [interpreter] Marie Antoinette
    had been a very pretty woman, elegant until
  • 65:53 - 65:54
    the Revolution.
  • 65:54 - 65:56
    From 1788-89 she got thinner.
  • 65:56 - 65:58
    Her hair went white.
  • 65:58 - 66:01
    She abandoned all her coquetry and her pretty
    things.
  • 66:01 - 66:04
    She became emaciated.
  • 66:04 - 66:09
    When she arrived for her trial, she was unrecognizable.
  • 66:09 - 66:14
    Narrator: On October 15, Marie is put on trial.
  • 66:14 - 66:18
    accused of high treason and depleting the
    national treasure.
  • 66:18 - 66:25
    [overlapping voices] The little evidence offered
    is salacious and vengeful rumor.
  • 66:25 - 66:28
    A final charge is added to the list.
  • 66:28 - 66:32
    She is accused of incest with her son.
  • 66:32 - 66:34
    At this, Marie stands to defend herself.
  • 66:34 - 66:40
    [Marie voice-over] I appeal to the conscience
    and feelings of every mother present to declare
  • 66:40 - 66:45
    if there be one amongst you who does not shudder
    at the idea of such horrors.
  • 66:45 - 66:50
    [speaking French] [interpreter] And at that
    moment there was a change in the mood because
  • 66:50 - 66:55
    all the women felt they were implicated and
    they realized they had gone too far with these
  • 66:55 - 66:56
    accusations.
  • 66:56 - 67:05
    Narrator: In a moment of public sympathy,
    Marie hopes she will be deported to Austria.
  • 67:05 - 67:11
    But her hopes are dashed when the sentence
    is handed down.
  • 67:11 - 67:13
    She is to meet the same fate as her husband.
  • 67:13 - 67:17
    Man: Marie Antoinette was, in a sense, doomed
    from the start.
  • 67:17 - 67:22
    She was the symbol of this Austrian alliance
    that had proved disastrous for France.
  • 67:22 - 67:26
    She was, along with her husband, a laughing
    stock because of the apparent sexual failure
  • 67:26 - 67:31
    of their marriage and she was a symbol of
    court culture at a time when people were coming
  • 67:31 - 67:36
    to see the Court culture itself as something
    completely corrupt and terrible for the country.
  • 67:36 - 67:40
    So for all these reasons she was hated like
    no queen of France had ever been hated before.
  • 67:40 - 67:41
    She was loathed.
  • 67:41 - 67:42
    She was reviled.
  • 67:42 - 67:50
    Narrator: From her cell, Marie writes a final
    letter bidding farewell to her children and
  • 67:50 - 67:53
    family, promising to be brave.
  • 67:53 - 68:05
    Her long gray hair is cut in preparation for
    the blade.
  • 68:05 - 68:15
    Her hands are tightly bound.
  • 68:15 - 68:20
    As she is escorted from the prison gates,
    she expects a carriage.
  • 68:20 - 68:24
    Instead, there awaits a common criminals cart.
  • 68:24 - 68:30
    Man: She hopes when she's taken off to execution
    that she's going to get the same treatment
  • 68:30 - 68:31
    that the king got.
  • 68:31 - 68:36
    Meaning she would be in an enclosed carriage
    so that the crowd couldn't get her.
  • 68:36 - 68:40
    But they just put her in an open wagon where
    people would shout all sorts of things, horrible
  • 68:40 - 68:41
    things.
  • 68:41 - 68:43
    Horrible threats at her.
  • 68:43 - 68:50
    [vocalizing] Narrator: The shadow of the sovereign
    she once was, Marie Antoinette maintains a
  • 68:50 - 68:56
    queenly dignity as she is paraded through
    the streets of Paris.
  • 68:56 - 69:22
    [bell tolling] [vocalizing] [bell tolling
    continues] [vocalizing continues] Her name
  • 69:22 - 69:27
    and the charges against her are read out.
  • 69:27 - 69:42
    [bell tolling continues] [vocalizing continues]
    The last Queen of France is dead.
  • 69:42 - 69:47
    Several days later, following countless more
    executions, a member of the National Convention
  • 69:47 - 69:52
    notes the pointless waste of life as one after
    another of his colleagues are lost to the
  • 69:52 - 69:54
    guillotine.
  • 69:54 - 70:02
    The Revolution is like Saturn devouring its
    own children who says, [Danton sniffs] "Revolutions,
  • 70:02 - 70:05
    my friend, cannot be made with rosewater."
  • 70:05 - 70:16
    The bloodshed has only just begun.
  • 70:16 - 70:24
    ♪ ♪ September 1793, four years into the
    Revolution and France is being torn apart.
  • 70:24 - 70:31
    There is violent insurrection in the provinces
    and huge losses in the faltering war against
  • 70:31 - 70:33
    Europe.
  • 70:33 - 70:40
    In one blistering defeat, the British Navy
    takes the port city of Toulon.
  • 70:40 - 70:42
    Europe is eating away at France's borders.
  • 70:42 - 70:45
    Man: France, the single largest country in
    Western Europe.
  • 70:45 - 70:47
    It's the most populous country in Western
    Europe.
  • 70:47 - 70:49
    It has been the great military power.
  • 70:49 - 70:55
    And, of course, when it entered into the Revolution
    a lot of its traditional enemies and also
  • 70:55 - 70:59
    a lot of its traditional allies, like a-ha,
    this is our chance to not to carve a piece
  • 70:59 - 71:03
    off of the actual territory of France, but
    certainly to enrich ourselves at its expense
  • 71:03 - 71:04
    and to weaken it permanently.
  • 71:04 - 71:07
    Man: France is isolated in the whole of Europe.
  • 71:07 - 71:10
    It's being blockaded by Britain.
  • 71:10 - 71:13
    It's being attacked and invaded by Austria
    and by Prussia.
  • 71:13 - 71:18
    The people of Paris are seized by a fear that
    the victory, the counter-revolution, will
  • 71:18 - 71:20
    lead to a bloodbath.
  • 71:20 - 71:27
    Narrator: Danton and Robespierre, the star
    orators of the Convention, realize that they
  • 71:27 - 71:31
    must boldly strike out to save the Revolution.
  • 71:31 - 71:36
    They convinced their colleagues to institute
    a menacing new form of martial law.
  • 71:36 - 71:41
    [voice-over] It is time for all Frenchman
    to enjoy sacred equality.
  • 71:41 - 71:48
    It is time to impose this equality by signal
    acts of justice upon traitors and conspirators.
  • 71:48 - 71:51
    Make terror the order of the day.
  • 71:51 - 71:56
    Narrator: Thus beings a new chapter in the
    Revolution.
  • 71:56 - 72:02
    A period of violent repression called the
    terror.
  • 72:02 - 72:07
    In a remarkable reversal, the Revolutionaries
    suspend the new constitution. and all the
  • 72:07 - 72:10
    rights it was to guarantee.
  • 72:10 - 72:13
    Police spies scatter throughout the country.
  • 72:13 - 72:18
    Anyone suspected of counter revolutionary
    activity is rounded up, quickly tried and
  • 72:18 - 72:21
    sent to the national razor.
  • 72:21 - 72:28
    Woman: The reign of terror was conceived as
    an emergency government.
  • 72:28 - 72:33
    What they understood by terror was striking
    terror into the hearts of the enemies of the
  • 72:33 - 72:42
    Republic so that they would be either scared
    straight as it were or arrested and disposed
  • 72:42 - 72:43
    of.
  • 72:43 - 72:50
    Narrator: The slightest suspicion can send
    anyone to the scaffold.
  • 72:50 - 72:53
    Politicians who say a kind word of the defunct
    monarchy.
  • 72:53 - 72:56
    Anyone who uses the formal monsieur or madam.
  • 72:56 - 73:01
    instead of the new form of address: citizen.
  • 73:01 - 73:05
    The air is fraught with paranoia.
  • 73:05 - 73:08
    Neighbors denounce neighbors.
  • 73:08 - 73:16
    The incessant rolling of the death carts rattles
    through the streets of Paris.
  • 73:16 - 73:22
    Woman: Execution is absolutely hanging over
    people's heads in the sense that we know in
  • 73:22 - 73:26
    Paris there are police spies And there are
    quite a few police spies everywhere standing
  • 73:26 - 73:31
    in bread lines, listening to what the women
    are saying, and turning them in if they don't
  • 73:31 - 73:32
    like what they hear.
  • 73:32 - 73:36
    You could be turned in not just for complaining
    about the high price of bread, but you could
  • 73:36 - 73:42
    be turned in supposedly even for not being
    enthusiastic enough about where things were
  • 73:42 - 73:44
    going and the successes of the Revolution.
  • 73:44 - 73:50
    So, just about anything that would stand out
    for commentary could get you into trouble.
  • 73:50 - 73:57
    Narrator: The Convention sets up a Revolutionary
    tribunal expediting trials and executions
  • 73:57 - 73:59
    with ruthless efficiency.
  • 73:59 - 74:05
    To consolidate power, they form a twelve man
    council and call it the Committee of Public
  • 74:05 - 74:06
    Safety.
  • 74:06 - 74:10
    Man: Ultimately power had to be delegated
    to a smaller group and that group became the
  • 74:10 - 74:12
    Committee of Public Safety.
  • 74:12 - 74:18
    Ultimately it became twelve people who really
    ruled France as a kind of collective dictatorship.
  • 74:18 - 74:25
    Narrator: With his masterful words and revolutionary
    vision, Robespierre soon emerges as the committee's
  • 74:25 - 74:29
    fiercest guiding voice.
  • 74:29 - 74:34
    And that voice is calling for more blood.
  • 74:34 - 74:40
    Man: One of the paradoxes in Robespierre's
    political life is that he very early on is
  • 74:40 - 74:42
    a passionate proponent of the death penalty.
  • 74:42 - 74:46
    And, of course, this is thrown back in his
    face later when he becomes an equally passionate
  • 74:46 - 74:50
    proponent of terror and the guillotine.
  • 74:50 - 74:56
    He never particularly responds to that except
    to say, 'Well, times have changed.'
  • 74:56 - 75:02
    Narrator: The Revolution has hardened Robespierre.
  • 75:02 - 75:08
    Once an impassioned supporter of a free press,
    he now reinstates censorship, a vestige of
  • 75:08 - 75:10
    the old regime.
  • 75:10 - 75:15
    And with the church already under attack,
    Robespierre stands idly by as one of the most
  • 75:15 - 75:22
    radical revolutionaries, Jacques-René Hébert
    proposes a new agenda, dechristianization.
  • 75:22 - 75:29
    Man: When the crisis of the war, an internal
    rebellion is at its height, people begin to
  • 75:29 - 75:32
    say the root of all the problem is priests,
    is religion.
  • 75:32 - 75:38
    And what we've got to do if we're ever going
    to be safe against the enemies of Revolution
  • 75:38 - 75:41
    is destroy the power of the Catholic Church.
  • 75:41 - 75:46
    Superstition, fanaticism, that's what religion
    is all about and therefore what we have to
  • 75:46 - 75:49
    do is stamp out this whole thing entirely.
  • 75:49 - 75:55
    Narrator: Streets carrying the word 'Saint'
    are renamed.
  • 75:55 - 76:00
    Religious icons are destroyed and replaced
    with tributes to the new Saint, Marat.
  • 76:00 - 76:06
    Man: If the church came to seem simply the
    enemy to the radical revolutionaries, churches
  • 76:06 - 76:08
    and cathedrals are simply stripped of their
    altars.
  • 76:08 - 76:11
    The stained glass is smashed.
  • 76:11 - 76:12
    Statues are smashed.
  • 76:12 - 76:14
    The wealth of the church is to simply cart
    it off.
  • 76:14 - 76:19
    Of course, for European opinion, this was
    something even more shocking than the death
  • 76:19 - 76:20
    of the King.
  • 76:20 - 76:23
    Narrator: Not even then Christian calendar
    is spared.
  • 76:23 - 76:29
    Years are numbered no longer from the birth
    of Christ, but from September 1792, the overthrow
  • 76:29 - 76:31
    of the monarchy.
  • 76:31 - 76:34
    It is now year one.
  • 76:34 - 76:37
    Months are renamed according to the seasons.
  • 76:37 - 76:39
    July becomes Thermidor.
  • 76:39 - 76:42
    April: Floréal.
  • 76:42 - 76:45
    Months are broken into three weeks of ten
    days each.
  • 76:45 - 76:50
    Man: The Revolutionary calendar was certainly
    designed as a kind of weapon against Christianity,
  • 76:50 - 76:51
    against Christian belief.
  • 76:51 - 76:54
    Of course by having a 10-day week, you'd no
    longer have Sundays so people wouldn't even
  • 76:54 - 76:56
    know what day Sunday was anymore.
  • 76:56 - 76:57
    That's what they hoped.
  • 76:57 - 77:03
    Narrator: The Terror spreads across France.
  • 77:03 - 77:07
    Insurrections are put down with a vicious,
    unrelenting cruelty.
  • 77:07 - 77:14
    In the city of Lyon, where counter-revolutionaries
    are gaining ground, the Committee of Public
  • 77:14 - 77:17
    Safety sets a brutal example.
  • 77:17 - 77:24
    [overlapping voices] Hundreds of rebels are
    tied up, marched into fields and mowed down
  • 77:24 - 77:26
    all mass.
  • 77:26 - 77:34
    [cannon fires] [bodies fall] A region called
    the Vendée, in the west of France, has also
  • 77:34 - 77:39
    become a counter revolutionary stronghold.
  • 77:39 - 77:46
    Rebels and priests are tied together and packed
    onto boats that are then mercilessly sunk.
  • 77:46 - 77:54
    Up to a hundred thousand people are killed
    in the Vendée alone.
  • 77:54 - 78:00
    In Paris, the blade falls at an ever more
    frantic pace.
  • 78:00 - 78:08
    But the French armies are finally seeing victories
    on the frontier.
  • 78:08 - 78:13
    Under a brilliant young commander named Napoleon
    Bonaparte, the French Army sends the British
  • 78:13 - 78:17
    Navy into a demoralizing retreat at Toulon.
  • 78:17 - 78:21
    The Revolution is on the rise.
  • 78:21 - 78:23
    Robespierre is at the height of his power.
  • 78:23 - 78:30
    He has taken on the enemies of the Revolution,
    ensured its success through Terror.
  • 78:30 - 78:36
    Man: For time, the Terror was very effective
    as a means of getting the country together,
  • 78:36 - 78:40
    getting the government together and fighting
    what was after all a war on several fronts.
  • 78:40 - 78:42
    On the Eastern front.
  • 78:42 - 78:43
    On the Northern front.
  • 78:43 - 78:44
    Against external enemies.
  • 78:44 - 78:47
    Also, a Civil War in the Vendée which is
    the bloodiest of all.
  • 78:47 - 78:51
    Also, a Civil War against the supporters of
    the Girondins and other Revolutionaries who
  • 78:51 - 78:54
    had turned against the government in Paris.
  • 78:54 - 78:59
    Narrator: The Terror has achieved its goals,
    but it does not stop.
  • 78:59 - 79:12
    And it will not stop until it devours the
    very man who unleashed it: Maximilien Robespierre.
  • 79:12 - 79:18
    With the blood of the Terror, Maximilien Robespierre
    has rescued the Revolution.
  • 79:18 - 79:23
    An invigorated army is repelling attacks at
    the border and internal dissent has been all
  • 79:23 - 79:26
    but crushed.
  • 79:26 - 79:33
    At the height of his success, Robespierre
    dreams up a loftier goal yet, to use more
  • 79:33 - 79:39
    Terror to mold a new kind of society, a Republic
    of Virtue.
  • 79:39 - 79:43
    Man: By virtue he means civic virtue.
  • 79:43 - 79:45
    It's an active principle for Robespierre.
  • 79:45 - 79:49
    For example, you cannot be a virtuous citizen
    by simply obeying the laws and keeping your
  • 79:49 - 79:50
    head down.
  • 79:50 - 79:55
    You must actively be involved in the work
    of the state and that includes, for Robespierre,
  • 79:55 - 79:58
    destroying the enemies of the state.
  • 79:58 - 80:05
    Narrator: On February 5, 1794, Robespierre
    gives a speech outlining his philosophy.
  • 80:05 - 80:10
    [voice-over] Terror without virtue is disastrous.
  • 80:10 - 80:14
    But virtue without terror is powerless.
  • 80:14 - 80:19
    Man: He associates terror with virtue.
  • 80:19 - 80:23
    Terror at that moment becomes, in his thinking,
    an instrument by which you create.
  • 80:23 - 80:24
    Virtue.
  • 80:24 - 80:28
    Narrator: But others disagree.
  • 80:28 - 80:32
    For Danton the Revolution is heading down
    the wrong path.
  • 80:32 - 80:37
    He and his followers, the Dantonists, believe
    it is time to bring the Terror to a halt.
  • 80:37 - 80:42
    It has served its purpose and is in danger
    of feeding the revolutionaries into their
  • 80:42 - 80:43
    own fire.
  • 80:43 - 80:48
    Woman: By the spring of 1794, things are beginning
    to go better.
  • 80:48 - 80:53
    The food situation is no longer so bad and
    the war effort is going better and Danton
  • 80:53 - 80:56
    is basically saying we need to get a new footing
    for the government.
  • 80:56 - 80:59
    We need to move to a kind of normalization.
  • 80:59 - 81:02
    Robespierre believes it's too soon.
  • 81:02 - 81:07
    Danton will start organizing a group to argue
    that we should end the Terror.
  • 81:07 - 81:10
    Robespierre will see this as a direct threat
    to the government.
  • 81:10 - 81:14
    He will not see it as just a difference of
    opinion about the direction of policy.
  • 81:14 - 81:16
    He will see it as potential treason.
  • 81:16 - 81:22
    Narrator: And in Robespierre's Republic of
    Virtue there is only one response to treason.
  • 81:22 - 81:29
    The Datonists are rounded up and quickly sentenced
    to death.
  • 81:29 - 81:35
    Robespierre has sent thousands to the scaffold,
    but is uneasy with the blood of execution.
  • 81:35 - 81:40
    He will not attend the beheadings of his former
    friends and allies.
  • 81:40 - 81:47
    As he steps up to the blade, Danton shouts,
    [voice-over] 'My only regret is that I'm going
  • 81:47 - 81:53
    before that rat, Robespierre!'
  • 81:53 - 82:03
    Narrator: With the Dantonists out of the way,
    Robespierre launches France into an even bloodier
  • 82:03 - 82:07
    more horrifying period, The Great Terror.
  • 82:07 - 82:12
    Man: The Great Terror is the name given to
    the last phase of the Terror in the spring
  • 82:12 - 82:15
    of 1794 into the summer of 1794.
  • 82:15 - 82:20
    It's the period at which the tempo of executions
    really starts to increase in which the atmosphere
  • 82:20 - 82:24
    of paranoia particularly in Paris, but really
    across the country starts to increase exponentially.
  • 82:24 - 82:28
    You can track the number of executions until
    it's up to almost 800 per month in Paris.
  • 82:28 - 82:35
    Towards the end even more.
  • 82:35 - 82:38
    Paris's executioner is busier than ever.
  • 82:38 - 82:46
    But on June 6, 1794, the role of the carts
    comes to a halt.
  • 82:46 - 82:49
    The guillotine hangs silent.
  • 82:49 - 82:55
    Robespierre has declared a new religious holiday,
    The Festival of the Supreme Being.
  • 82:55 - 83:03
    He wants to replace the old Catholic God with
    a new one, The Goddess of Reason.
  • 83:03 - 83:06
    Man: One thing about Robespierre is that he
    never supported these atheist policies.
  • 83:06 - 83:11
    He believed that people needed a divinity
    to believe in and he helped sponsor this cult
  • 83:11 - 83:15
    that was called the Cult of the Supreme Being
    with this extraordinary tableau in Paris.
  • 83:15 - 83:20
    And I believe it was June of 1794, which had
    choirs of people dressed in white singing.
  • 83:20 - 83:25
    You had this kind of paper mache mountain
    that was built in the center of Paris and
  • 83:25 - 83:28
    then at the critical moment of the ceremony
    you had Robespierre himself sort of emerging
  • 83:28 - 83:31
    on the top of this mountain, clad in a toga
    and marching down.
  • 83:31 - 83:34
    And I think at this moment, a lot of people
    felt, 'All right.
  • 83:34 - 83:36
    Who does he really think he is?
  • 83:36 - 83:37
    Does he think he's God here?
  • 83:37 - 83:38
    Does he think he's the King?'
  • 83:38 - 83:43
    Narrator: As the Great Terror spirals on,
    Robespierre's colleagues see the Festival
  • 83:43 - 83:48
    of the Supreme Being as his departure from
    the realm of reality.
  • 83:48 - 83:55
    Man: There are those who think that Robespierre
    really has reached so extreme and so unreasonable
  • 83:55 - 83:57
    a position that they can't turn back.
  • 83:57 - 84:02
    That his fanaticism has somehow overtaken
    him and there are those who think he's just
  • 84:02 - 84:03
    gone nuts.
  • 84:03 - 84:09
    Narrator: Once again Robespierre's suspicions
    turned to those closest at hand.
  • 84:09 - 84:15
    On June 27, now the ninth of Thermidor, he
    appears before the Convention and delivers
  • 84:15 - 84:17
    a speech of threats.
  • 84:17 - 84:22
    It is the last speech he will ever give.
  • 84:22 - 84:25
    Woman: Robespierre makes a tactical error.
  • 84:25 - 84:29
    He comes in and announces that he has a new
    list of enemies of the Republic, but he won't
  • 84:29 - 84:31
    give the list.
  • 84:31 - 84:34
    Therefore, everyone is afraid they might be
    on the list and when he comes back the next
  • 84:34 - 84:38
    day to give the list, he is arrested before
    he can speak.
  • 84:38 - 84:43
    Narrator: An unexpected chorus of voices shouts
    Robespierre down.
  • 84:43 - 84:47
    He is stunned into silence.
  • 84:47 - 84:55
    The deputies declare him an outlaw and immediately
    remove him from the convention.
  • 84:55 - 84:59
    Robespierre and several of his associates
    are taken to City Hall where they remain under
  • 84:59 - 85:02
    watch for the night.
  • 85:02 - 85:05
    Shots ring out in the early morning.
  • 85:05 - 85:08
    Guard's race to the second floor.
  • 85:08 - 85:12
    They fling the doors open to a grisly scene.
  • 85:12 - 85:16
    One of Robespierre's allies has thrown himself
    from the window.
  • 85:16 - 85:20
    Another has taken a pistol to his head.
  • 85:20 - 85:24
    And Robespierre is found semi-conscious with
    a bullet wound to the face.
  • 85:24 - 85:32
    His jaw shattered on an apparent suicide attempt.
  • 85:32 - 85:37
    Robespierre spends his last hours on the table
    of the Committee of Public Safety in the very
  • 85:37 - 85:45
    room where he had piloted the Terror to its
    hideously, bloody peak.
  • 85:45 - 85:51
    As he is ridiculed and insulted by his former
    colleagues, Robespierre is unable to respond.
  • 85:51 - 85:58
    The Grand Master of Oratory has been silenced.
  • 85:58 - 86:04
    In the Conciergerie, where the last Queen
    of France had preceded him, Robespierre is
  • 86:04 - 86:06
    prepared for the national razor.
  • 86:06 - 86:12
    His cellmate, the Revolutionary Saint-Just
    points to a painting of the Rights of Man
  • 86:12 - 86:20
    and declares, ' At least we did that.'
  • 86:20 - 86:26
    Robespierre had spearheaded a Revolution and
    changed the face of France.
  • 86:26 - 86:31
    He had reordered society and engineered a
    bloody and tyrannical system to ensure its
  • 86:31 - 86:34
    success.
  • 86:34 - 86:38
    But he was destined to be one of its final
    victims.
  • 86:38 - 86:44
    Man: It turns out that there is a great deal
    of enthusiasm for ending the Terror.
  • 86:44 - 86:46
    Nobody can figure out how to do it.
  • 86:46 - 86:49
    And what turns out to be the case is that
    the only thing that will end the Terror and
  • 86:49 - 86:53
    apparently the only thing they can all agree
    upon is the fall of Robespierre.
  • 86:53 - 87:02
    [people cheering] Narrator: On July 27, 1794,
    the guillotine comes down on the incorruptible
  • 87:02 - 87:09
    and the last blood of the Terror is shed.
  • 87:09 - 87:15
    The Terror dies with Robespierre, but the
    Revolution does not.
  • 87:15 - 87:22
    The Rights of Man, democracy, the New Republic,
    the accomplishments of the Revolution would
  • 87:22 - 87:29
    far outlive any of the revolutionaries themselves.
  • 87:29 - 87:35
    France would enter a period of uncertainty
    frozen between fear of another Terror, or
  • 87:35 - 87:41
    worse yet, a return to the oppressive monarchy
    that preceded it.
  • 87:41 - 87:48
    Five stagnant years would pass before power
    once again consolidated in the hands of a
  • 87:48 - 87:52
    single man, Napoleon Bonaparte.
  • 87:52 - 87:56
    Historians disagree over the end of the Revolution.
  • 87:56 - 87:59
    Some believe it died with the rise of Napoleon.
  • 87:59 - 88:04
    Others maintain that the Revolution lived
    on into the 19th century and beyond.
  • 88:04 - 88:12
    Woman: The Revolution was the first and enduring
    model of a people taking its destiny in its
  • 88:12 - 88:14
    own hands.
  • 88:14 - 88:21
    The idea that the subjects of the oldest,
    the most established, the most glorious monarchy
  • 88:21 - 88:30
    in Europe could decide to completely rewrite
    their history was something that had extraordinary
  • 88:30 - 88:31
    resonance.
  • 88:31 - 88:38
    Narrator: The Revolution tore apart the old
    feudal fabric of Europe and forever changed
  • 88:38 - 88:41
    the course of Western civilization.
  • 88:41 - 88:47
    Woman: The question raised by the French Revolution
    is how much violence is justified in achieving
  • 88:47 - 88:48
    a better society?
  • 88:48 - 88:55
    Do people have the right to overthrow what
    they see as an unjust system to replace it
  • 88:55 - 89:00
    with what they are convinced in their hearts
    is a more just system?
  • 89:00 - 89:03
    How much violence is justified in doing that?
  • 89:03 - 89:05
    We still face this question today.
  • 89:05 - 89:11
    Narrator: As Robespierre and his colleagues
    were driving their county into the future,
  • 89:11 - 89:16
    many of them must have wondered what the final
    outcome would be.
  • 89:16 - 89:21
    More than 200 years after the birth of the
    French Republic, the ghost of Robespierre
  • 89:21 - 89:25
    hangs over Revolutions from Russia to Vietnam;
    China to Latin America.
  • 89:25 - 89:35
    The French experiments with democracy have
    inspired models all over the world wherever
  • 89:35 - 89:39
    tyranny takes root the cry for justice is
    eternal.
  • 89:39 - 89:42
    For liberty, equality, fraternity.
  • 89:42 - 89:43
    For Revoltuion. ♪ ♪.
Title:
The French Revolution History Channel #1
Video Language:
English
Duration:
08:50

English subtitles

Revisions