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Learning Objectives
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Chapter 9 teaches students about:

  • How the old regime was replaced by modern society during the French Revolution.
  • The Three Estates of the old regime, and the thwarted ambitions of both peasants and urban dwellers in prerevolutionary France.
  • The tensions between the Third Estate, the nobility, and the king.
  • The founding and initial reforms of the National Assembly or Constituent Assembly, which favored the middle classes.
  • The formation of a revolutionary culture and the role of popular participation in the revolution.
  • The gradual involvement of other European powers in a war with France and the impact of war on the revolution.
  • The influence of various factions within the revolution, such as the Girondins, the sans-culottes, and others.
  • The National Convention, the execution of the king, and the commencement of the Terror.
  • The Committee on Public Safety, which operated as a joint dictatorship or war cabinet.
  • The relations of the revolutionary governments with the church and the process of dechristianization.
  • The first French Republic, the Directory, and the narrowness of its social base.
  • Napoleon Bonaparte's spectacular rise to power.
  • Napoleon's enlightened despotism and the restoration of order and peace at home and abroad.
  • The emergence of a modern state under Napoleon, which combined aspects of the revolution and the old regime.







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