The French Revolution: a document collection
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Format: | Buch |
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Indianapolis
Hackett Publishing Company, Inc.
2023
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Ausgabe: | Second edition |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Previous edition: Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999 |
Beschreibung: | xxiii, 369 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten 23 cm |
ISBN: | 9781647920906 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents Introduction xi Chronology xv List ofIllustrations xxiii Maps xxiv _______________________ PART ONE_______________________ From Old Regime to Revolution(1610—1789) chapter i: The Prerevolution 1. Charles Loyseau, A Treatise on Orders (1610) 2. The Paris Parlement, Remonstrance Concerning the Third Twentieth Tax (July 11-12, 1782) 3. Jacques Necker, Preface to Account to the King (1781) 4. Emilie Du Châtelet, Examinations ofthe Bible (c. 1730s) 5. Abbé Raynal, A Philosophical and Political History ofthe Settlements and Trade ofthe Europeans in the East and West Indies (1770) 6. Isabelle de Charrière, The Nobleman (1763) 7. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Discourse on the Origin and Foundations of Inequality Among Men (1755) 8. Louis Sébastien Mercier, Paris Scenes (1782-1788) chapter 2: From Estates General to National Assembly 9. Letter from the King for the Convocation of the Estates General at Versailles (January 24, 1789) 10. Abbé Sieyès, What Is the Third Estate? (January 1789) 11. Cahiers de Doléances a. Cahier of the Parish of St. Germain d’Airan, Written This First Day of March 1789, According to the King’s Wishes b. List of Grievances for the Town of Vire (February 26, 1789) 12. The Declaration of the National Assembly (June 17, 1789) 13. The Tennis Court Oath (June 20, 1789) chapter 3: 1 The Emergence of Popular Revolution 14. Rural Unrest 9 9 16 19 22 25 30 32 39 42 42 43 49 50 51 53 55 57 57 a. Letter from the Commissioners of the Estates of Dauphine to the Committee of Twelve (July 31, 1789) b. Letter from La Breaudière of Segondigny (Poitou) to the Committee of
Twelve (July 24, 1789) 57 59 V
Contents VI 15. M. the Duc ď Aiguillon, Motion Concerning Individual Privileges and Feudal and Seigneurial Rights (August 4, 1789) 16. The Debate over the King’s Veto a. Abbé Henri Grégoire, Opinion ... on the Royal Veto, at the Session of the National Assembly (September 4, 1789) b. Jean-Joseph Mounier, Speech on the Royal Sanction (September 5, 1789) 17. Women’s March to Versailles a. The Woman Cheret, The Event ofParis and Versailles, by One ofthe Ladies Who Had the Honor to Be in the Deputation to the General Assembly (1789) b. Testimony of Master Jean-Louis Brousse des Faucherets (1790) 63 65 65 68 74 74 76 _______________________ PART TWO_______________________ From Liberal to Republican Revolution (1789—1792) 79 chapter 4: 87 Legislating an Enlightened Regime 18. National Assembly, Debate on Religious Freedom (August 23, 1789) 19. Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen (August 26, 1789) 20. Petition by the Jews Settled in France to the National Assembly Concerning the Postponement of December 24, 1789 (January 28, 1790) 21. Demands for Equal Rights by Free People of Color a. Society of American Colonists, Petition to the National Assembly (Paris, 1789) b. Vincent Ogé, Petition to the Assembly of the North Province (October 29, 1790) 22. The National Assembly Decrees the Enfranchisement of Free Men of Color (May 15, 1791) 23. Olympe de Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of Woman (September 14, 1791) 24. Maximilien Robespierre, On the Abolition of the Death Penalty (May 30, 1791) 25. Discussion of the Le Chapelier Law (June 13, 1791) 26. Insurrection in Saint-
Domingue a. Report of the Limbé Town Council on What Happened in This District at the Time of the Slave Insurrection (August 1791) b. Imprisoned Insurgents, Letter to Governor Blanchelande, Camp Gallifet (September 24, 1791) 27. Pierre François Gossin, Report and Decree on the Transfer of Voltaire’s Remains to Sainte-Genevieve (March 1791) 28. National Assembly, Constitution of 1791 87 90 92 96 96 98 98 99 104 107 110 110 111 112 114
Contents chapter 5: Revolution in the Countryside 29. The Continuing Contest over Seigneurial Rights vii 120 120 a. Petition from Inhabitants of the Somme to the National Assembly Concerning Seigneurial Rights and Taxes (Received by the National Assembly on December 31, 1789) 120 b. Letter from the Community of Marnay (Haute Saône) to the National Assembly Concerning Rights to Waterways (April 15, 1790) 123 30. Petition from the Residents of Roscoff (Finistère) to the National Assembly Concerning the High Price of Bread (January 1790) 31. Remarks on the Dialect and Mores of the People of the Countryside in the Department of Lot-et-Garonne, Sent by the Society of Friends of the Constitution of Agen to the Abbé Gregoire (1791) chapter 6: New Tensions 32. The Municipal Council Versus the Society of Friends of the Constitution of Tours (November 1790) 33. The Debate over the Civil Constitution of the Clergy Warningfrom Monsieur the Archbishop of Vienne, to the Secular and Regular Clergy, and to the Faithful ofHis Diocese (November 11, 1790) b. Minutes of the Swearing of the Oath by Jean-Baptiste Petitjean, Curé of Epineuil, Department of the Cher (January 1791) 124 126 13 i 131 137 a. 34. Declaration of the King Addressed to All the French about His Flight from Paris (June 21, 1791) 35. Marie Antoinette, Letter to Leopold II (September 8, 1791) 36. Anonymous, The Queens Farewells to Her Darlings ofBoth Sexes (1792) chapter 7: War and a New Revolution 37. Manon Roland on the Meetings of the Girondins in Her Home (1793) 38. The Debate over a Declaration of War 138 141 144 147 149
151 151 153 a. Maximilien Robespierre, Discourse on War Delivered to the Jacobin Club (January 2 and 11, 1792) b. Jacques-Pierre Brissot, Third Discourse on the Necessity of War, Delivered to the Jacobin Club (January 20, 1792) 39. The “Marseillaise” (August 1792) 40. The Brunswick Manifesto (July 25, 1792) 41. Deposing the King 154 156 158 160 164 a. Petition from the Paris Sections to the National Assembly Demanding the Suspension of the King (August 3, 1792) b. Decree of the National Assembly for Suspending the King (August 10, 1792) 42. The September Massacres (September 1792) 43. Speeches on the Trial of the King a. Speech by Charles-François-Gabriel Morrison (November 13, 1792) b. Speech by the Marquis de Condorcet (December 3, 1792) 164 166 167 171 171 176
viii Contents ______________________ PART THREE______________________ 183 The Republican Crisis (1793—1795) chapter 8: Popular Movements Beyond the Convention 44. Definitions of the Sans-Culotte, the Moderate, and the Aristocrat (April—May 1793) a. Response to the Impertinent Question, But What Is a Sans-Culotte? b. Definition of the Moderate, the Feuillant, the Aristocrat 45. Address by Section Sans-Culotte to the National Convention (September 2, 1793) 46. Jean-Paul Marat, The Peoples Friend (June 23, 1793) 47. Jacques-René Hebert, Father Duchesne 48. Revolutionary Women in Paris Petition from the Revolutionary Republican Women to the National Convention on the Leadership of the Armies and the Law of Suspects (August 1793) b. Revolutionary Republican Women in a Showdown with the Market Women (November 1793) 190 190 190 191 192 194 197 200 a. 49. Emancipation in Saint-Domingue 200 201 204 a. Georges Biassou, Jean-François Papillon, and Gabriel Belair, Letter from the Leaders of the Insurgent Blacks to the General Assembly, National Commissioners, and Citizens of the French Part of Saint-Domingue (July 1792) 204 b. Toussaint Louverture, Letter (August 25, 1793) 207 c. Léger-Félicité Sonthonax, The Emancipation Proclamation ofAugust 29, 1793 208 d. Jean-Baptiste Belley, The Truth about the Colonists or the Plan ofthe Club Massiac (Paris, n.d.) 210 50. Creole of Saint-Domingue, My Odyssey: Experiences ofa Young Refugee from Two Revolutions (1793) 51. Ronchet, Addressfrom the Provisional Municipality to the National Convention, in the Name ofLiberty, Equality, and the One and
Indivisible Republic (August 2,1793) 52. The Vendée War a. 211 213 218 Counter-Revolutionary Activism 218 (i) Proces-Verbal of the War Council at Oye (April 4, 1793) (ii) Public Notice and Invitation to Parishes of the Military Division of the Camp of La Roche-sur-Yon (June 13, 1793) 218 b. Revolutionary Repression (i) Louis-Marie Turreau, Memoirfor the History ofthe Vendée War (1795) chapter 9: Legislating the Terror 53. Constitution of the Year I (June 24, 1793) 54. Instituting the Terror (September 5, 1793) 55. Law on Suspects (September 17, 1793) 219 220 220 223 223 227 233
ix Contents 56. ihe National Convention Outlaws Women’s Clubs and Popular Societies (October 30, 1793) 57. Georges-Jacques Danton, “Concerning Arbitrary Measures and Arrests” (January 23, 1794) 58. Bertrand Barère, On Behalfofthe Committee ofPublic Safety, Report to the National Convention on the Maximum (February 22, 1794) 59. Law of 22 Prairial Year II (June 10, 1794) chapter io: Revolution in Society and Culture 60. Anonymous, Reflections ofa Good Citizen in Favor ofDivorce (1789?) 61. Decree Regulating Divorce (September 20, 1792) 62. Citizen Lebrun, Republican Ode to the French People on the Supreme Being (October—November 1793) 63. Pierre-Laurent Monestier, Decree Concerning Fanatical Priests or Troublemakers, and the Celebration ofthe Decades (1794) 64. Maximilien Robespierre, Report on the Principles ofPolitical Morality Ihat Should Guide the National Convention in the Domestic Administration ofthe Republic (February 5, 1794) 65. Louis-Antoine-Léon de Saint-Just, Report in the Name ofthe Committees ofPublic Safety and General Security Concerning Prisoners . . . 8 Ventôse Year II (February 26, 1794) chapter u: The Thermidorian Reaction 66. Jean-Lambert Tallien, On the System of Terror (August 28, 1794) 67. Pierre Gaveaux and Jean-Marie Souriguère, “The Alarm of the People” (January 1795) 68. The Prairial Uprising (May 20-23, 1795) 69. Louis XVIII, Declaration of Verona (June 24, 1795) 234 239 240 243 247 247 249 251 253 255 259 264 264 269 270 276 _______________________ PART FOUR______________________ Directory and Consulate (1795-1803) chapter 12: Orchestrating
Politics from Above 70. A New Constitution a. François Antoine Boissy d’Anglas, Preliminary Discourse to the Draft ofthe French Republican Constitution (June 23, 1795) b. Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Citizens (August 22, 1795) 71. Law against Provoking the Dissolution of Government (April 1796) 72. Council of Five Hundred Decrees the Closure of All Political Clubs (July 24-25, 1797) 73. Proclamation of the Directory to the French People (September 14, 1797) 279 286 286 286 288 291 293 296
x Contents 74. The Directory’s Electoral Interference 300 a. Address from the Executive Directory Concerning Elections (March 22, 1798) 300 b. The Executive Directory’s Proclamation on Elections (March 29, 1798) 302 chapter 13: Dissenters and Opponents 304 75. Gracchus Babeuf “The Plebeians’ Manifesto” (November 30, 1795) 76. Marc-Antoine Jullien, Some Advice to the Cisalpine Patriots (1797?) 77. Old Enemies 304 308 310 a. A Chouan in Caen (September 4, 1797) 310 b. A Jacobin in Lyon (March 11, 1797) 312 78. Anonymous, On the True Cause ofthe Revolution (1797) 79. Public Opinion in Paris (1796-1799) 313 317 Cultural Life 320 80. The Revival of Religious Practice 320 chapter 14: a. Letter from the Commissioner in Krignac (Morbihan) Concerning Local Religious Practices (February 27, 1797) 320 b. Letter from the Commissioner in Magny (Calvados) Concerning Religious Processions (July 11, 1797) · 321 81. Constance de Salm, “Epistles for Sophie: I, The Dangers of Unfortunate Choice” (c. 1801) chapter 15: NapoleonCloses the 323 Revolution 329 82. Napoleon Bonaparte, “Proclamation to the French Nation” (November 10, 1799) 83. The Imperial Religious Settlement a. Concordat with the Papacy (July 1801) b. Napoleon’s Proclamation to the French on the Religious Settlement (April 1802) 329 330 331 333 334 340 84. The French Civil Code (1803-1804) 85. Napoleon’s Restoration of Slavery in the Caribbean a. Napoleon Bonaparte, Views on Slave Emancipation, 1800 b. Charles Leclerc, Commander in Chief of the Army of Saint-Domingue, Letters (1802) c. Toussaint Louverture, Letters and Memoir
(1802) 86. The Making of an Independent Haiti 341 342 343 344 a. Toussaint Louverture, Constitution of the French Colony of Saint-Domingue (July 1801) 345 b. Toussaint Louverture,Proclamation (November 25, 1801) 348 c. Louis Boisrond Tonnerre, The Declaration of Independence (January 1, 1804) 350 Suggestionsfor Further Reading Index 353 359
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Contents Introduction xi Chronology xv List ofIllustrations xxiii Maps xxiv _ PART ONE_ From Old Regime to Revolution(1610—1789) chapter i: The Prerevolution 1. Charles Loyseau, A Treatise on Orders (1610) 2. The Paris Parlement, Remonstrance Concerning the Third Twentieth Tax (July 11-12, 1782) 3. Jacques Necker, Preface to Account to the King (1781) 4. Emilie Du Châtelet, Examinations ofthe Bible (c. 1730s) 5. Abbé Raynal, A Philosophical and Political History ofthe Settlements and Trade ofthe Europeans in the East and West Indies (1770) 6. Isabelle de Charrière, The Nobleman (1763) 7. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Discourse on the Origin and Foundations of Inequality Among Men (1755) 8. Louis Sébastien Mercier, Paris Scenes (1782-1788) chapter 2: From Estates General to National Assembly 9. Letter from the King for the Convocation of the Estates General at Versailles (January 24, 1789) 10. Abbé Sieyès, What Is the Third Estate? (January 1789) 11. Cahiers de Doléances a. Cahier of the Parish of St. Germain d’Airan, Written This First Day of March 1789, According to the King’s Wishes b. List of Grievances for the Town of Vire (February 26, 1789) 12. The Declaration of the National Assembly (June 17, 1789) 13. The Tennis Court Oath (June 20, 1789) chapter 3: 1 The Emergence of Popular Revolution 14. Rural Unrest 9 9 16 19 22 25 30 32 39 42 42 43 49 50 51 53 55 57 57 a. Letter from the Commissioners of the Estates of Dauphine to the Committee of Twelve (July 31, 1789) b. Letter from La Breaudière of Segondigny (Poitou) to the Committee of
Twelve (July 24, 1789) 57 59 V
Contents VI 15. M. the Duc ď Aiguillon, Motion Concerning Individual Privileges and Feudal and Seigneurial Rights (August 4, 1789) 16. The Debate over the King’s Veto a. Abbé Henri Grégoire, Opinion . on the Royal Veto, at the Session of the National Assembly (September 4, 1789) b. Jean-Joseph Mounier, Speech on the Royal Sanction (September 5, 1789) 17. Women’s March to Versailles a. The Woman Cheret, The Event ofParis and Versailles, by One ofthe Ladies Who Had the Honor to Be in the Deputation to the General Assembly (1789) b. Testimony of Master Jean-Louis Brousse des Faucherets (1790) 63 65 65 68 74 74 76 _ PART TWO_ From Liberal to Republican Revolution (1789—1792) 79 chapter 4: 87 Legislating an Enlightened Regime 18. National Assembly, Debate on Religious Freedom (August 23, 1789) 19. Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen (August 26, 1789) 20. Petition by the Jews Settled in France to the National Assembly Concerning the Postponement of December 24, 1789 (January 28, 1790) 21. Demands for Equal Rights by Free People of Color a. Society of American Colonists, Petition to the National Assembly (Paris, 1789) b. Vincent Ogé, Petition to the Assembly of the North Province (October 29, 1790) 22. The National Assembly Decrees the Enfranchisement of Free Men of Color (May 15, 1791) 23. Olympe de Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of Woman (September 14, 1791) 24. Maximilien Robespierre, On the Abolition of the Death Penalty (May 30, 1791) 25. Discussion of the Le Chapelier Law (June 13, 1791) 26. Insurrection in Saint-
Domingue a. Report of the Limbé Town Council on What Happened in This District at the Time of the Slave Insurrection (August 1791) b. Imprisoned Insurgents, Letter to Governor Blanchelande, Camp Gallifet (September 24, 1791) 27. Pierre François Gossin, Report and Decree on the Transfer of Voltaire’s Remains to Sainte-Genevieve (March 1791) 28. National Assembly, Constitution of 1791 87 90 92 96 96 98 98 99 104 107 110 110 111 112 114
Contents chapter 5: Revolution in the Countryside 29. The Continuing Contest over Seigneurial Rights vii 120 120 a. Petition from Inhabitants of the Somme to the National Assembly Concerning Seigneurial Rights and Taxes (Received by the National Assembly on December 31, 1789) 120 b. Letter from the Community of Marnay (Haute Saône) to the National Assembly Concerning Rights to Waterways (April 15, 1790) 123 30. Petition from the Residents of Roscoff (Finistère) to the National Assembly Concerning the High Price of Bread (January 1790) 31. Remarks on the Dialect and Mores of the People of the Countryside in the Department of Lot-et-Garonne, Sent by the Society of Friends of the Constitution of Agen to the Abbé Gregoire (1791) chapter 6: New Tensions 32. The Municipal Council Versus the Society of Friends of the Constitution of Tours (November 1790) 33. The Debate over the Civil Constitution of the Clergy Warningfrom Monsieur the Archbishop of Vienne, to the Secular and Regular Clergy, and to the Faithful ofHis Diocese (November 11, 1790) b. Minutes of the Swearing of the Oath by Jean-Baptiste Petitjean, Curé of Epineuil, Department of the Cher (January 1791) 124 126 13 i 131 137 a. 34. Declaration of the King Addressed to All the French about His Flight from Paris (June 21, 1791) 35. Marie Antoinette, Letter to Leopold II (September 8, 1791) 36. Anonymous, The Queens Farewells to Her Darlings ofBoth Sexes (1792) chapter 7: War and a New Revolution 37. Manon Roland on the Meetings of the Girondins in Her Home (1793) 38. The Debate over a Declaration of War 138 141 144 147 149
151 151 153 a. Maximilien Robespierre, Discourse on War Delivered to the Jacobin Club (January 2 and 11, 1792) b. Jacques-Pierre Brissot, Third Discourse on the Necessity of War, Delivered to the Jacobin Club (January 20, 1792) 39. The “Marseillaise” (August 1792) 40. The Brunswick Manifesto (July 25, 1792) 41. Deposing the King 154 156 158 160 164 a. Petition from the Paris Sections to the National Assembly Demanding the Suspension of the King (August 3, 1792) b. Decree of the National Assembly for Suspending the King (August 10, 1792) 42. The September Massacres (September 1792) 43. Speeches on the Trial of the King a. Speech by Charles-François-Gabriel Morrison (November 13, 1792) b. Speech by the Marquis de Condorcet (December 3, 1792) 164 166 167 171 171 176
viii Contents _ PART THREE_ 183 The Republican Crisis (1793—1795) chapter 8: Popular Movements Beyond the Convention 44. Definitions of the Sans-Culotte, the Moderate, and the Aristocrat (April—May 1793) a. Response to the Impertinent Question, But What Is a Sans-Culotte? b. Definition of the Moderate, the Feuillant, the Aristocrat 45. Address by Section Sans-Culotte to the National Convention (September 2, 1793) 46. Jean-Paul Marat, The Peoples Friend (June 23, 1793) 47. Jacques-René Hebert, Father Duchesne 48. Revolutionary Women in Paris Petition from the Revolutionary Republican Women to the National Convention on the Leadership of the Armies and the Law of Suspects (August 1793) b. Revolutionary Republican Women in a Showdown with the Market Women (November 1793) 190 190 190 191 192 194 197 200 a. 49. Emancipation in Saint-Domingue 200 201 204 a. Georges Biassou, Jean-François Papillon, and Gabriel Belair, Letter from the Leaders of the Insurgent Blacks to the General Assembly, National Commissioners, and Citizens of the French Part of Saint-Domingue (July 1792) 204 b. Toussaint Louverture, Letter (August 25, 1793) 207 c. Léger-Félicité Sonthonax, The Emancipation Proclamation ofAugust 29, 1793 208 d. Jean-Baptiste Belley, The Truth about the Colonists or the Plan ofthe Club Massiac (Paris, n.d.) 210 50. Creole of Saint-Domingue, My Odyssey: Experiences ofa Young Refugee from Two Revolutions (1793) 51. Ronchet, Addressfrom the Provisional Municipality to the National Convention, in the Name ofLiberty, Equality, and the One and
Indivisible Republic (August 2,1793) 52. The Vendée War a. 211 213 218 Counter-Revolutionary Activism 218 (i) Proces-Verbal of the War Council at Oye (April 4, 1793) (ii) Public Notice and Invitation to Parishes of the Military Division of the Camp of La Roche-sur-Yon (June 13, 1793) 218 b. Revolutionary Repression (i) Louis-Marie Turreau, Memoirfor the History ofthe Vendée War (1795) chapter 9: Legislating the Terror 53. Constitution of the Year I (June 24, 1793) 54. Instituting the Terror (September 5, 1793) 55. Law on Suspects (September 17, 1793) 219 220 220 223 223 227 233
ix Contents 56. ihe National Convention Outlaws Women’s Clubs and Popular Societies (October 30, 1793) 57. Georges-Jacques Danton, “Concerning Arbitrary Measures and Arrests” (January 23, 1794) 58. Bertrand Barère, On Behalfofthe Committee ofPublic Safety, Report to the National Convention on the Maximum (February 22, 1794) 59. Law of 22 Prairial Year II (June 10, 1794) chapter io: Revolution in Society and Culture 60. Anonymous, Reflections ofa Good Citizen in Favor ofDivorce (1789?) 61. Decree Regulating Divorce (September 20, 1792) 62. Citizen Lebrun, Republican Ode to the French People on the Supreme Being (October—November 1793) 63. Pierre-Laurent Monestier, Decree Concerning Fanatical Priests or Troublemakers, and the Celebration ofthe Decades (1794) 64. Maximilien Robespierre, Report on the Principles ofPolitical Morality Ihat Should Guide the National Convention in the Domestic Administration ofthe Republic (February 5, 1794) 65. Louis-Antoine-Léon de Saint-Just, Report in the Name ofthe Committees ofPublic Safety and General Security Concerning Prisoners . . . 8 Ventôse Year II (February 26, 1794) chapter u: The Thermidorian Reaction 66. Jean-Lambert Tallien, On the System of Terror (August 28, 1794) 67. Pierre Gaveaux and Jean-Marie Souriguère, “The Alarm of the People” (January 1795) 68. The Prairial Uprising (May 20-23, 1795) 69. Louis XVIII, Declaration of Verona (June 24, 1795) 234 239 240 243 247 247 249 251 253 255 259 264 264 269 270 276 _ PART FOUR_ Directory and Consulate (1795-1803) chapter 12: Orchestrating
Politics from Above 70. A New Constitution a. François Antoine Boissy d’Anglas, Preliminary Discourse to the Draft ofthe French Republican Constitution (June 23, 1795) b. Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Citizens (August 22, 1795) 71. Law against Provoking the Dissolution of Government (April 1796) 72. Council of Five Hundred Decrees the Closure of All Political Clubs (July 24-25, 1797) 73. Proclamation of the Directory to the French People (September 14, 1797) 279 286 286 286 288 291 293 296
x Contents 74. The Directory’s Electoral Interference 300 a. Address from the Executive Directory Concerning Elections (March 22, 1798) 300 b. The Executive Directory’s Proclamation on Elections (March 29, 1798) 302 chapter 13: Dissenters and Opponents 304 75. Gracchus Babeuf “The Plebeians’ Manifesto” (November 30, 1795) 76. Marc-Antoine Jullien, Some Advice to the Cisalpine Patriots (1797?) 77. Old Enemies 304 308 310 a. A Chouan in Caen (September 4, 1797) 310 b. A Jacobin in Lyon (March 11, 1797) 312 78. Anonymous, On the True Cause ofthe Revolution (1797) 79. Public Opinion in Paris (1796-1799) 313 317 Cultural Life 320 80. The Revival of Religious Practice 320 chapter 14: a. Letter from the Commissioner in Krignac (Morbihan) Concerning Local Religious Practices (February 27, 1797) 320 b. Letter from the Commissioner in Magny (Calvados) Concerning Religious Processions (July 11, 1797) · 321 81. Constance de Salm, “Epistles for Sophie: I, The Dangers of Unfortunate Choice” (c. 1801) chapter 15: NapoleonCloses the 323 Revolution 329 82. Napoleon Bonaparte, “Proclamation to the French Nation” (November 10, 1799) 83. The Imperial Religious Settlement a. Concordat with the Papacy (July 1801) b. Napoleon’s Proclamation to the French on the Religious Settlement (April 1802) 329 330 331 333 334 340 84. The French Civil Code (1803-1804) 85. Napoleon’s Restoration of Slavery in the Caribbean a. Napoleon Bonaparte, Views on Slave Emancipation, 1800 b. Charles Leclerc, Commander in Chief of the Army of Saint-Domingue, Letters (1802) c. Toussaint Louverture, Letters and Memoir
(1802) 86. The Making of an Independent Haiti 341 342 343 344 a. Toussaint Louverture, Constitution of the French Colony of Saint-Domingue (July 1801) 345 b. Toussaint Louverture,Proclamation (November 25, 1801) 348 c. Louis Boisrond Tonnerre, The Declaration of Independence (January 1, 1804) 350 Suggestionsfor Further Reading Index 353 359 |
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genre | (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content |
genre_facet | Quelle |
id | DE-604.BV048854808 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T21:40:57Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:47:55Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781647920906 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-034120031 |
oclc_num | 1381296719 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-384 DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-384 DE-12 |
physical | xxiii, 369 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten 23 cm |
psigel | BSB_NED_20240122 |
publishDate | 2023 |
publishDateSearch | 2023 |
publishDateSort | 2023 |
publisher | Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. |
record_format | marc |
spelling | The French Revolution a document collection edited by Laura Mason and Tracey Rizzo Second edition Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. 2023 xxiii, 369 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten 23 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Previous edition: Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999 Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 gnd rswk-swf France / History / Revolution, 1789-1799 / Sources (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 s DE-604 Mason, Laura (DE-588)171495500 edt trl win Rizzo, Tracey (DE-588)1128830124 edt trl win Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF 978-1-64792-096-8 Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034120031&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The French Revolution a document collection Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4018183-2 (DE-588)4135952-5 |
title | The French Revolution a document collection |
title_auth | The French Revolution a document collection |
title_exact_search | The French Revolution a document collection |
title_exact_search_txtP | The French Revolution a document collection |
title_full | The French Revolution a document collection edited by Laura Mason and Tracey Rizzo |
title_fullStr | The French Revolution a document collection edited by Laura Mason and Tracey Rizzo |
title_full_unstemmed | The French Revolution a document collection edited by Laura Mason and Tracey Rizzo |
title_short | The French Revolution |
title_sort | the french revolution a document collection |
title_sub | a document collection |
topic | Französische Revolution (DE-588)4018183-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Französische Revolution Quelle |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034120031&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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