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This is Part 1 of a 3-Part series.
- France was in huge financial stress in 1789.
- Most of the burden, in form of heavy taxes, had to be shouldered by the common people while Aristocrats and Church Leaders (Clergy) had easy lives.
- The King Louis XVI called upon a meeting on 5th May 1789 inviting aristocrats, clergy & common people to discuss financial stress & solutions.
- The three parties had one vote each but common people represented over 98% of the population in France.
- So they were unhappy with just one vote as they were likely to be overruled by clergy & aristocracy 2:1.
- Instead of discussing the financial reforms, the commoners began discussing unfair distribution of votes and decided they should meet separately to decide how the country should be run.
- A few days later National Constituent Assembly (NCA) was formed and they pledged to keep meeting until the king agreed to meet their demands of equality.
- Many of these commoners were highly educated lawyers; a few members from clergy and aristocracy also joined as they also had been commoners a few years ago.
- While so far the struggle had been for equality, some members of NCA began demanding the total removal of king as head-of-the-state.
- The king sensed trouble, called army to take position around Paris causing fear among commoners, who then decided to arm themselves with weapons for a rebellion.
- NCA created a military of common people; they found guns at a military hospital but couldn’t find gunpowder, which was stored at prison Bastille in Paris.
- They raided Bastille, which led to a bloody fight and chopping off of the head of the in-charge; the crowd then paraded with the chopped off head in the streets.
- NCA got together when they got to know of this violence and voted if they wanted a peaceful struggle or a violent revolution; violent revolution won.
- From here began the bloody legacy of the French Revolution and this is where NCA became an effective government of France and in-charge of French National Guard (military & police force).
In Part 2, we cover stripping of king’s powers and France becoming a republic.
In Part 3, we cover the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte.
Image courtesy of Picture by Wikipedia
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