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Montāžas Teksta

  • Beheading of the KingJanuary 21,1793
  • "The King, he is finally gone."
  • Reign of Terror Sept. 1793- July 1794
  • "Off with your head"
  • Robespierre Overthrown in FranceJuly 27, 1974
  • "We got them now"
  • Today on January 21, 1793, King Louis XVI was beheaded by the guillotine in the Place de la Revolution in Paris. The execution of King Louis XVI marked the pinnacle of the long and bloody French Revolution. The uprising began four years earlier with the storming of the bastille in Paris.
  • Coup of 18–19 BrumaireNov. 9-10, 1799
  • "He is great"
  • Reign of Terror, period of the French Revolution from September 5, 1793, to July 27, 1794, during which the Revolutionary government decided to take harsh measures against those suspected of being enemies of the Revolution (nobles, priests, and hoarders). In Paris a wave of executions followed. Although the Terror claimed such social outcasts as criminals and prostitutes, its main purpose was to clear France of suspected traitors, including Marie Antoinette (executed in Paris on October 16, 1793), and to purge the Jacobins of dissidents. It fell with the greatest severity on the clergy, the aristocracy, and the Girondins.
  • On July 27, 1794 (9 Thermidor in the Revolutionary calendar), Robespierre and his allies were placed under arrest by the National Assembly. Robespierre was taken to the Luxembourg prison in Paris, but the warden refused to jail him, and he fled to the Hotel de Ville. Armed supporters arrived to aid him, but he refused to lead a new insurrection.
  •  French Revolution. The event is often viewed as the effective end of the Napoleon Bonaparte and substituted the Consulate, making way for the despotism of France in Directory that overthrew the system of government under the coup d’état, (November 9–10, 1799), Coup of 18–19 Brumaire. In Paris on 18 Brumaire, year VIII (November 9, 1799), the legislative Council of Ancients, under Sieyès, voted to have both the Ancients and the lower house, the Council of Five Hundred, meet the next day in the palace at Saint-Cloud, ostensibly in order to render the councils safe from a purported “Jacobin plot” in Paris but in reality in order to put the councils at a convenient site away from the city and under the intimidation of Bonaparte’s troops.
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