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Facts and Figures•Total weight of a Guillotine was about 580 kilos (1278lb) •The blade weighed over 40 kilos (88.2lb) •Height of side posts was just over 4m (14ft) •The blade drop was 2.3m (88 inches) •Power at impact was 400 kilos (888lb) per square inch.
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C 1793 August 23
4 revolutionary armies
B fixing the prices of many goods and services.
E 1793 October 21
1 Law of 14 Frimaire A Law of Revolutionary Government passed; power becomes centralised on the Committee of Public Safety.
A 1793 September 9
5 Levée en masse E priests and supporters liable to death on sight.
D 1793 September 29:
2 Convention passes the General Maximum
C Establishment of sans-culottes paramilitary forces
B 1793 December 4
3 An anti-clerical law passed
D Conscription order
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A 1793 September 9
4 revolutionary armies
C Establishment of sans-culottes paramilitary forces
B 1793 December 4
1 Law of 14 Frimaire A Law of Revolutionary Government passed; power becomes centralised on the Committee of Public Safety.
C 1793 August 23
5 Levée en masse D Conscription order
D 1793 September 29:
2 Convention passes the General Maximum,
B fixing the prices of many goods and services.
E 1793 October 21:
3 An anti-clerical law passed,
E priests and supporters liable to death on sight.
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Thursday 20 April 2023
Why was Robespierre overthrown?
KI3: Radical Revolution 1793-1799.
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Thursday 20 April 2023
Session Aims
Events of 1789.
• Recall key events from Robespierre’s life.
• Explain why Robespierre lost support in the summer of 1794.
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WHO? WHERE? WHEN?
WHY? WHAT?
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A print portraying the execution of Robespierre, Saint-Just, Cuthon, and several other members
of the Committee of Public Safety on 10 Thermidor Year II (28 July 1794), which brought
to an end the Great Terror and ushered in a period of reaction known as Thermidor--a term
that since has been used to describe a period of conservative reaction following a radical phase
of a revolution.
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Robespierre Loses
support
On the CPS & CGSWhy did tensions
emerge within and between the CPS and
CGS?
On the CPS & CGSWhy did tensions
emerge within and between the CPS and
CGS?
The Sans-CulottesWhy was
Robespierre’s losing support among the
sans-culottes?
The Sans-CulottesWhy was
Robespierre’s losing support among the
sans-culottes?
Among the CatholicsHow did people react to Robespierre’s new
religion?
Among the CatholicsHow did people react to Robespierre’s new
religion?
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Explain why Robespierre lost support in the summer of 1794. (12marks)
• Use the information from your diagram to write an answer to this question.
• You have 15 minutes!!
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L1: Answers will contain either some descriptive material which is only loosely linked to the focus of the question or some explicit comment with little, if any, appropriate support. Answers are likely to be generalised and assertive. The response will be limited in development and skills of written communication will be weak. 1-2
L2: Answers will demonstrate some knowledge and understanding of the demands of the question. They will either be almost entirely descriptive with few explicit links to the question or they will provide some explanations backed by evidence that is limited in range and/or depth. Answers will be coherent but weakly expressed and/or poorly structured. 3-6
L3: Answers will demonstrate good understanding of the demands of the question providing relevant explanations backed by appropriately selected information, although this may not be full or comprehensive. Answers will, for the most part, be clearly expressed and show some organisation in the presentation of material. 7-9
L4: Answers will be well-focused, identifying a range of specific explanations, backed by precise evidence and demonstrating good understanding of the connections and links between events/issues. Answers will, for the most part, be well-written and organised. 10-12
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The Terror and the Overthrow of Robespierre
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGjJOz5lDsw&feature=related
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEhUuYFpMac
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Complete the following
Robespierre was overthrown because…….
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18th of June
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Changes under the National Assembly
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Four Phases (Periods) of the French Revolution
What four governments ruled after the Tennis Court Oath?
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Four Phases (Periods) of the French Revolution
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• National Convention• September 20:National Convention. French Army stops advance of Coalition troops at Valmy.• September 21: Abolition of royalty and proclamation of the First French Republic.• September 22: First day of the French Revolutionary Calendar (N.B.: calendar introduced in 1793).• December 3: Louis XVI brought to trial, appears before the National Convention (11 & 23 December). Robespierre argues that "Louis must die, so that the country may live".• December 4 : A Belgian delegation is received at the National Convention to claim independence from Belgium.• 1793• January 21: Citizen Louis Capet guillotined, formerly known as Louis XVI.• March 7: Outbreak of rebellion against the Revolution: War in the Vendée.• March 11: Revolutionary Tribunal established in Paris.• April 6: Committee of Public Safety established.• May 30: A revolt breaks out in Lyon.• June 2: Arrest of Girondist deputies to National Convention by Jacobins.• June 10: Jacobins gain control of the Committee of Public Safety.• June 24: Ratification of new Constitution by National Convention, but not yet proclaimed. Slavery is abolished in France until 1802 (Rise of Napoleon Bonaparte).• July 13: Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat by Charlotte Corday.• July 27: Robespierre elected to Committee of Public Safety.• July 28: Convention proscribes 21 Girondist deputies as enemies of France.• August 23: Levée en masse (conscription) order.• September 5: Start of Reign of Terror.• September 9: Establishment of sans-culottes paramilitary forces - revolutionary armies.• September 17: Law of Suspects passed.• September 22: A new calendar is introduced, denoting September 22, 1792 as being the start of year I.• September 29: Convention passes the General Maximum, fixing the prices of many goods and services.• October 10: 1793 Constitution put on hold; decree that the government must be "revolutionary until the peace".• October 16: Marie Antoinette guillotined.• October 21: An anti-clerical law passed, priests and supporters liable to death on sight.• October 24: Trial of the 21 Girondist deputies by the Revolutionary Tribunal.• October 31: The 21 Girondist deputies guillotined.• November 3: Olympe de Gouges, champion of rights for women, guillotined for Girondist sympathies.• November 8: Madame Roland guillotined as part of purge of Girondists.• November 10: Celebration of the Goddess of Reason at Cathedral of Notre Dame which was re-dedicated as the Temple of Reason.• December: First issue of Desmoulins' Le Vieux Cordelier.• December 4: Law of 14 Frimaire (Law of Revolutionary Government) passed; power becomes centralised on the Committee of Public Safety.• December 23: Anti-Republican forces in the Vendée finally defeated and 6000 prisoners executed.