The Age of the Democratic Revolution. A Political History of Europe and America, 1760-1800
378 Chapter XVI cumstances, not known in this country, may serve to palliate the apparent cruelty of the ruling faction.” Like a ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 379 between new and old—between “democratic” and “aristocratic” forms of society in the sense exp ...
380 Chapter XVI Frankfurt, and his political opinions, like those that he conveyed from Louis XVI, were brushed aside as too con ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 381 ing the six- pound crown, and bearing the orb and scepter. Goldpieces were thrown to the mult ...
382 Chapter XVI song, since known as the Marseillaise. Its refrain leaped from town to town: Aux armes, citoyens, Formez vos bat ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 383 sume their interrupted efforts in their own countries. As the Prince of Condé formed a milita ...
384 Chapter XVI Pope Pius VI, and the best of the French émigré bishops, did not confuse political or material restitution to th ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 385 the lead of the king and his ministers. For the extreme right, those opposed even to moderate ...
386 Chapter XVI Given the fact of war, each of the belligerents looked for sympathizers within its enemy’s territory. Thus each ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 387 while the war made other countries more aristocratic in official doctrine, it made the French ...
388 Chapter XVI Henry of Prussia, Frederick the Great’s brother, was a “Jacobin.” So were several members of the English House o ...
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The Issues and the Adversaries 391 of the most far- reaching and immediate effects of the Revolution, as Georges Lefebvre pointe ...
392 Chapter XVI countries, like England, where legal doctrines put heavy emphasis on the inheri- tance of a complex legal tradit ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 393 they were called “Jansenists,” and when revolution came to Italy in 1796 the Italian Jansenis ...
394 Chapter XVI took a great variety of attitudes to the Revolution. At the most radical moment, in France in 1793 and 1794, bus ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 395 Seldom did business men take any initiative in bringing on revolution. Very commonly they acc ...
396 Chapter XVI sufficiency, and the liberty which meant the virtual absence of centralized govern- ment; and that the opposite ...
The Issues and the Adversaries 397 position to Parliamentary Reform in England some years before, and elaborated them as a criti ...
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