The Age of the Democratic Revolution. A Political History of Europe and America, 1760-1800
418 Chapter XVII while it was Brissot, the most voluble of the French world- revolutionaries, who thought Dumouriez went too far ...
Revolutionizing of the Revolution 419 the charge of revolutionary activity at Lausanne, and a number of officers of Irish birth ...
420 Chapter XVII teers from the United States. He rejoiced in “upheavals of the globe, these great revolutions that we are calle ...
Revolutionizing of the Revolution 421 Propaganda Decrees, though mere propaganda was hardly their purpose. More will be said of ...
422 Chapter XVII Ségur went home, and Genet became chargé. He thought he saw signs in Russia that the liberating new modern spir ...
Revolutionizing of the Revolution 423 popular and of international revolutionism. Some of the constructive efforts of the Revolu ...
CHAPTER XVIII LIBERATION AND ANNEXATION: 1792–1793 Sir: The democratic government of France is said to have invented a new syste ...
Liberation and Annexation 425 territory taken by Catherine II in this “second” partition of Poland, involving White Russia and t ...
426 Chapter XVIII embourg were the most important), virtually cut in two by the large Bishopric of Liège, an independent member- ...
Liberation and Annexation 427 larist and reforming governments of Joseph II and Leopold II, against which they had in fact led t ...
428 Chapter XVIII traitor of 1793.^4 An age that saw one French general become king of Sweden might have seen another end up as ...
Liberation and Annexation 429 French or revolutionary demands. For the purchase of food, fuel, bedding, horses, hay, and other r ...
430 Chapter XVIII Antwerp, and suppression of long- distance commerce in Belgium, were considered by the Dutch and the English t ...
Liberation and Annexation 431 it is that he should not have the management of finances, but be subjected to strict rules; I prop ...
432 Chapter XVIII ruling bodies, and the church, should be confiscated. Against this property, assig- nats should be issued, to ...
Liberation and Annexation 433 priests,” and that the people should “feed but not fatten them.”^13 Everywhere there were demands ...
434 Chapter XVIII ber of votes, not with the number of adult males, but with figures for total popula- tion in which women and c ...
Liberation and Annexation 435 “noisy and impudent” persons who sat in alehouses and “obscure clubs” engaging in seditious talk. ...
436 Chapter XVIII was radicals outside the government, like Marat, who demanded a true revolution- izing of the United Provinces ...
Liberation and Annexation 437 trust. The Brissot group, having touted Dumouriez as their great general and ge- nius, was hopeles ...
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