A History of Modern Europe - From the Renaissance to the Present

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456 Ch. 12 • The French Revolution


oppose the Revolution. In a world in which
symbols played a crucial political role, sans­
culottes could be identified by the Phrygian
cap, a symbol of freedom drawn from the
Roman Republic—close-fitting, red in
color, with a tricolor emblem—in contrast
to the three-cornered hat that had been
worn by urban social elites. The language
of the sans-culottes also quickly indicated
who they were; they called everyone “citi­
zen” and used the familiar (tu and never
vous)y egalitarian form of address. The po­
litical ideal of the sans-culottes was that
popular sovereignty had to be practiced
every day in direct democracy, in revolu­
tionary clubs and in the sections.
King Louis XVI wearing the

Phrygian cap. The Flight to Varennes


Fearing the growing violence of the Revolu­
tion and counting on the support of the other monarchs of Europe, Louis
XVI and his family tried to flee France in June 1791. The king’s goal was to
throw his support behind the foreign enemies of the Revolution and return
to France to revoke the concessions that he had made. Apprehended by the
National Guard in Varennes, the royal family was prevented from continu­
ing their journey into exile and freedom.
The king’s attempt to flee turned public sentiment further against him,
and strengthened support for a republic. The day after his flight, the
Cordeliers Club called for the establishment of a republic, but the major­
ity of the Assembly feared civil war. On July 17, 1791, at the Champ-de­
Mars in Paris, people came to sign (or put their “X” on) a petition resting
on the “Altar of the Fatherland” that called on the National Assembly to
replace the king “by all constitutional means.” The National Guard
opened fire, killing fifty people. Badly, the moderate mayor of Paris, and
Lafayette, the commander of the National Guard in Paris, declared mar­
tial law. However, even Louis XVI’s formal acceptance of the constitution
on September 14, 1791, could not stem the popular tide against the
monarchy.


War and the Second Revolution


The Revolution now entered a new, more radical phase. The king’s flight
seriously weakened the constitutional monarchists within the Assembly.

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