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Jacques Danton, Camille Desmoulins, Maximilien de Robespierre, and Louis de Saint-Just all had critical leadership roles in bringing about and carrying out the French Revolution. Danton observed, "La révolution dévore ses enfants" [The revolution eats up its children]. And all four indeed had lost their heads by the time the revolution ended.
well that depends on if you are talking about in America or France. In France it was a king and it was Louis XIV, XV and XVI
Yes. Robespierre did suporrt the revoltion. in fact, he was the head of the revolution.
King Louis XVI
The storming of the Bastille was particularly gruesome. It was during this event that the act of decapitating someone and putting their head on a pike, then parading it around the town square became popular.The guillotine was invented shortly thereafter, and was used frequently in the days and months after the Bastille had been stormed.The entire revolution was pretty bloody, really.
Maximillien Robespierre, nicknamed "the Incorruptible", was the leader of the Jacobins who took over the leadership of France during the French Revolution. He and the other committee members ordered the execution of the King, Louis XVI for treason in January 1793. Robespierre, as an enlightened thinker, brought revolutionary ideas of equality, liberty and fraternity to the minds of the French people already put under pressure by poverty, exacerbated by an incapable king and an exorbitant queen. During the revolution, he also made France a secluar state. He attempted to re-name the months of the year and make 1794 the first year of French history. This did not catch on though, and his attempt to institute a new "festival of the saint" was also unsucessful. While it is true that Robespierre allowed the death of thousands of French persons-men, women and children- during the course of the revolution, he also paved the way for the rise of a republic France, as opposed to a monarchy. In addition, his unseating of the monarchy led to the power of Napoleon Bonaparte who aided in developing France's politics under a system of centralisation. Robespierre died in 1794, the final victim of the revolution- taken by the guillotine to which he had sent thousands.
French culture was ruled by what you might call class war, the very rich and the very poor, there was no middle. The French were always reliant on rule from above, but that rule is what was destroying them, and the fight to retain that rule was only making it worse, it finally came to a head in the revolution, strangely enough it pretty much went back to the same thing afterward too.
Napoleon Bonaparte. The King was Louis XVI; the queen was Marie Antoinette.
Louis XVI was an inept and indecisive French King who lost his office and his head during the French Revolution.
The National Convention was in control from 20 September 1792 until 26 October after the Monarchy was abandoned until it was succeeded by the Directory.
used to. during french revolution.
Head chopping is what they did literally during the revolution: they had people's head chopped off by a guillotine. It was done to people that did not support the revolution. During the revolution, you weren't allowed to have a different opinion than the revolutionary opinion, and when you did, you were in great danger.
His head was cut off by the Guillotine during the French Revolution.
it was used to cut off peoples head
The French Revolution started in 1789. At that time, Louis XVI was king of France until 1793 (when he was killed). After that, the National Assembly grabbed the power, and after that the Directory. By the time Napoleon came to power in 1799 (stating a coupe and turning France into an Empire), France was one huge chaos.
really really mad! that's why it was so bloody cause they wanted every nobleman's head!(they were miffed from mistreatment)
Yes. Robespierre did suporrt the revoltion. in fact, he was the head of the revolution.
Charles de Gaulle
The head of the French government is the "premier ministre" (prime minister). He is nominated to the position by the president (who is head of state, but not of government) and accountable to the parliament.