the Girondists were the conservative party of the French government during the French Revolution, they opposed the killing of King Louis XVI, but were beaten by the Jacobins lead by Robespierre, soon after they were all arrested and executed in what was known as the "Reign of Terror"
A group of deputies in the Assembly and Legislative Convention, many of them from the Gironde area around Bordeaux, established during the French Revolution. Centred around the figure of J.-P. Brissot, the 'faction of the Gironde' represented the resistance of the provinces to Parisian dominance, and opposition to the emerging dictatorship and terror under Robespierre. In June 1793 the Girondins were themselves expelled from the Convention and later killed.
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Although not an actual political party, they could be considered the French minority in the Legislative Assembly.
She was a Girondist policy maker and Influential politician who is well known for her 1795 publication of her thoughts and memoirs written while awaiting execution. She was taken to the guillotine on 8 November 1793.
(1793), incident precipitated by the military adventurism of Citizen Edmond-Charles Genêt, a minister to the United Statesdispatched by the revolutionary Girondist regime of the new French Republic, which at the time was at war with Great Britain and Spain. His activities violated an American proclamation of neutrality in the European conflict and greatly embarrassed France's supporters in the United States.
Well, honey, Jean-Paul Marat was offed by Charlotte Corday in 1793 because she thought he was a royalist sympathizer and a pain in the neck. The French Revolution was a messy time, and Marat was stirring the pot with his radical ideas. Corday took matters into her own hands, literally, and gave Marat a one-way ticket to the afterlife.
These are the main people: Napoleon Bonaparte A general in the French army and leader of the 1799 coup that overthrew the Directory. Napoleon's accession marked the end of the French Revolution and the beginning of Napoleonic France and Europe. Louis XVI The French king from 1774 to 1792 who was deposed during the French Revolution and executed in 1793. Louis XVI inherited the debt problem left by his grandfather, Louis XV, and added to the crisis himself through heavy spending during France's involvement in the American Revolution from 1775 to 1783. Because this massive debt overwhelmed all of his financial consultants, Louis XVI was forced to give in to the demands of the Parlement of Paris and convene the Estates-General-an action that led directly to the outbreak of the Revolution. Louis XVI was deposed in 1792 and executed a year later. Marie-Antoinette The wife of King Louis XVI and, in the French commoners' eyes, the primary symbol of the French royalty's extravagance and excess. When Marie-Antoinette was executed in 1793, she was dressed in a plain dress, common to the poorest in French society. Maximilien Robespierre A brilliant political tactician and leader of the radical Jacobins in the National Assembly. As chairman of the Committee of Public Safety, Robespierre pursued a planned economy and vigorous mobilization for war. He grew increasingly paranoid about counterrevolutionary opposition, however, and during the Reign of Terror of 1793-1794 attempted to silence all enemies of the Revolution in an effort to save France from invasion. After the moderates regained power and the Thermidorian Reaction was under way, they had Robespierre executed on July 28, 1794. Jacques Necker A Swiss-born banker who served as France's director general of finance in the late 1770s, with high hopes of instituting reform. As it turned out, Necker was able only to propose small efforts at eliminating costly inefficiencies. He did produce a government budget, however, for the first time in French history. Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès A liberal member of the clergy, supporter of the Third Estate, and author of the fiery 1789 pamphlet "What Is the Third Estate?" Sieyès was one of the primary leaders of the Third Estate's effort at political and economic reform in France. Georges Jacques Danton, Lucie Simplice Camille Benoist Desmoulins, Maximilien Francois Marie Isidore de Robespierre, and Louis Antoine Leon de Saint-Just all had critical leadership roles in bringing about and carrying out the French Revolution. Danton observed, La revolution devore ses enfants [The revolution eats up its children]. And all four indeed had lost their heads by the time the revolution ended.