Vol 4

Revolutionary France

by Francois Furet

Published 3 December 1992
This is an account of 110 years of turbulence and change. At the offset there were not one, but two revolutions: by intent the first was egalitarian, the second - Bonaparte's - authoritarian. The tension between the two characterized the period and shaped the Republic that in the end emerged from the ruins of the Ancien Regime. The narrative begins in the last years of Louis XVI. The author provides an account of the years leading up to the Revolution and of the Revolution itself. The sovereignty of the people was as absolute as the monarchy it replaced, and the Terror was its tragic and inevitable consequence. Conformity in all matters from dress to religious observance was enforced in the name of equality. In 1799, after a well-planned and executed military coup, Bonaparte seized power and within five years had made himself France's first emperor. Napoleon conquered not only half of Europe but the aspirations of the Revolution, and put in place the laws in institutions by which France is still largely governed.
Yet the Revolutionary ideology of liberty and equality survived Napoleon and two restorations of the monarchy, re-emerging in the popular uprisings of 1830, 1848 and 1871, and finally finding constitutional expression in the Third Republic of 1871. The book is aimed at undergraduates in European history and at general readers.