French Revolution - Role of Lower Classes
French Revolution - Role of Lower Classes
French Revolution - Role of Lower Classes
IB European History
Mr. Swan/Mr. Duran
23 September 2008
While the privileged First and Second Estates were growing and becoming
ever more useless, the Third Estate’s bitter feelings and resentment toward
the other two Estates was intensifying to the point of explosion. This uprising
Storming of the Bastille. The most important role of the Third Estate,
The days of the Old Regime of France were numerous and took their
toll on the Third Estate. The First Estate was comprised of clergymen who
owned only 5-10% of France’s land. This Second Estate encompassed all of
the nobility of France. These two classes, combined, accounted for only
in these classes were exempt from taxes and duties. In order to regain
financial stability from all the failed wars in the past, the French monarchy
began selling titles of nobility. Between 1774 and 1789, 3,389 people
purchased these titles. Although these sales temporarily satisfied the need
for money, they created a growing wealthy class with substantial tax
“an aristocracy that was ever more splendid, yet ever less useful” (Breunig
4). When the monarchy realized that this method was not resolving the fiscal
crisis, a taille (head tax) was imposed heavily on the lower classes. The Third
Estate was understandably furious and felt that because they made up the
vast majority of the country’s population, only they had the right to govern
served to incur damage not only to the physical buildings and people
involved in the rebellion, but also to the power of the Old Regime. The first
major riot was the storming of the Bastille, which was a prison in Paris that
had, for years, symbolized the iron grip of the Old Regime. Political prisoners
who opposed the regime were said to have been held and brutally tortured
within the prison’s stone walls. On July 14th, 1789, a giant mob of angry Third
Estate citizens attacked the prison viciously. The prison’s governor, Bernard
opening of the prison gates, the mob rushed in, stole about 28,000 muskets,
and grabbed de Launay. He was roughly dragged through the streets of Paris
before being beheaded. In the end, only 7 prisoners were found, but the riot
Regime.
Perhaps the most important role of the Third Estate in the French
Revolution was that of a continual push for freedom and rights. Many of the
occurred between 1789 and 1791. For example, during the Night of August
4th, 1789, a group of nobles gathered to renounce their feudal rights and tax
exemptions. For centuries, the traditional feudal system had been oppressing
grievances and protests by the vast population of the Third Estate. The
nobles believed that partial surrender was the only method by which to quell
the uprising revolution. Shortly after, the Declaration of Rights of Man and
Citizen was adopted by the National Assembly on August 27th, 1789. This
that had never been officially placed into action in France before. Phrases
heard all over the country for the first time. The Declaration not only
reinforced human rights, but it also was the first major step toward
the injustices inflicted upon the lower classes. The writing of revolutionary
documents and legislature would not stop there; the willpower of the Third
Revolution. The mass protests by the lower classes served would not only
serve as inspiration for later protests in the Revolution, but also for protests