Causes of the French Revolution Funny Napoleon

  • Introduction & Quick Facts
    • Relief
      • The Hercynian massifs
        • The Ardennes
        • The Vosges
        • The Massif Central
        • The Massif Armoricain
      • The great lowlands
        • The Paris Basin
        • The Flanders Plain
        • The Alsace Plain
        • The Loire plains
        • The Aquitaine Basin
      • The younger mountains and adjacent plains
        • Pyrenees, Jura, and Alps
        • The southern plains
    • Drainage
      • The Seine system
      • The Loire system
      • The Garonne system
      • The Rhône system
      • The Rhine system
      • The smaller rivers and the lakes
    • Soils
    • Climate
      • The oceanic region
      • The continental region
      • The Mediterranean region
    • Plant and animal life
      • Plant life
      • Animal life
    • Ethnic groups
    • Languages
    • Religion
    • Settlement patterns
      • Rural landscape and settlement
        • Bocage
        • Open-field
        • Mediterranean
        • Mountain
      • Postwar transformation
      • Urban settlement
    • Demographic trends
      • Population history
      • Emigration
      • Immigration
      • Population structure
      • Population distribution
    • Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
      • Grains
      • Fruits and wine making
      • Dairying and livestock
      • Agribusiness
      • Forestry
      • Fishing
    • Resources and power
      • Minerals
      • Energy
    • Manufacturing
      • Industrial trends
      • Branches of manufacturing
    • Finance
      • Banking and insurance
      • The stock exchange
      • Foreign investment
    • Trade
    • Services
      • Civil service
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    • Labour and taxation
    • Transportation and telecommunications
      • Roads
      • Railroads
      • Waterways
      • Air transport
      • Telecommunications
    • Government
      • The constitutional framework
        • The genesis of the 1958 constitution
        • The dual executive system
        • The role of the president
        • Parliamentary composition and functions
        • The role of referenda
        • The role of the Constitutional Council
      • Regional and local government
        • The régions
        • The départements
        • The communes
        • The overseas territories
    • Justice
      • The judiciary
      • Administrative courts
    • Political process
    • Security
      • Armed forces
      • Police services
    • Health and welfare
      • Social security and health
      • Housing
      • Wages and the cost of living
    • Education
      • Primary and secondary education
      • Higher education
      • Other features
    • Cultural milieu
    • Daily life and social customs
    • The arts
      • Literature
      • The fine arts
        • Painting and sculpture
        • Music
        • Dance
        • Architecture
        • Photography
      • The cinema
    • Cultural institutions
      • Administrative bodies
      • Museums and monuments
    • Sports and recreation
    • Media and publishing
      • Television and radio
      • The press
    • Gaul
      • Geographic-historical scope
      • The people
      • The Roman conquest
        • Gaul under the high empire (c. 50 bcec. 250 ce)
        • Gaul under the late Roman Empire (c. 250–c. 400)
      • The end of Roman Gaul (c. 400–c. 500)
    • Merovingian and Carolingian age
      • Origins
        • Early Frankish period
        • Gaul and Germany at the end of the 5th century
      • The Merovingians
        • Clovis and the unification of Gaul
          • Frankish expansion
          • The conversion of Clovis
        • The sons of Clovis
          • The conquest of Burgundy
          • The conquest of southern Germany
        • The grandsons of Clovis
          • The shrinking of the frontiers and peripheral areas
          • The parceling of the kingdom
        • The failure of reunification (613–714)
          • Chlotar II and Dagobert I
          • The hegemony of Neustria
          • Austrasian hegemony and the rise of the Pippinids
      • The Carolingians
        • Charles Martel and Pippin III
          • Charles Martel
          • Pippin III
        • Charlemagne
          • The conquests
          • The restoration of the empire
        • Louis I
        • The partitioning of the Carolingian empire
          • The Treaty of Verdun
          • The kingdoms created at Verdun
      • The Frankish world
        • Society
          • Germans and Gallo-Romans
          • Social classes
          • Diffusion of political power
        • Institutions
          • Kingship
          • The central government
          • Local institutions
          • The development of institutions in the Carolingian age
        • Economic life
          • Trade
          • Frankish fiscal law
        • The church
          • Institutions
          • Monasticism
          • Education
          • Religious discipline and piety
          • The influence of the church on society and legislation
        • Merovingian literature and arts
        • Carolingian literature and arts
    • The emergence of France
      • French society in the early Middle Ages
      • The political history of France (c. 850–1180)
        • Principalities north of the Loire
        • The principalities of the south
        • The monarchy
        • Economy, society, and culture in the Middle Ages (c. 900–1300)
          • Economic expansion
          • Urban prosperity
          • Rural society
        • Religious and cultural life
          • The age of cathedrals and Scholasticism
          • Culture and learning
    • France, 1180 to c. 1490
      • France from 1180 to 1328
        • The kings and the royal government
          • Philip Augustus
          • Louis VIII
          • Louis IX
          • Later Capetians
        • Foreign relations
      • The period of the Hundred Years' War
        • The kings and the war, 1328–1429
          • Philip VI
          • John the Good
          • Charles V
          • Charles VI
          • Charles VII
        • Recovery and reunification, 1429–83
          • Governmental reforms
          • Military reforms
          • Regrowth of the French monarchy
        • Economy, society, and culture in the 14th and 15th centuries
          • Economic distress
          • The cities
          • The church
          • Culture and art
    • France, 1490–1715
      • France in the 16th century
        • Military and financial organization
        • The growth of a professional bureaucracy
        • The age of the Reformation
        • The Wars of Religion
        • Political ideology
      • France in the early 17th century
        • Henry IV
        • Louis XIII
        • The Fronde
      • The age of Louis XIV
        • The development of central government
        • Louis's religious policy
        • Absolutism of Louis
        • Foreign affairs
      • French culture in the 17th century
    • France, 1715–89
      • The social and political heritage
        • The social order of the ancien régime
        • Monarchy and church
        • Commitment to modernization
      • Continuity and change
        • Agricultural patterns
        • Industrial production
        • Commerce
        • Cities
      • Cultural transformation
        • The Enlightenment
        • The influence of Montesquieu and Rousseau
      • The political response
        • The historical debate
        • Foreign policy and financial crisis
        • Domestic policy and reform efforts
        • Tax reform
        • Parlements
        • King and parlements
      • The causes of the French Revolution
    • The French Revolution and Napoleon, 1789–1815
      • The destruction of the ancien régime
        • The convergence of revolutions, 1789
          • The juridical revolution
          • Parisian revolt
          • Peasant insurgencies
          • The abolition of feudalism
        • The new regime
          • Restructuring France
          • Sale of national lands
        • Seeds of discord
          • Religious tensions
          • Political tensions
      • The First French Republic
        • The second revolution
        • A republic in crisis
        • Girondins and Montagnards
        • The Reign of Terror
        • The Jacobin dictatorship
        • The Army of the Republic
        • The Thermidorian Reaction
        • The Directory
          • Sister republics
          • Alienation and coups
      • The Napoleonic era
        • The Consulate
        • Loss of political freedom
        • Society in Napoleonic France
          • Religious policy
          • Napoleonic nobility
          • The civil code
        • Campaigns and conquests, 1797–1807
        • The Grand Empire
        • The Continental System
        • Conscription
      • Napoleon and the Revolution
    • France, 1815–1940
      • The restoration and constitutional monarchy
        • Constitutionalism and reaction, 1815–30
          • Louis XVIII, 1815–24
          • Charles X, 1824–30
        • The revolution of 1830
        • The July Monarchy
      • The Second Republic and Second Empire
        • The revolution of 1848
        • The Second Republic, 1848–52
        • The Second Empire, 1852–70
          • The authoritarian years
          • The liberal years
          • The Franco-German War
      • The Third Republic
        • The Commune of Paris
        • The formative years (1871–1905)
          • Attempts at a restoration
          • The constitution of the Third Republic
          • Republican factions
          • Opportunist control
          • The Dreyfus Affair
          • Foreign policy
        • The prewar years
        • World War I
        • The interwar years
          • German reparations
          • Financial crisis
          • Collective security
          • Internal conflict on the left
          • The Great Depression and political crises
          • German aggressions
        • Society and culture under the Third Republic
          • Economy
          • Cultural and scientific attainments
    • France since 1940
      • Wartime France
        • The Vichy government
        • The Resistance
        • Liberation
      • The Fourth Republic
        • Constitution of the Fourth Republic
        • Political and social changes
        • Colonial independence movements
      • The Fifth Republic
      • France after de Gaulle
      • France under a Socialist presidency
        • Mitterrand's first term
        • Mitterrand's second term
      • France under conservative presidencies
        • The Chirac administration
        • The Sarkozy administration
      • The euro-zone crisis and the Socialist resurgence
        • The 2012 presidential campaign
        • The Hollande administration
      • Society since 1940
      • The cultural scene

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Source: https://www.britannica.com/place/France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815

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