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I.

The Crisis Of The French Monarchy


A. The Monarchy Seeks New Taxes
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

3.

a)

b)

B. Necker's Report
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

c)

C. Calonne's Reform Plan And The Assembly Of Notables


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

D. Deadlock And The Calling Of The Estates General


1.

2.

II. The Revolution Of 1789


A. The Estate General Becomes The National Assembly
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

B. Debate Over Organization and Voting


1.

a)

b)
2.

a)

b)

C. Doubling The Third


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

D. The Cahiers de Doleances


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

E. The Third Estate Creates the National Assembly


1.

a)

b)

2.
a)

b)

F. The Tennis Court Oath


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

G. Fall Of The Bastille


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

H. The Great Fear And The Night Of Auguat 4


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)
I. The Declaration Of The Rights Of Man
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

J. The Parisian Women's March On Versailles


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

III. The Reconstruction Of France


A. Political Reorganization
1.

2.

B. Active and Passive Citizen


1.

2.
C. OLympe de Gouges' Declaration of the Right of Woman
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

D. Departments Replace Provinces


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

E. Economic Policy
1. Workers' Organization Forbidden

a)

b)

2. Confiscation of Church Lands

a)

b)
F. The Civil Constitution Of The Clergy
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

G. Counterrevolutionary Activity
1. Flight to Varennes

a)

b)

2. Declaration of Pillnitz

a)

b)

IV. The End Of The Monarchy: A Second Revolution


A. Emergence Of The Jacobins
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)
B. The Convention And The Role Of The Sans-Culottes
1. The September Massacres

a)

b)

2. Goals of the Sans-Culottes

a)

b)

C. The Policies of the Jacobins


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

D. Execution of Louis XVI


1. The September Massacres

a)

b)

2. Goals of the Sans-Culottes

a)

b)
V. Europe At War With The Revolution
A. Edmund Burke Attacks The Revolution
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

B. Suppression Of Reform In Britain


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

C. The Second And Third Partitions Of Poland,1793, 1795


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)
b)

VI. The Reign Of Terror


A. War With Europe
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

B. The Republic Defended


1. The Levee en Masse

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

C. The "Republic Of Virtue" And Robespiere's Justification Of Terror


1.

a)

b)

2.
a)

b)

D. Repression Of The Society Of Revolutionary Republican Women


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

E. De-Christianization
1. The September Massacres

a)

b)

2. Goals of the Sans-Culottes

a)

b)

F. Revolutionary Tribunals
1.

a)

b)

2.
a)

b)

G. The End Of The Terror


1. Revolutionaries Turn Against Themselves

a)

b)

2. Fall of Robespierre

a)

b)

VII. The Thermidorian Reaction


A. Establishment Of The Directory
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

B. Removal Of The Sans-Culottes From Political Life


1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)
C.
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

3.

a)

b)

4.

a)

b)

VIII.
A.
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

B.
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

C.
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

D.
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

E.
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

3.

a)

b)

F.
1.

a)

b)

2.

a)

b)

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