The French Revolution By The History Channel Analysis

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Prior to reading chapter 18 in our history book or watching the video The French Revolution by the History Channel, I knew very little of the details regarding the French Revolution. The film link on Blackboard was to watch the first 5 segments of the documentary, but I immediately searched and watched the remaining 4 segments because I was so intrigued. When one hears it being referred to as one of the bloodiest wars in histories, rest assured, it is not an understatement. It is not just the amount of people that were slaughtered being considered for this statement, it is also the manner in which the deaths occurred, and the reasonings behind them. France was currently under the rule of a king and queen that although they enjoyed the life of royalty, they had no …show more content…

This lack of leadership leads to the ability of Maximilien Robespierre to rise into a position of power. To gain respect and support, Robespierre used the current poverty conditions of the common people as a platform to claim he was a true representative of the people and call for change. He quickly became nicknamed The Incorruptible as he promoted a Master Order which calls for a new order of society. In the beginning, he believed in a doctrine that was drawn from The Age of Enlightenment such as equality for all men, liberty, fraternity, universal suffrage, an end to slavery, and opposition to the death penalty. To achieve the aforementioned would require that everything within the French society must be recreated, the political system, an end to the Catholic Church and Christianity, an end to the nobility class, and a change in human nature itself. It seems that Robespierre not only begins ignoring all the horrific

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