Joshua Hall
King Louis XVI was in power during the revolution, he was thrown into this position when King Louis XV attempted to flee the country. Extravagant spending by the king’s father left the country on the brink of bankruptcy. Unrest among the peasants knowing there situation, were not willing to support the feudal system any longer. When the three states assembled, they imposed heavy tax increases, which were approved by Nobility and Clergy. This left the country in flames, while the taxes did not provide relief, the French Revolution was created.
King Louis XVI was opposed to the 3rd Estates perspective of the situation. He believed he could repay his debt with heavy tax increases, Nobility and Clergy also …show more content…
One of these is the medieval fortress recognized as “Bastille”. This was a royal prison used to house political prisoners. It was a symbol of royal authority in the heart of Paris, to drain there irritation the peasants stormed the Bastille, not to free the seven inmates but to prove they are prepared to take action against the kings absurd ways. In reaction King Louis withdrew his troops from Paris. Another one is the attack on “Tuleries Palace”. The Austrian artily and its Prussian allies were forming together on the borders of France, preparing to march. The outbreak of rebellion behavior was becoming more often and more radical. On august 10th 1792, 20,000 people stormed the royal palace. The palace was conquered, but the king and queen managed to escape under the distraction of their armed forces. The last one I will share is the “Reign of Terror” which was a period of violence. “Maximilien Robespierre” was the dignitary of this movement; he aimed to sentence anyone who was rebellious towards the revolution to the guillotine. So the during the revolution he didn’t have to fight the battle on two fronts. July 28 1994 he himself was sentenced to death by guillotine which ended the Reign of