Browse Items (78 total)

http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/58d208d28e5eaf8b5a8eebc19f1914e0.jpg

1857-00-00

An image produced well after the Revolution shows a Queen, assaulted by the gaze of the people, controlled by the soldier, and tentative in her stance and appearance.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/39164c17ca32ddaa170f47ff3a258235.jpg

Locked up in the Temple prison, there was little for the family to do but await the likely result. This image shows the grief suffusing the entire situation.

November 20, 1790

Despite a show of support for the Revolution, by the fall of 1790, the royal family and its entourage increasingly felt that the changes of the past eighteenth months had cost them their dignity and power. Unable to stop or even control the changes…

June 20, 1791

After 14 July, some of the King’s entourage had urged him to flee so that he would not have to approve a new Constitution. Aristocrats such as the Baron de Breteuil and the Marquis de Bouillé, along with the King’s brothers, who had already fled…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/4ed35d45d648077ac3f3107e1b0cfa06.jpg

1790

This engraving focuses on expurgating the clergy, this time with vomiting as the intended method. Here, the cleric spits up the unfair advantages enjoyed in the old regime.

November 12, 1794

Across France, the period of the Directory witnessed revenge against those who had carried out revolutionary justice during the Terror. Opponents of the Jacobins forced them from office and sought to prevent them from participating in politics. In…

1805

In this excerpt, Rainsford continues to exhalt the qualities of L’Ouverture while criticizing French behavior in the attempted reconquest of the island under Napoleon.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/b0dee9c0562808caa6e25f9c63ee3675.jpg

1791

This cartoon mocks all the leading figures of the "Counterrevolution," including the former royal family and its blood relatives, plus the clergy, the nobility, and specific individuals, such as Mirabeau, who had supported the monarchy in the early…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/47c10473922d7af448dce26000068bb5.jpg

1793

In this color print from 1793, the height of the Terror, two circular drawings appear next to each other, contrasting two types of liberty. English liberty exists, as the figure suggests, but based on the Magna Carta, calm prevails. Representing…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/b73b28c6dd51daeb66adff77c14b6f73.jpg

1793

Yet another English image promising that the death of Louis will bring havoc on the Revolution. This engraving indicates that the very blood of the King requires vengeance.
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