Browse Items (78 total)

September 8, 1791

Fears about Marie Antoinette’s intentions and actions were not baseless. Although inexperienced in the new style of politics, Marie Antoinette did see a need for help from abroad if the monarchy was to stop or reverse the course of the Revolution,…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/94b70135599ec428a23c70c1314ac1bd.jpg

1797

Although the revolutionaries long regarded the Pope as an enemy, their anger was stoked significantly by the papal decision to decree as unacceptable the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. This decision, hardly unexpected given the way that the…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/6dfa336dc317b80e94eeed1eed57a65f.jpg

1790

This image ridicules monks for contributing nothing to society, either economically or demographically, by depicting a group of them being taken from the monastery and drafted into the army, where they hope "to become good citizens" as was expected…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/0cf35804a9a73cf23981d8d0b36df093.mp3

1785

This aria from the Gretry opera, Richard the Lion–Hearted, was adopted by royalists during the early years of the Revolution. The song’s accusation that the king had been abandoned by all but his most devoted followers made it a suitable…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/196f92c3d08a993a158da77cf541cb47.jpg

1790

Cartoons attacked the refractory clergy. Here, fat, overfed, and underworked clergy are squeezed down to an appropriate size. As elsewhere, visual images mocked the clergy by depicting them as subject to the threats and physical attacks of others.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/4af01ae8c04e973031a571d9626b21b6.jpg

1792

Of particular interest in this caricature of refractory clergy here are the long noses, traditionally used to caricature Jews, that suggest the refractory clergy were not of the people. This image shows resistant clergy marching in their last…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/67ee7841ca69c0192c977b0702952c41.jpg

1796

This highly sophisticated political cartoon by the noted engraver James Gillray from October 1796 responds to Edmund Burke’s pamphlet, "Reflections on a Regicide Peace." This image argues against further war with France to avoid bankrupting the…

1794

The fall of Robespierre and the Mountain in the summer of 1794 also reinvigorated counterrevolutionary forces, especially those hoping to restore royal authority in the person of the son of the "martyr" Louis XVI. We see evidence of efforts to…
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