Browse Items (161 total)

http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/5dd4929b042d6bf5ab1540d48470ddbc.jpg

1789

The women who arrived, though lightly armed, were no shrinking violets. They insisted that the royal family return to Paris where, in fact, they would find themselves under virtual house arrest.

November 2, 1794

The case against Olympe de Gouges is worth reading in detail because it is typical of the attacks on those who criticized the authority of the central government that gathered force in the fall of 1793 and continued up to July 1794, when Robespierre…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/15473831f329c53fbc518dde668e526e.jpg

1793

As 80,000 crowded into the square to watch the execution of Louis XVI, they cannot have been unaware that the guillotine sat where a statue of Louis XV had been. Here Sanson, the executioner, snatches the detached head of Louis XVI to show to the…

1859

This newspaper article considers the question of equality from the opposite point of view—arguing that without social distinctions making clear who should lead and who should follow, society cannot hold together. In particular, the article emphasizes…

1757

Having found Damiens guilty, the judges ordered him punished in a gruesome public spectacle, with the intention of repressing symbolically, through his body, the threat to order that the judges perceived in his attack on the King. Such punishment,…

October 14, 1793

Seven months after the execution of the King, shortly after the declaration of "Revolutionary Government," the Convention turned to the rest of the royal family. Fearing that Marie Antoinette and her son, the nominal King, would provide rallying…

This event, which may be entirely apocryphal, and is shown in an image that surely dates from much after the Revolution, relates to the vision of the weakness of Louis and the strength of Marie Antoinette.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/85ecef51b01fc6db3f9ad544449d96bf.jpg

1815

An idealized portrait of Marie Antoinette at the moment of death. Unlike the pale, aged woman the contemporaries observed, this later print memorialized a beautiful, absolutely pure, woman. While in life she had been assailed as a lesbian, a…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/b2e46cc225288380d514bd5107582ec6.jpg

Confined to her cell, the Queen is as dejected as her husband.
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.
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