Browse Items (181 total)

http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/f009084c8df25a54ca13df96d865951a.jpg

1789

The "bravery of the citizens united against" the royal army, as the text suggests, enabled them to conquer in four hours a fortress that had defeated invasions since 1368.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/baf41d3a0f8c50301f06a8950bde9bd9.jpg

1789-1791

This color print emphasizes the populace’s participation in the storming of the Bastille, showing the urban population fighting under a red banner with muskets, swords, and pikes against the royal soldiers. Stunning images such as these—as well as…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/a8508be800d163652b1c7bb10a14628d.jpg

1789

This painting emphasizes the populace’s participation in the storming of the Bastille, showing the urban population fighting under a red banner with muskets, swords, and pikes against the royal soldiers.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/d2d96061ab364a27964523d4d571228d.jpg

1789-1791

Upon returning to City Hall, the now heavily armed crowd stormed that building as well, arresting the "Provost of Markets" (or mayor) and his son–in–law, another municipal official. Both men were beheaded and their severed heads were placed on pikes…
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/54f6574016ec42e0d6fb5958e41007d7.jpg

1789-1791

This engraving from the Berthault series depicts Stanislas Maillard bravely climbing on a plank over the dry moat surrounding the fortress to accept from one of the soldiers Launay’s "capitulation" of the Bastille.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/files/original/baacf20f0b7d420d2c8d1b6692cc8e53.jpg

July 14, 1789

This engraving of the attack highlights the heroism of the people charging determinedly into the billowing clouds and firing relentlessly in the face of strong resistance emanating from the fortress.

July 14, 1789

Meaningless violence was precisely how the Duchess of Gontaut viewed the events of July 14th, especially the murder of the military governor of the Bastille and of the mayor of Paris, whose heads were placed on pikes and paraded around the city.

July 14, 1789

The soldiers stationed at the fortress did not see themselves as resisting the Revolution so much as keeping watch on a rather insignificant outpost that had nothing at all to do with the major events transpiring in Versailles. In this passage, a…

July 14, 1789

Having assembled at the traditional protest place in front of the City Hall, known as place des grèves (meaning sandbar, which it was, but which has come to mean "strike"), the crowd set off in search of ammunition. Eventually arriving at the…

July 14, 1789

As demonstrations spread across Paris on the morning of 14 July, Pierre–Victor Besenval, commander of the royal soldiers stationed in the capital, contemplated ordering his men to suppress the protests. However, as reports poured in from across the…
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