Sunday, August 18, 2019
The French Revolution :: essays research papers
 The French Revolution was an unstable, blood-filled time. With 20,000 sent to the  guillotine and an equal number to prison, it is not hard to find importance but rather to  find meaning. The most crucial thing to look for in the revolution is justification, reasons  that excuse or bring significance to the deaths of many. John Locke, a philosophe of the  time, may have argued that a leader who does not provide his people with inalienable  rights is grounds for dismissal in the form of regicide1. On the other hand Thomas  Hobbes, also a philosopher, may have taken a different argument. It was his belief that  ââ¬Ëman is a bruteââ¬â¢, therefore he needs a dictator to keep the peace. John Lockeââ¬â¢s idealistic  view point if practiced properly could have provided the lower class of France with  equality, something the were desperately in need of. The Thomas Hobbes approach  which advocates control, could not have provided the people with such liberation, but in  theory should be able to maintain the peace among the people, the peace that seemed so  lacking during the French Revolution. The French Revolution was a disaster for the  following reasons: it happened too fast, it went too far, and it achieved too little.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Thomas Paine a radical thinker of the era once said ââ¬ËTime makes more converts  than reasonââ¬â¢. With this quote we can see why revolution was successful in England, but  not France. England slowly used the Magna Carta (1213), Petition of Rights (1628), and  the Habeas Corpus Act (1679) to limit itââ¬â¢s monarch. It was a long road that was by no  means perfect. With monarchs who paid little attention to the act(s) in place during their  reign and parliament, like James (1603-1625) and Charles I (1625-1649) it was hard to  see progress quickly. These acts played a vital role in Britainââ¬â¢s journey to democracy,  through them came proper representation of the people, equality, and what is now known  as the ââ¬ËGlorious Revolutionââ¬â¢.   à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  France seemed to be on itââ¬â¢s way to a similar fate. In 1789, the Estates-General2  had now received a promise of a head count from Louis XVI. Prior to this time the very  large third estate3 (26 million) had the same number of representatives in the  Estates-General as the first estate4 (100,000) and the second estate5 (400,000) combined.   Once the Estates-General had been renamed the National Assembly by the third estate a  constitution was in the works. During this time the people of France became restless,  food shortages plagued the country side. It also appeared that Louis XVI might dissolve    					    
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