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The Triumph of Liberty
The Enlightenment, Modern Democracy, and the
American & French Revolutions
Professor Will Adams
Valencia College
Setting the Scene
Scientific Revolution
 In 1543, Copernicus published On
the Revolutions of the Heavenly
Spheres which argued that the sun,
rather than the Earth, stood at the
center of the universe and that the
planets revolved around the sun
 Copernicus’ work inspired
astronomers to examine the
heavens in new ways
 Increasingly, they based their
theories on observed data and used
mathematical reasoning to
organize the data
 This reliance on observation and
mathematics ushered in the
“Scientific Revolution”.
Impact of the Scientific Revolution
 Suggested that rational analysis of behavior and
institutions could have meaning in the human as
well as the natural world.
 Increasingly, thinkers challenged recognized
authorities such as Aristotelian philosophy and
Christian religion and sought to explain the world
in purely rational terms.
 The result was a movement known as the
“Enlightenment”.
The American Revolution
A Changing World
 In the mid-18th century, British colonists in North
America seemed content with British rule, but in
the mid-1760’s things started to change
 First, new ideas about a just society began to
circulate in the Enlightenment era
 Second, the British imposed new taxes to offset
the cost of the Seven Years’ War; taxes which
seemed to the colonists to conflict with the
Enlightenment philosophy.
The Seven Years’ War
 Commercial competition
in the New World
ultimately generated
violence that culminated
in the Seven Years’ War
(1756-1763).
 In North America, the
Seven Years’ War merged
with the on-going French
and Indian War which
pitted the British and
French against each other.
George Washington fought for the British
and was defeated in the opening battle of
the French and Indian War at Fort Necessity
in the Ohio Country
The Seven Years’ War: A British Victory
 The British emerged
victorious and as a result
they gained control of North
America from the French.
 The war helped create
conditions that led to the
American Revolutionary
War, because the British
colonists no longer needed
British protection from the
French and would come to
resent the taxes imposed by
Britain to pay for its military
commitments.
American Revolution: New Legislation
 Trying to recover financial losses from the
French and Indian War and the Seven Years’
War, the British passed a series of new taxes
on the colonies.
 Sugar Act (1764)
 Stamp Act (1765)
 Townshend Act (1767)
 Tea Act (1773)
 Other offensive legislation included the
Quartering Act of 1765 and the Intolerable
Acts.
The Issue of Taxation
 While other issues annoyed the colonists, it was
taxation that most led to demands for independence.
 Because Parliament had usually refrained from taxing
them, many colonists assumed that it could not.
 One American asked, if taxes were now imposed
“without our having a legal Representation where
they are laid, are we not reduced from the Character
of free Subjects to the miserable State of tributary
Slaves?”
 The idea of “No taxation without representation” was
consistent with Rousseau and other Enlightenment
thinkers.
The Issue of Representation
 In England, electoral districts for Parliament were
often based on earlier conditions.
 For example, Dunwich continued to maintain its
right to elect a parliamentary representative long
after the city itself had been washed into the
North Sea.
 Manchester, however, was a rapidly growing city
that lacked representation.
 Most Englishmen accepted this condition because
they believed in “virtual representation”.
 Representatives served the interests of the entire
nation rather than just their home locality.
The Issue of Representation
 Such Englishmen assumed that
since the colonists held
interests in common with
citizens back home, they were
“virtually” represented.
 Americans, on the other hand,
had enjoyed “actual
representation” since the
founding of the colonies.
 They believed elected
representatives should be
directly responsive to local
interests and they were used to
instructing their legislators
about how to vote on key
issues.
 They were skeptical of the idea
of “virtual representation”.
Country Ideology
 Even before the Seven Years’ War, the British had
borrowed heavily to fund several other wars and
developed a large bureaucracy to collect taxes to
pay the war debt
 In response, a “Country” or “Real Whig” ideology
emerged that:
 Stressed the threats to personal liberty posed
by a large standing army and a powerful state
 Emphasized the dangers of taxation to
property rights and the need for property
holders to maintain the right to consent to
taxation
Country Ideology
 Country ideology stressed that it was the duty of
the Parliament (particularly the House of
Commons which represented the people as a
whole) to check the executive power of the Crown.
 It was the House of Commons’ control of taxation that
controlled tyrannical leaders.
 John Locke had argued that rulers had authority to
enforce law “only for the public good”.
 When the Crown did its job properly, the House of
Commons appropriated the necessary funds.
 When rulers infringed on the people’s liberties, the
House restrained them by withholding taxes.
Country Ideology
 Because of these important
responsibilities, Country
ideology required
representatives to be of
sufficient property and
judgment to make
independent decisions
 A representative of
appropriate social status was
generally assumed to be
qualified to lead, but if he
proved otherwise, his
constituents should be able to
vote him out
Country Ideology
 Country ideology appealed to
many Americans.
 It was consistent with the idea
that power should reside at
the local level.
 It emboldened those who
feared they lacked a voice in
decisions being made in
England.
 Its insistence on the
important political role of the
propertied elite appealed to
the local gentry.
The Sugar Act
 Given the philosophies of the Enlightenment
and Country ideology, the colonists responded
only mildly to the Sugar Act.
 The effects of the act were felt mostly in New
England where it cut into the smuggling trade
with the French West Indies.
 Still, on principle, the act was offensive and
eventually all the assemblies passed
resolutions declaring that any Parliamentary
tax on America, including the Sugar Act, was
unconstitutional.
The Stamp Act
 The Stamp Act, because its
effects were felt equally
throughout the colonies, elicited
a more swift response
 One response was the formation
of the Sons of Liberty, a
collection of loosely organized
protest groups, who put
pressure on stamp distributors
and British authorities
 The American response was
troublesome enough that in
March 1766, the Stamp Act was
repealed
 Still the British persisted in their
right to impose taxes, including
the Townshend Duties in 1767
The Boston Massacre
 The Townshend duties
continued to strain the
relationship between America
and Britain, and most of its
articles were eventually repealed
 Before that, however, on March
5, 1770, the “Boston Massacre”
occurred in which British troops
fired on an unruly crowd, killing
five men
 A period of quiet followed this
outbreak, but during it the
colonies established “committees
of correspondence” to keep each
other informed of objectionable
British actions.
The Boston Tea Party
 The “Quiet Period” was broken on
December 16, 1773 with the Boston
Tea Party.
 Partly because Americans were
drinking smuggled and untaxed
tea, the British East India Company
was nearly bankrupt.
 Lord North, the British prime
minister, tried to rescue it by the
Tea Tax of 1773 which was a thinly
disguised measure to get the
Americans to pay the old
Townshend duty on British East
India Tea.
 A well-organized band of men,
some disguised as Indians, boarded
the tea ship Dartmouth and broke
open 342 chests of tea and threw
the contents into the harbor.
The First Continental Congress
 The Boston Tea Party led to
the British passing three
repressive measures known
collectively as the Intolerable
Acts.
 These acts united the colonists
like never before and the First
Continental Congress met in
Philadelphia from September 5
to October 26, 1774.
 Even now, however, it was but
a minority who favored war
with Britain.
 Most hoped and believed the
British would change their
policies and all would be well
again.
Increased Tensions
 Colonists began to separate
into “Whigs” who advocated
increased rights and “Tories”
who were more loyal to the
Crown.
 Both the Americans and
British could see a crisis was
looming and took steps to
prepare.
 In 1774, General Thomas
Gage, the commander of the
British army in America and
governor of Massachusetts,
dissolved the legislature
which then proceeded to
assemble anyway.
Increased Tensions
 A “Provincial Congress”
established the “Committee of
Safety,” to be headed by John
Hancock, in October 1774 for
the purpose of stockpiling
weapons and organizing
militia volunteers.
 Special companies of “minute
men” were to be ready at “a
minutes warning in Case of an
alarm”.
 In a move to quell such
belligerence, Lord North
ordered Gage to take decisive
action.
Lexington & Concord
 On April 18, 1775, Gage
assembled 700 men on the
Boston Common and marched
them toward Lexington and
Concord
 His goal was to arrest rebel
leaders Samuel Adams and
John Hancock in Lexington and
destroy the military supplies
the Committee of Safety had
stockpiled in Concord
 Riders like Paul Revere warned
fellow patriots, and by the time
the British reached Lexington
they found 70 armed
militiamen waiting for them
Lexington & Concord
 No one knows who fired the
first shot, but the end result
was 18 Americans killed or
wounded.
 The British then marched to
Concord and burned some
supplies.
 Some 4,000 militia men
descended on the British
and harassed their retreat
back to Boston, inflicting
273 casualties while
suffering nearly 100 of their
own.
Lexington & Concord
Concord Hymn
By the rude bridge that arched the
flood,
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers
stood,
And fired the shot heard ‘round
the world.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Concord Hymn
The Declaration of Independence
 On July 4, 1776, the
Continental Congress
adopted “The Unanimous
Declaration of the
thirteen united States of
America” (The
Declaration of
Independence).
The Declaration of Independence
 “all men are created equal, that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,
that among these are Life, Liberty, and the
pursuit of Happiness”
 Governments derive their power and authority
from “the consent of the governed”
 When any government infringes upon
individual’s rights, “it is the Right of the People to
alter or abolish it, and to institute new
Government”
 Declared the colonies to be “Free and
Independent States”
David vs. Goliath
 However, declaring independence and actually
winning it by war were two different things.
 Victory in the Seven Years’ War had left Britain as
the dominant power in the world.
 It had a population of eight million with a
professional army, large navy, and formidable
wealth.
 The colonists had a population of two and a half
million (20% of whom were enslaved) and no
army, navy, or significant financial resources.
British Troops: August, 1776
 24,000 soldiers
 Average soldier was 30 years old
with 10 years service
 Muskets, bayonets, light field
guns
 Two or three ranks of infantry
supported by light field guns
 Powerful Navy (30 warships, 400
transports)
 More experienced, better led,
more thoroughly disciplined and
trained
 General William Howe knew
generals from their Seven Years’
War record
Colonial Troops: August, 1776
 28,000 soldiers
 Average soldier was 20 years old
with less than a year of service
 Muskets, bayonets, light field guns
 Two or three ranks of infantry
supported by light field guns
 Used simplified British tactics
(experience from Seven Years’
War)
 No Navy
 Great disparity in quality between
militia and Continental Army
 Many generals were imposed upon
General George Washington by
Congress or state governments.
The Difference
 What gave the colonists hope
was the opportunity to be
gained by courage, cause, the
home court advantage, and
patriotism
 Unlike earlier European
dynastic squabbles, the
American Revolution was an
ideological war that affected
the population
 “Remember, officers and
soldiers, that you are freemen,
fighting for the blessings of
liberty; that slavery will be your
portion and that of your
posterity if you do not acquit
yourselves like men.”
- George Washington
British Challenges
 Underestimated the impact of patriotism.
 Overestimated the Loyalist strength.
 Only about 20% of free Americans were Tories.
 Colonial decentralization meant colonies had no
strategic heart and the British would have to
occupy vast expanses of territory.
 Supply and communications were difficult with
England 3,000 miles away.
 The British population was not united behind the
war.
 Britain still had enemies in Europe to worry about.
Civilian Attitudes
 Both sides understood from the
beginning that they were
fighting for the allegiance of a
people and for the destruction
or preservation of one state and
the creation of another
 The colonists had to defeat the
British and control the loyalists
without losing popular support
or destroying the republican
principles for which they
fought
 The British argued that they
were protecting loyalists from
the tyranny of a few ambitious
rebels.
The British Strategy
 The British never really found a
good solution for dealing with the
population
 Tried various strategies with little
success
1. Intimidating the rebels with
a show of force
2. Combining force and
persuasion to break the
rebellion without alienating a
majority of the colonists
3. Enlisting the support of
loyalists in a gradual and
cumulative restoration of
royal government
American Strategy
 Primarily defensive and
therefore shaped by
countering British moves.
 Uncertainties about
supplies and manpower
worked against a
consistent strategy.
 However, Washington
understood his strengths
and weaknesses and had
the defender’s advantage.
American Strategy
 Maintain a principal striking force in a central
position to block any British advance into the
interior.
 Be neither too timid or too bold in seeking battle
for limited objectives (Partisan operations in the
South).
 Avoid the destruction of the army at all costs.
 Find some means of concentrating a sufficient
force to strike a decisive offensive blow whenever
the British overextended themselves.
The United States is Born
 In September 1783, the British formally recognized
American independence.
 In 1787, Americans drafted the Constitution of the United
States which created a federal government based on
popular sovereignty.
 The Bill of Rights in particular stressed individual liberties
such as freedom of speech, the press, and religion.
 The success of the American Revolution and this early
understanding of freedom, equality, and popular
sovereignty in America would have broad implications
throughout the world.
 Remember Emerson’s “shot heard round the world”!
The French Revolution
Absolutism
 King Louis XIV (1643-1715)
of France is credited with
having said “L’etat c’est
moi!” or “I am the state.”
 Louis’s statement is
consistent with the idea of
absolutism.
 Absolutism is the theory
that ultimate power in the
early centuries of modern
Europe was vested in a
hereditary monarch who
claimed a God-given right
to rule.
Absolutism
 Louis went so far as to call
himself the “Sun King,”
claiming that like the sun,
everything revolved around
him
 Catholicism was the
national religion of France
 “One faith, one law, one
king.”
 In 1685 Louis revoked the
Edict of Nantes and
insisted that Huguenots
convert to Catholicism.
Philosophes
 Enlightenment thinkers
considered absolutism to
be unnatural and they
sought to discover natural
laws that governed human
society in the same way
Newton’s laws regulated
the universe.
 Collectively, these
thinkers were called the
philosophes
(“philosophers”) .
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
 Many Enlightenment thinkers
condemned the legal and
social privileges enjoyed by
aristocrats and called for a
society in which all
individuals were equal before
the law
 In 1762, Rousseau wrote The
Social Contract arguing that
members of a society were
collectively the sovereign
 All individuals would
participate directly in the
formulation of policy and the
creation of laws
French Revolution: Ancien Regime
 The Americans sought independence from
British imperial rule, but they kept British
law and much of the British social and
cultural heritage.
 On the other hand, French revolutionaries
sought to replace the ancien regime (“the
old order”) with new political, social, and
cultural structures.
French Revolution: Estates General
 In May 1789, in an
effort to raise taxes,
King Louis XVI
convened the Estates
General, an assembly
representing the
entire French
population through
three groups known as
estates.
French Revolution: Estates General
 The first estate was
about 100,000 Roman
Catholic clergy.
 The second estate was
about 400,000 nobles.
 The third estate was
about 24 million others
(serfs, free peasants,
laborers).
 In spite of these
numerical discrepancies,
each estate had one vote.
French Revolution: Estates General
 The third estate
demanded sweeping
political and social
reform, but the other
two estates resisted
 On June 20, 1789, the
third estate seceded
from the Estates
General and declared
itself the National
Assembly.
French Revolution: NationalAssembly
 The National Assembly vowed
not to disband until France
had a written constitution.
 This assertion of popular
sovereignty spread to Paris
and on July 14 a crowd
stormed the Bastille to seize
weapons and ammunition.
 The garrison surrendered in
the wake of great bloodshed.
 The attackers severed the
commander’s head and
paraded it through the streets
on a pike.
 Insurrections spread
throughout France.
French Revolution: Declaration
 In August, 1789, the National Assembly issued the
Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen.
 Obviously influenced by the American
Revolution and the Declaration of
Independence
 Proclaimed the equality of all men, declared that
sovereignty resided in the people, and asserted
individual rights to liberty, prosperity, and
security.
Reforms of the National Assembly
 The motto of the National
Assembly was “Liberty, equality,
fraternity”
 Reconfigured French society
 Ended the fees and labor services
the peasants owed their landlords
 Seized church lands
 Abolished the first estate and
defined clergy as civilians
 Required clergy to take an oath of
loyalty to the state
 Made the king the chief executive
but deprived him of legislative
authority (a constitutional
monarchy)
 Men of property could vote for
legislators
The Convention
 Alarmed by the disintegration of monarchial
authority, the rulers of Austria and Prussia
invaded France to support the king and restore
the ancien regime.
 The revolutionaries responded by establishing the
Convention, a new legislative body elected by
universal male suffrage.
 The Convention abolished the monarchy and
proclaimed France a republic.
The Convention
 Drafted people and
resources for use in the
war through the levee en
masse (universal
conscription).
 This was a move toward
total war.
 Used the guillotine to
execute enemies to
include King Louis XVI
and Queen Marie
Antoinette in 1793 for
treason.
Maximilian Robespierre (1758-1794)
 Led the radical Jacobin
party which believed
France needed
complete restructuring
and used a campaign of
terror to promote their
agenda
 Dominated the
Convention from 1793-
1794.
Robespierre & The Jacobins
 Sought to eliminate the
influence of Christianity
 Closed churches
 Forced priests to take
wives
 Promoted a new “cult of
reason” as a secular
alternative
 Devised a new calendar
which recognized no day of
religious observance
 Between the summers of 1793
and 1794, the Jacobins
executed 40,000 people and
imprisoned 300,000.
The Directory
 Many of the victims of the Reign of Terror were fellow
radicals who had fallen out of favor with Robespierre and
the Jacobins.
 In July 1794, the Convention arrested Robespierre and his
allies, convicted them of treason, and executed them.
 A group of conservative men of property seized power
and ruled from 1795 to 1799 under a new institution called
the Directory.
 The Directory sought a middle way between the ancien
regime and radical revolution but had little success.
 In Nov 1799, Napoleon Bonaparte staged a coup d’etat and
seized power.
Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
 Napoleon had served as
an officer under King
Louis XVI and had
become a general at age
24.
 In a campaign of 1796-
1797, he drove the
Austrians from
northern Italy and
established French rule
there.
Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
 In 1799, he returned to
France and joined the
Directory, but when
Austria, Russia, and
Britain formed a coalition
to attack France and end
the Revolution, Napoleon
staged a coup d’etat.
 He overthrew the
Directory, imposed a new
constitution, and named
himself first consul.
 In 1802, he became consul
for life and in 1804
crowned himself emperor.
Napoleon: The Concordat
 Brought stability to France
 Made peace with the Catholic Church
 Concluded the Concordat with the pope in 1801
 France would retain the church lands seized during the
Revolution, but France agreed to pay priests’ salaries,
recognize Roman Catholic Christianity as the preferred
faith of France, and extend freedom of religion to
Protestants and Jews
 Was a popular measure with people who supported the
political and social goals of the revolution but didn’t
want to replace Christianity with the cult of reason
Napoleon: Civil Code
 In 1804,Napoleon established the Napoleonic Civil Code,
which further stabilized France.
 Affirmed the political and legal equality of all adult
men
 Established a merit-based society in which individuals
qualified for education and employment because of
talent rather than birth or social standing
 Protected private property, even allowing aristocratic
opponents of the Revolution to return to France and
reclaim their property
 Confirmed many of the moderate revolutionary
policies of the National Assembly but removed many
measure passed by the more radical Convention
Napoleon as Authoritarian
 Limited free speech, routinely
censoring newspapers
 Established a secret police
force and detained thousands
of political opponents
 Manipulated public opinion
through systematic
propaganda
 Ignored elective bodies
 Surrounded himself with loyal
military officers
 Set his family above and apart
from the French people
The End of Napoleon’s Empire
 In 1812, Napoleon decided to invade Russia,
believing that the Russians were conspiring
with the British.
 Napoleon and his “Grand Army” of 600,000
soldiers captured Moscow, but the Russians
refused to surrender.
 Instead, Russian patriots burned the city,
leaving Napoleon without supplies or
shelter.
The End of Napoleon’s Empire
 Napoleon was forced to
retreat
 Defeated by “General
Winter”
 Only 30,000 soldiers made
it back to France
 The defeat in Russia
emboldened a coalition of
British, Austrian,
Prussian, and Russian
armies to converge on
France.
 Forced Napoleon to
abdicate his throne in April
1814
The End of Napoleon’s Empire
 The coalition restored the
French monarchy and exiled
Napoleon to the island of
Elba, near Corsica.
 In March 1815, Napoleon
escaped, returned to France,
and reconstituted his army.
 This time the British defeated
him at Waterloo and
banished Napoleon to the
remote island of St. Helena in
the South Atlantic.
 He died there in 1821.
Other Impacts
 The Enlightenment ideals and
the American and French
Revolutions also influenced:
 The Saint Dominque slave
revolt in Haiti
 Simon Bolivar in South
America
 The Abolitionist
Movement in the USA
 The Declaration of the
Rights of Woman and the
Female Citizen
 Elizabeth Cady Stanton
and women’s rights
movements
The End
C’Est Fin

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  • 1. The Triumph of Liberty The Enlightenment, Modern Democracy, and the American & French Revolutions Professor Will Adams Valencia College
  • 3. Scientific Revolution  In 1543, Copernicus published On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres which argued that the sun, rather than the Earth, stood at the center of the universe and that the planets revolved around the sun  Copernicus’ work inspired astronomers to examine the heavens in new ways  Increasingly, they based their theories on observed data and used mathematical reasoning to organize the data  This reliance on observation and mathematics ushered in the “Scientific Revolution”.
  • 4. Impact of the Scientific Revolution  Suggested that rational analysis of behavior and institutions could have meaning in the human as well as the natural world.  Increasingly, thinkers challenged recognized authorities such as Aristotelian philosophy and Christian religion and sought to explain the world in purely rational terms.  The result was a movement known as the “Enlightenment”.
  • 6. A Changing World  In the mid-18th century, British colonists in North America seemed content with British rule, but in the mid-1760’s things started to change  First, new ideas about a just society began to circulate in the Enlightenment era  Second, the British imposed new taxes to offset the cost of the Seven Years’ War; taxes which seemed to the colonists to conflict with the Enlightenment philosophy.
  • 7. The Seven Years’ War  Commercial competition in the New World ultimately generated violence that culminated in the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763).  In North America, the Seven Years’ War merged with the on-going French and Indian War which pitted the British and French against each other. George Washington fought for the British and was defeated in the opening battle of the French and Indian War at Fort Necessity in the Ohio Country
  • 8. The Seven Years’ War: A British Victory  The British emerged victorious and as a result they gained control of North America from the French.  The war helped create conditions that led to the American Revolutionary War, because the British colonists no longer needed British protection from the French and would come to resent the taxes imposed by Britain to pay for its military commitments.
  • 9. American Revolution: New Legislation  Trying to recover financial losses from the French and Indian War and the Seven Years’ War, the British passed a series of new taxes on the colonies.  Sugar Act (1764)  Stamp Act (1765)  Townshend Act (1767)  Tea Act (1773)  Other offensive legislation included the Quartering Act of 1765 and the Intolerable Acts.
  • 10. The Issue of Taxation  While other issues annoyed the colonists, it was taxation that most led to demands for independence.  Because Parliament had usually refrained from taxing them, many colonists assumed that it could not.  One American asked, if taxes were now imposed “without our having a legal Representation where they are laid, are we not reduced from the Character of free Subjects to the miserable State of tributary Slaves?”  The idea of “No taxation without representation” was consistent with Rousseau and other Enlightenment thinkers.
  • 11. The Issue of Representation  In England, electoral districts for Parliament were often based on earlier conditions.  For example, Dunwich continued to maintain its right to elect a parliamentary representative long after the city itself had been washed into the North Sea.  Manchester, however, was a rapidly growing city that lacked representation.  Most Englishmen accepted this condition because they believed in “virtual representation”.  Representatives served the interests of the entire nation rather than just their home locality.
  • 12. The Issue of Representation  Such Englishmen assumed that since the colonists held interests in common with citizens back home, they were “virtually” represented.  Americans, on the other hand, had enjoyed “actual representation” since the founding of the colonies.  They believed elected representatives should be directly responsive to local interests and they were used to instructing their legislators about how to vote on key issues.  They were skeptical of the idea of “virtual representation”.
  • 13. Country Ideology  Even before the Seven Years’ War, the British had borrowed heavily to fund several other wars and developed a large bureaucracy to collect taxes to pay the war debt  In response, a “Country” or “Real Whig” ideology emerged that:  Stressed the threats to personal liberty posed by a large standing army and a powerful state  Emphasized the dangers of taxation to property rights and the need for property holders to maintain the right to consent to taxation
  • 14. Country Ideology  Country ideology stressed that it was the duty of the Parliament (particularly the House of Commons which represented the people as a whole) to check the executive power of the Crown.  It was the House of Commons’ control of taxation that controlled tyrannical leaders.  John Locke had argued that rulers had authority to enforce law “only for the public good”.  When the Crown did its job properly, the House of Commons appropriated the necessary funds.  When rulers infringed on the people’s liberties, the House restrained them by withholding taxes.
  • 15. Country Ideology  Because of these important responsibilities, Country ideology required representatives to be of sufficient property and judgment to make independent decisions  A representative of appropriate social status was generally assumed to be qualified to lead, but if he proved otherwise, his constituents should be able to vote him out
  • 16. Country Ideology  Country ideology appealed to many Americans.  It was consistent with the idea that power should reside at the local level.  It emboldened those who feared they lacked a voice in decisions being made in England.  Its insistence on the important political role of the propertied elite appealed to the local gentry.
  • 17. The Sugar Act  Given the philosophies of the Enlightenment and Country ideology, the colonists responded only mildly to the Sugar Act.  The effects of the act were felt mostly in New England where it cut into the smuggling trade with the French West Indies.  Still, on principle, the act was offensive and eventually all the assemblies passed resolutions declaring that any Parliamentary tax on America, including the Sugar Act, was unconstitutional.
  • 18. The Stamp Act  The Stamp Act, because its effects were felt equally throughout the colonies, elicited a more swift response  One response was the formation of the Sons of Liberty, a collection of loosely organized protest groups, who put pressure on stamp distributors and British authorities  The American response was troublesome enough that in March 1766, the Stamp Act was repealed  Still the British persisted in their right to impose taxes, including the Townshend Duties in 1767
  • 19. The Boston Massacre  The Townshend duties continued to strain the relationship between America and Britain, and most of its articles were eventually repealed  Before that, however, on March 5, 1770, the “Boston Massacre” occurred in which British troops fired on an unruly crowd, killing five men  A period of quiet followed this outbreak, but during it the colonies established “committees of correspondence” to keep each other informed of objectionable British actions.
  • 20. The Boston Tea Party  The “Quiet Period” was broken on December 16, 1773 with the Boston Tea Party.  Partly because Americans were drinking smuggled and untaxed tea, the British East India Company was nearly bankrupt.  Lord North, the British prime minister, tried to rescue it by the Tea Tax of 1773 which was a thinly disguised measure to get the Americans to pay the old Townshend duty on British East India Tea.  A well-organized band of men, some disguised as Indians, boarded the tea ship Dartmouth and broke open 342 chests of tea and threw the contents into the harbor.
  • 21. The First Continental Congress  The Boston Tea Party led to the British passing three repressive measures known collectively as the Intolerable Acts.  These acts united the colonists like never before and the First Continental Congress met in Philadelphia from September 5 to October 26, 1774.  Even now, however, it was but a minority who favored war with Britain.  Most hoped and believed the British would change their policies and all would be well again.
  • 22. Increased Tensions  Colonists began to separate into “Whigs” who advocated increased rights and “Tories” who were more loyal to the Crown.  Both the Americans and British could see a crisis was looming and took steps to prepare.  In 1774, General Thomas Gage, the commander of the British army in America and governor of Massachusetts, dissolved the legislature which then proceeded to assemble anyway.
  • 23. Increased Tensions  A “Provincial Congress” established the “Committee of Safety,” to be headed by John Hancock, in October 1774 for the purpose of stockpiling weapons and organizing militia volunteers.  Special companies of “minute men” were to be ready at “a minutes warning in Case of an alarm”.  In a move to quell such belligerence, Lord North ordered Gage to take decisive action.
  • 24. Lexington & Concord  On April 18, 1775, Gage assembled 700 men on the Boston Common and marched them toward Lexington and Concord  His goal was to arrest rebel leaders Samuel Adams and John Hancock in Lexington and destroy the military supplies the Committee of Safety had stockpiled in Concord  Riders like Paul Revere warned fellow patriots, and by the time the British reached Lexington they found 70 armed militiamen waiting for them
  • 25. Lexington & Concord  No one knows who fired the first shot, but the end result was 18 Americans killed or wounded.  The British then marched to Concord and burned some supplies.  Some 4,000 militia men descended on the British and harassed their retreat back to Boston, inflicting 273 casualties while suffering nearly 100 of their own.
  • 26. Lexington & Concord Concord Hymn By the rude bridge that arched the flood, Their flag to April's breeze unfurled, Here once the embattled farmers stood, And fired the shot heard ‘round the world. - Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • 28. The Declaration of Independence  On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted “The Unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America” (The Declaration of Independence).
  • 29. The Declaration of Independence  “all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness”  Governments derive their power and authority from “the consent of the governed”  When any government infringes upon individual’s rights, “it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new Government”  Declared the colonies to be “Free and Independent States”
  • 30. David vs. Goliath  However, declaring independence and actually winning it by war were two different things.  Victory in the Seven Years’ War had left Britain as the dominant power in the world.  It had a population of eight million with a professional army, large navy, and formidable wealth.  The colonists had a population of two and a half million (20% of whom were enslaved) and no army, navy, or significant financial resources.
  • 31. British Troops: August, 1776  24,000 soldiers  Average soldier was 30 years old with 10 years service  Muskets, bayonets, light field guns  Two or three ranks of infantry supported by light field guns  Powerful Navy (30 warships, 400 transports)  More experienced, better led, more thoroughly disciplined and trained  General William Howe knew generals from their Seven Years’ War record
  • 32. Colonial Troops: August, 1776  28,000 soldiers  Average soldier was 20 years old with less than a year of service  Muskets, bayonets, light field guns  Two or three ranks of infantry supported by light field guns  Used simplified British tactics (experience from Seven Years’ War)  No Navy  Great disparity in quality between militia and Continental Army  Many generals were imposed upon General George Washington by Congress or state governments.
  • 33. The Difference  What gave the colonists hope was the opportunity to be gained by courage, cause, the home court advantage, and patriotism  Unlike earlier European dynastic squabbles, the American Revolution was an ideological war that affected the population  “Remember, officers and soldiers, that you are freemen, fighting for the blessings of liberty; that slavery will be your portion and that of your posterity if you do not acquit yourselves like men.” - George Washington
  • 34. British Challenges  Underestimated the impact of patriotism.  Overestimated the Loyalist strength.  Only about 20% of free Americans were Tories.  Colonial decentralization meant colonies had no strategic heart and the British would have to occupy vast expanses of territory.  Supply and communications were difficult with England 3,000 miles away.  The British population was not united behind the war.  Britain still had enemies in Europe to worry about.
  • 35. Civilian Attitudes  Both sides understood from the beginning that they were fighting for the allegiance of a people and for the destruction or preservation of one state and the creation of another  The colonists had to defeat the British and control the loyalists without losing popular support or destroying the republican principles for which they fought  The British argued that they were protecting loyalists from the tyranny of a few ambitious rebels.
  • 36. The British Strategy  The British never really found a good solution for dealing with the population  Tried various strategies with little success 1. Intimidating the rebels with a show of force 2. Combining force and persuasion to break the rebellion without alienating a majority of the colonists 3. Enlisting the support of loyalists in a gradual and cumulative restoration of royal government
  • 37. American Strategy  Primarily defensive and therefore shaped by countering British moves.  Uncertainties about supplies and manpower worked against a consistent strategy.  However, Washington understood his strengths and weaknesses and had the defender’s advantage.
  • 38. American Strategy  Maintain a principal striking force in a central position to block any British advance into the interior.  Be neither too timid or too bold in seeking battle for limited objectives (Partisan operations in the South).  Avoid the destruction of the army at all costs.  Find some means of concentrating a sufficient force to strike a decisive offensive blow whenever the British overextended themselves.
  • 39. The United States is Born  In September 1783, the British formally recognized American independence.  In 1787, Americans drafted the Constitution of the United States which created a federal government based on popular sovereignty.  The Bill of Rights in particular stressed individual liberties such as freedom of speech, the press, and religion.  The success of the American Revolution and this early understanding of freedom, equality, and popular sovereignty in America would have broad implications throughout the world.  Remember Emerson’s “shot heard round the world”!
  • 41. Absolutism  King Louis XIV (1643-1715) of France is credited with having said “L’etat c’est moi!” or “I am the state.”  Louis’s statement is consistent with the idea of absolutism.  Absolutism is the theory that ultimate power in the early centuries of modern Europe was vested in a hereditary monarch who claimed a God-given right to rule.
  • 42. Absolutism  Louis went so far as to call himself the “Sun King,” claiming that like the sun, everything revolved around him  Catholicism was the national religion of France  “One faith, one law, one king.”  In 1685 Louis revoked the Edict of Nantes and insisted that Huguenots convert to Catholicism.
  • 43. Philosophes  Enlightenment thinkers considered absolutism to be unnatural and they sought to discover natural laws that governed human society in the same way Newton’s laws regulated the universe.  Collectively, these thinkers were called the philosophes (“philosophers”) .
  • 44. Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)  Many Enlightenment thinkers condemned the legal and social privileges enjoyed by aristocrats and called for a society in which all individuals were equal before the law  In 1762, Rousseau wrote The Social Contract arguing that members of a society were collectively the sovereign  All individuals would participate directly in the formulation of policy and the creation of laws
  • 45. French Revolution: Ancien Regime  The Americans sought independence from British imperial rule, but they kept British law and much of the British social and cultural heritage.  On the other hand, French revolutionaries sought to replace the ancien regime (“the old order”) with new political, social, and cultural structures.
  • 46. French Revolution: Estates General  In May 1789, in an effort to raise taxes, King Louis XVI convened the Estates General, an assembly representing the entire French population through three groups known as estates.
  • 47. French Revolution: Estates General  The first estate was about 100,000 Roman Catholic clergy.  The second estate was about 400,000 nobles.  The third estate was about 24 million others (serfs, free peasants, laborers).  In spite of these numerical discrepancies, each estate had one vote.
  • 48. French Revolution: Estates General  The third estate demanded sweeping political and social reform, but the other two estates resisted  On June 20, 1789, the third estate seceded from the Estates General and declared itself the National Assembly.
  • 49. French Revolution: NationalAssembly  The National Assembly vowed not to disband until France had a written constitution.  This assertion of popular sovereignty spread to Paris and on July 14 a crowd stormed the Bastille to seize weapons and ammunition.  The garrison surrendered in the wake of great bloodshed.  The attackers severed the commander’s head and paraded it through the streets on a pike.  Insurrections spread throughout France.
  • 50. French Revolution: Declaration  In August, 1789, the National Assembly issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen.  Obviously influenced by the American Revolution and the Declaration of Independence  Proclaimed the equality of all men, declared that sovereignty resided in the people, and asserted individual rights to liberty, prosperity, and security.
  • 51. Reforms of the National Assembly  The motto of the National Assembly was “Liberty, equality, fraternity”  Reconfigured French society  Ended the fees and labor services the peasants owed their landlords  Seized church lands  Abolished the first estate and defined clergy as civilians  Required clergy to take an oath of loyalty to the state  Made the king the chief executive but deprived him of legislative authority (a constitutional monarchy)  Men of property could vote for legislators
  • 52. The Convention  Alarmed by the disintegration of monarchial authority, the rulers of Austria and Prussia invaded France to support the king and restore the ancien regime.  The revolutionaries responded by establishing the Convention, a new legislative body elected by universal male suffrage.  The Convention abolished the monarchy and proclaimed France a republic.
  • 53. The Convention  Drafted people and resources for use in the war through the levee en masse (universal conscription).  This was a move toward total war.  Used the guillotine to execute enemies to include King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette in 1793 for treason.
  • 54. Maximilian Robespierre (1758-1794)  Led the radical Jacobin party which believed France needed complete restructuring and used a campaign of terror to promote their agenda  Dominated the Convention from 1793- 1794.
  • 55. Robespierre & The Jacobins  Sought to eliminate the influence of Christianity  Closed churches  Forced priests to take wives  Promoted a new “cult of reason” as a secular alternative  Devised a new calendar which recognized no day of religious observance  Between the summers of 1793 and 1794, the Jacobins executed 40,000 people and imprisoned 300,000.
  • 56. The Directory  Many of the victims of the Reign of Terror were fellow radicals who had fallen out of favor with Robespierre and the Jacobins.  In July 1794, the Convention arrested Robespierre and his allies, convicted them of treason, and executed them.  A group of conservative men of property seized power and ruled from 1795 to 1799 under a new institution called the Directory.  The Directory sought a middle way between the ancien regime and radical revolution but had little success.  In Nov 1799, Napoleon Bonaparte staged a coup d’etat and seized power.
  • 57. Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)  Napoleon had served as an officer under King Louis XVI and had become a general at age 24.  In a campaign of 1796- 1797, he drove the Austrians from northern Italy and established French rule there.
  • 58. Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)  In 1799, he returned to France and joined the Directory, but when Austria, Russia, and Britain formed a coalition to attack France and end the Revolution, Napoleon staged a coup d’etat.  He overthrew the Directory, imposed a new constitution, and named himself first consul.  In 1802, he became consul for life and in 1804 crowned himself emperor.
  • 59. Napoleon: The Concordat  Brought stability to France  Made peace with the Catholic Church  Concluded the Concordat with the pope in 1801  France would retain the church lands seized during the Revolution, but France agreed to pay priests’ salaries, recognize Roman Catholic Christianity as the preferred faith of France, and extend freedom of religion to Protestants and Jews  Was a popular measure with people who supported the political and social goals of the revolution but didn’t want to replace Christianity with the cult of reason
  • 60. Napoleon: Civil Code  In 1804,Napoleon established the Napoleonic Civil Code, which further stabilized France.  Affirmed the political and legal equality of all adult men  Established a merit-based society in which individuals qualified for education and employment because of talent rather than birth or social standing  Protected private property, even allowing aristocratic opponents of the Revolution to return to France and reclaim their property  Confirmed many of the moderate revolutionary policies of the National Assembly but removed many measure passed by the more radical Convention
  • 61. Napoleon as Authoritarian  Limited free speech, routinely censoring newspapers  Established a secret police force and detained thousands of political opponents  Manipulated public opinion through systematic propaganda  Ignored elective bodies  Surrounded himself with loyal military officers  Set his family above and apart from the French people
  • 62. The End of Napoleon’s Empire  In 1812, Napoleon decided to invade Russia, believing that the Russians were conspiring with the British.  Napoleon and his “Grand Army” of 600,000 soldiers captured Moscow, but the Russians refused to surrender.  Instead, Russian patriots burned the city, leaving Napoleon without supplies or shelter.
  • 63. The End of Napoleon’s Empire  Napoleon was forced to retreat  Defeated by “General Winter”  Only 30,000 soldiers made it back to France  The defeat in Russia emboldened a coalition of British, Austrian, Prussian, and Russian armies to converge on France.  Forced Napoleon to abdicate his throne in April 1814
  • 64. The End of Napoleon’s Empire  The coalition restored the French monarchy and exiled Napoleon to the island of Elba, near Corsica.  In March 1815, Napoleon escaped, returned to France, and reconstituted his army.  This time the British defeated him at Waterloo and banished Napoleon to the remote island of St. Helena in the South Atlantic.  He died there in 1821.
  • 65. Other Impacts  The Enlightenment ideals and the American and French Revolutions also influenced:  The Saint Dominque slave revolt in Haiti  Simon Bolivar in South America  The Abolitionist Movement in the USA  The Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen  Elizabeth Cady Stanton and women’s rights movements