Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.on this day King Louis XVI of France
was sent into exile.
After giving military and monetary aid to the young republic in the
Americas to humiliate her ancient enemy Britain, France would find herself
upturned by revolution. Louis XVI had initially hoped that French troops
could seize the United States after its war, but, in 1789, economic crisis
brought famine, and the storming of the Bastille signaled an uprising as
had not been seen in Europe for centuries. The elected National Assembly
ruled alongside Louis in a constitutional monarchy that ate away at
absolutist authority. That October, a mob of angry women marched on
Versailles and joined with others to bring the royal family to the
Tuileries in Paris where they would be held to higher accountability.
Louis and Marie Antoinette attempted to escape in 1791, but they were
brought back and viewed with great suspicion by the people. A year later,
the Brunswick Manifesto promised vengeance from Austria and Prussia if the
king's family were harmed, which only furthered the poplar suspicion. It
seemed now that the king not only cared little for his people, but was
also willing to deal with foreign strength against them, as great an
insult as the use of Hessian mercenaries in the Americas during their
revolution. On August 13, Louis was officially arrested, and a month later
the National Assembly abolished the monarchy and declared a republic.
"This would have headed off a lot of trouble. " -
reader's commentWhile the king waited and war raged on the German
and Italian borders, the revolutionaries forged themselves into factions
competing for similar, though unique, goals. Question of creating a
permanent constitutional monarchy may have been answered with the
discovery of the armoire de fer hidden in the king's rooms, but the iron
chest believed to be holding the secret documents of ministers'
double-agendas was destroyed in a sudden fire.
Nonetheless, loud cries for trial on grounds of treason brought Louis to
trial before a special Convention. A body of 721 deputies heard the cases
and word of crimes against the state by the king, but the resulting vote
was indecisive. The king was thought to have been invaluable as a hostage,
but it was evident that the threats to his safety were raising the tempers
of the crowns of Europe. After French victory at the Battle of Valmy, the
Prussian and Austrian armies had retreated out of France, but they would
certainly return as the spring campaigning season came. Finally the
decision was made to use the king as a pawn in a bid for peace. It was an
unpopular notion to many in the National Assembly, but the fiery writings
and loud cries of the masses demanded peace.
"_IF_ this averts both the chaos of the Terror and
the invasions from all sides, we are still going to have a royalist
faction for some generations due to the hyper-secularist groups in the
Revolutionary Government." - reader's commentAmbassadors were sent
to Prussia, and discussions went into the new year. At last Brunswick
spoke out over the Bourbons and assured peace with the French Republic
provided that the royals were made safe. They agreed that he could be sent
to a neutral court, and his relatives in Spain volunteered to host him
along with a contingent of French guards who would make certain Louis
would not be used as the banner for royalists to rally. By this point, it
was obvious to those close to Louis that he was unfit for rule, devastated
by depression and poor nutrition into an indecisive mumbler.
Peace came to France on February 1, 1793, while the other countries worked
to put down their own republican insurrections. Demands of constitutions
were met across Europe, ending the age of autocratic rule that had been
best illustrated by France's own Louis XIV. The security and return to
prosperity allowed France to quiet its extremists and organize its army
into an effective force rather than the desperate mass-conscription that
had been anticipated to fight off the hordes of Europe.
France came to notable stability as the eighteenth century dawned. Its
colonies enjoyed great liberalization and became leaders in the abolition
movement. Not all were happy, however, and the colony of Corsica rebelled
in 1803 under native who had been trained in Paris as an artillery
commander. After a decade of cunning ambushes, Corsica was granted
independence in 1813. The revolutionary leader Napoleon Bonaparte would
set himself up as king while the French looked on and laughed to
themselves about those foolish enough to give up republican freedom for
tyranny.