Why France's old order collapsed after 1789 — the financial crisis, social inequality, and Enlightenment ideas that lit the fuse — and a clear timeline from the Estates-General through the Terror to Napoleon.
Updated 2026-06-03
Between 1789 and 1799, France dismantled an absolute monarchy that had stood for centuries, executed its king, and tried to rebuild society on the principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity. The French Revolution reshaped not only France but the political imagination of the entire modern world, giving rise to the language of citizenship, rights, and nationalism still used today.
It did not happen for a single reason. A bankrupt state, a rigid social hierarchy, food shortages, and a flood of Enlightenment ideas converged at once. Understanding the Revolution means seeing how those pressures combined and then tracing the chain of events they set off.
Long-term structural pressures plus short-term triggers.
Costly wars, including support for the American Revolution, left the crown nearly bankrupt and unable to raise revenue.
Society was split into three estates; the clergy and nobility were largely tax-exempt while the Third Estate bore the burden.
Thinkers like Rousseau, Voltaire, and Montesquieu spread ideas of popular sovereignty, reason, and natural rights.
Poor harvests drove bread prices to crushing levels, pushing the urban poor toward open revolt.
Louis XVI's indecision and the perception of royal extravagance eroded confidence in the crown.
A prosperous middle class wanted political power to match its economic weight and resented aristocratic privilege.
A decade of escalation, radicalization, and consolidation.
The Estates-General meets, the Third Estate forms the National Assembly, the Bastille falls, and feudal privileges are abolished.
The Declaration of the Rights of Man is adopted and a constitutional monarchy is established.
The monarchy is abolished, the king is executed, and the Reign of Terror sees mass executions under Robespierre.
The Directory governs an exhausted nation until Napoleon's 1799 coup ends the revolutionary era.
First nail down why the Revolution happened, then learn what happened — confusing the two is the most common mistake.
Memorize four turning points (1789, the republic, the Terror, Napoleon) and slot every detail into one of them.
Know the Jacobins, Girondins, and sans-culottes — the Revolution radicalized as power shifted between them.
Exam essays reward arguments linking causes to outcomes, so rehearse explaining how one event triggered the next.
The immediate trigger was the financial crisis that forced Louis XVI to convene the Estates-General, which the Third Estate then transformed into a revolutionary assembly.
A period from roughly 1793 to 1794 when the radical government, led by Robespierre, executed tens of thousands of suspected enemies of the Revolution.
It wound down under the Directory and effectively ended when Napoleon Bonaparte seized power in a 1799 coup, eventually crowning himself emperor.
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