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A group of deputies in the Assembly and Legislative Convention, many of them from the Gironde area around Bordeaux, established during the French Revolution. Centred around the figure of J.-P. Brissot, the ‘faction of the Gironde’ represented the resistance of the provinces to Parisian dominance, and opposition to the emerging dictatorship and terror under Robespierre. In June 1793 the Girondins were themselves expelled from the Convention and later killed.

— Stewart Wood

 
 

Revolutionary grouping led at first by Brissot, and known to contemporaries as the Brissotins. The principal figures included Vergniaud, Condorcet, and Roland. It was not a formal party or club, but a loose grouping which met in a number of salons (e.g. Madame Roland's), so that it is difficult to say who exactly was a Girondin (their enemy Marat produced a list of 102, but the criteria he used are unclear). A number of them came from the rich south-west (the département of the Gironde), and they tended to represent a relatively moderate, anti-Parisian position. Many were originally associated with the Jacobins, and after the deposition of Louis XVI in August 1792 they emerged as the controlling faction, taking France into war on several fronts. Suspected by the people of wanting to ‘stop the Revolution’, they engaged in a fierce struggle with the more radical Montagnards, led by Robespierre and actively supported by the Paris crowd [see Revolution, 1C]. After their defeat on 2 June 1793 many were imprisoned and executed, but subsequently acquired a romantic and heroic aura, exemplified in Lamartine's Histoire des Girondins.

[Peter France]

 
(jĭrŏn'dĭsts) or Girondins (zhērôNdăN') , political group of moderate republicans in the French Revolution, so called because the central members were deputies of the Gironde dept. Girondist leaders advocated continental war. Led at first by Jacques Brissot de Warville, the Girondists were known as Brissotins. Notable members were Pierre Vergniaud, Charles Dumouriez, and Jean Marie Roland de la Platière and Jeanne Manon Roland de la Platière. Representative of the educated, provincial middle class of the provinces, they were lawyers, journalists, and merchants who desired a constitutional government. Early in 1792 they succeeded, against Maximillien Robespierre's opposition, in having war declared on Austria. In the Revolutionary assembly, the Convention, they engaged in personal rivalry against Robespierre, Georges Danton, and Jean Paul Marat. The Girondists championed the provinces against Paris, and in particular against the commune. They were unable to prevent the trial of King Louis XVI, or his death sentence. The leftist Mountain became dominant in the Convention. The treason of Dumouriez, who defected to the Austrians (Mar., 1793), further weakened the position of the Girdondists, who also aroused popular hostility in Paris by opposing workers' demands for economic controls. On May 31 an armed crowd organized by the Paris sections surrounded the Convention and demanded the arrest of the Girondists. The Convention at first resisted, but continued popular pressure forced it to order the arrest of 29 girdondists on June 2. Brissot, Vergniaud, and other leaders were subsequently executed. The fall of the Girondists assured complete control by the Mountain.

Bibliography

See studies by M. J. Sydenham (1961) and A. Patrick (1972).


 
 

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Political Dictionary. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics. Copyright © 1996, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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