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The fall of the Bastille on July 14, 1789, signified the beginning of the French Revolution and the end of royal tyranny. It became a powerful symbol of the people's uprising against oppression and the demand for liberty and justice. The event galvanized revolutionary fervor across France, leading to the establishment of a republic and the eventual decline of monarchical power. Today, Bastille Day is celebrated as a national holiday in France, symbolizing freedom and the fight against despotism.
The Bastille was a prison.
Charles V built the bastille
Actually that doesn't mean anything at all. ;-)It might be an attempt at Bonne journee pour le jour de Bastille, which still doesn't make a whole lot of sense. But it's probably meant to be something like "Have a good Bastille Day," since today (July 14th) is Bastille Day, the French national holiday.
The Bastille (formally known as the Bastille Saint-Antoine) was a fortress in Paris, France.
The Bastille was a prison.
The whole thing took from about ten in the morning until four in the afternoon, with (this being France) two hours off for lunch. For a dramatic but accurate narrative, see my 'The Storming of the Bastille' on http://www.grenfell-banks.com/Bastille.htm
Bastille ended in 1789.
In French, the Bastille Prison is considered feminine, and you would refer to it as "la Bastille."
Explain more, Bastille peak is a mountain in Canada and Bastille prison is a prison in France....
what was the celebration called that signified the end of the war
In the Bastille prison in Paris.