The people of Paris. They only found a small and elderly soldier guard and a mere handful of prisoners, who were all held either for serious crimes or for mental illness.
The idea that this was a prison where people were put randomly for political reasons was put in peoples' heads by the infamous Marquis De Sade who had been put there as a mental patient after some of his experiments in sadistic sex had gone awry, killing or maiming his female victims. De Sade used to spend much of his days shouting from his roadside cell window into the street below that he and his fellow prisoners were innocent victims of the King's whims. Only after a while he was transferred to a cell that looked out on the castle's court yard. But the accusations had taken root by then.
The French people/revolutionaries. It began the French Revolution inspired by the American Revolution .
Nobody else attacked France. It was a civil war. The poor rose up against the rich, especially the royal family.
The Bastille was stormed during the French revolution.
On July 14, 1789, a mob stormed the Bastille fortress in Paris. That event marks the beginning of the historical period of the French revolution. It is the national day for France.
No, the Bastille was stormed on 14 July 1789 and King Louis XVI was never held in the Bastille. When he was imprisoned, it was at the Temple and he was not executed until 21 January 1793 almost three and a half years after the French Revolution began.
King Louis XVI. By the way, the Bastille was stormed on July 14th 1789. One year later that same day, this event was remembered and celebrated as still happens today.
The Bastille was built as a fortress to defend against the English approach to the city of Paris during the Hundred Years War. It was built under Charles V and was completed under Charles VI, after 17 years of construction.
On July 14, 1789, the people of Paris stormed the Bastille fortress, a symbol of the absolute monarchy of King Louis XVI. This event marked the beginning of the French Revolution and is celebrated as Bastille Day in France, symbolizing the fight for liberty and democracy.
La Bastille Saint-Antoine - best known today because of the people storming it on July 14, 1789
Place de la Bastille was built on the site of the former Bastille prison in Paris, France. The square was designed by architect Pierre-François-Léonard Fontaine during the French Revolution in the late 18th century to symbolize the triumph of liberty over oppression.
Bastille Day is the French national holiday, celebrated on 14 July each year. It commemorates the 1790 Fête de la Fédération, held on the first anniversary of the storming of the Bastille on 14 July 1789; the anniversary of the storming of the Bastille fortress-prison was seen as a symbol of the uprising of the modern nation, and of the reconciliation of all the French inside the constitutional monarchy which preceded the First Republic, during the French Revolution.
In my opinion, you have lots of better places to see in Paris. On the place de la Bastille there is nothing remaining of the old fortress of the same name, and the only things to see are the statue of the 'génie' (a spirit) in the middle of the square and the ugly modern opera-Bastille.
La Bastille was a castle and prison in the heart o Paris, near the Faubourg Saint-Antoine. As a symbol of the unjust power of the kings, it was stormed during the riots marking the beginning of the French revolution, on the 14th of July, 1789.