During the Reign of Terror (1793-1794), France was under a revolutionary government known as the National Convention, which operated as a form of radical republicanism. This period was characterized by the dominance of the Jacobins, particularly under leaders like Maximilien Robespierre. The government implemented extreme measures, including political purges and mass executions, in an effort to eliminate perceived enemies of the revolution and maintain control. The Reign of Terror ultimately led to significant internal conflict and the eventual downfall of the Jacobin leadership.
The Reign of Terror.
The reign of terror was a period between 1794 and 1795 and lasted 10 months. France did not have a monarch anymore, for the French revolutionists had killed their royal family in 1793.
King Louis XVI was known as Citizen Louis Capet in France after the Monarchy was ended in France and France declared itself a Republic. Thus King Louis XVI or Citizen Capet was a victim of the Reign of Terror when he was guillotined.
King Louis XVI and his wife Queen Marie Antoinette were king and queen of France from 1774 until 1793. They were eventually executed during the most violent phase of the revolution: the terror.
Maximilian Robespierre
executive government in France during reign of terror
executive government in France during reign of terror
executive government in France during reign of terror
executive government in France during reign of terror
The Reign of Terror.
Maximilian Robespierre
The Reign of Terror.
The Reign of Terror.
Maimilien Robespierre.
He was the creator, director and guiding light of the French Revolution.
France wanted a secular calendar.
The reign of terror was a period between 1794 and 1795 and lasted 10 months. France did not have a monarch anymore, for the French revolutionists had killed their royal family in 1793.