AP 18 Review PPT

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• Among the causes of the French Revolution
was the
• A. excessive spending of King Louis XVI.
• B. rise of the National Assembly.
• C. Reign of Terror.
• D. loss of the Old Regime
• Among the causes of the French Revolution
was the
• A. excessive spending of King Louis XVI.
• B. rise of the National Assembly.
• C. Reign of Terror.
• D. loss of the Old Regime
•
•
•
•
•
In Pre-Revolutionary France, estates were
A. homes of noble men.
B. social classes.
C. systems of taxation.
D. clubs for radicals.
•
•
•
•
•
In Pre-Revolutionary France, estates were
A. homes of noble men.
B. social classes.
C. systems of taxation.
D. clubs for radicals.
• . The main obstacle to solving financial problems
was
• a. the extravagant lifestyle of Louis XVI
• b. the unwillingness of the Third Estate to pay
more
• c. the fact that both the nobility and the clergy
were exempt from most taxes
• d. foreign wars
• e. a bad economy
• . The main obstacle to solving financial problems
was
• a. the extravagant lifestyle of Louis XVI
• b. the unwillingness of the Third Estate to pay
more
• c. the fact that both the nobility and the clergy
were exempt from most taxes
• d. foreign wars
• e. a bad economy
• At the start of the Estates General, members of the
Third Estate refused to have their credentials officially
recognized because
• They resented that the three estates met and voted
separately
• They doubted that decisions would be made by fully
democratic means
• The aristocracy also refused to show credentials
• They resented the attempt to include peasant within
the Third Estate
• The king refused to hold future meetings of the Estates
General
• At the start of the Estates General, members of the
Third Estate refused to have their credentials officially
recognized because
• They resented that the three estates met and voted
separately
• They doubted that decisions would be made by fully
democratic means
• The aristocracy also refused to show credentials
• They resented the attempt to include peasant within
the Third Estate
• The king refused to hold future meetings of the Estates
General
• Prior to the Revolution in France, there was great
fear of a poor grain harvest because
• Bread was the mainstay of the working-class diet;
high grain prices meant malnutrition, disease,
and starvation
• Factory workers would have to be paid more
• The queen had little sympathy for the poor
• There would be foreign competition
• All of the above
• Prior to the Revolution in France, there was great
fear of a poor grain harvest because
• Bread was the mainstay of the working-class diet;
high grain prices meant malnutrition, disease,
and starvation
• Factory workers would have to be paid more
• The queen had little sympathy for the poor
• There would be foreign competition
• All of the above
• Which of the following groupings represents the
membership of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd estates
respectively?
• Clergy; nobility; commercial and professional
middle class
• Nobility; clergy; commercial and professional
middle class
• commercial and professional middle class,
nobility;clergy
• clergy; commercial and professional middle
class;nobility
• Which of the following groupings represents the
membership of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd estates
respectively?
• Clergy; nobility; commercial and professional
middle class
• Nobility; clergy; commercial and professional
middle class
• commercial and professional middle class,
nobility;clergy
• clergy; commercial and professional middle
class;nobility
• The proposed gabelle of Charles do Calonne
was a tax on
• Marriage
• Newspapers
• Salt
• Sugar
• Land
• The proposed gabelle of Charles do Calonne
was a tax on
• Marriage
• Newspapers
• Salt
• Sugar
• Land
• The primary problem facing Louis XVI in the
late 1780s was
• Peasant unrest
• British naval expansion
• The poverty of the French nation
• The refusal of the the Third Estate to pay taxes
• The bankruptcy of the monarchy
• The primary problem facing Louis XVI in the
late 1780s was
• Peasant unrest
• British naval expansion
• The poverty of the French nation
• The refusal of the the Third Estate to pay taxes
• The bankruptcy of the monarchy
• Early in the French Revolution, The National
Assembly agreed to peasant demand for an end
to all things feudal in order to
• Restore law and order
• Get the support of the san-culottes
• Carry out Rousseau’s Social Contract
• Punish the nobility for not supporting the third
estate
• Carry out the principles for the new constitution
• Early in the French Revolution, The National
Assembly agreed to peasant demand for an end
to all things feudal in order to
• Restore law and order
• Get the support of the san-culottes
• Carry out Rousseau’s Social Contract
• Punish the nobility for not supporting the third
estate
• Carry out the principles for the new constitution
• . Louis XVI convened the Estates General in order
to :
• a. gain support for an expedition to quash the
rebellion in the colony of Saint Dominique
• b. gain support for war against England
• c. raise tax revenues
• d. gain support for his push to end papal power in
France
• e. resolve the question of voting rights for the
peasantry
• . Louis XVI convened the Estates General in order
to :
• a. gain support for an expedition to quash the
rebellion in the colony of Saint Dominique
• b. gain support for war against England
• c. raise tax revenues
• d. gain support for his push to end papal power in
France
• e. resolve the question of voting rights for the
peasantry
• .The French parlements spoke for the
interests of this group
• a. the guilds
• b. the poor
• c. the peasantry
• d. the aristocracy
• e. the clergy
• .The French parlements spoke for the
interests of this group
• a. the guilds
• b. the poor
• c. the peasantry
• d. the aristocracy
• e. the clergy
• He was responsible for the introduction of the
revolutionary land tax that all landowners would
have to pay regardless of their social status
• a. Charles Alexandre de Calonne
• b. Louis XV
• c. Rene Maupeou
• d. Jacques Necker
• e. Louis XIV
• He was responsible for the introduction of the
revolutionary land tax that all landowners would
have to pay regardless of their social status
• a. Charles Alexandre de Calonne
• b. Louis XV
• c. Rene Maupeou
• d. Jacques Necker
• e. Louis XIV
• The parliament of Paris declared that only the
• a. parliament itself could institute new taxes
• b. National Assembly could institiute new
taxes
• c. People’s assembly could institute new taxes
• d. Estates General could establish new taxes
• e. king could institute new taxes
• The parliament of Paris declared that only the
• a. parliament itself could institute new taxes
• b. National Assembly could institiute new
taxes
• c. People’s assembly could institute new taxes
• d. Estates General could establish new taxes
• e. king could institute new taxes
• The Second Estate of the Estates General were
made up of the
• a. clergy
• b. nobility
• c. peasants
• d. middle class
• e. artisans
• The Second Estate of the Estates General were
made up of the
• a. clergy
• b. nobility
• c. peasants
• d. middle class
• e. artisans
• By which of the following ways did the aristocracy
attempt to limit the influence of the Third Estate?
• a. they demanded that each estate have an equal
number of representatives
• b. they levied excessive “luxury” taxes on the estate
• c. they attempted to disband the estate all together
• d. they prevented delegates from attending the Estates
General
• e. They demanded that each individual should have a
vote in the Estates General
• By which of the following ways did the aristocracy
attempt to limit the influence of the Third Estate?
• a. they demanded that each estate have an equal
number of representatives
• b. they levied excessive “luxury” taxes on the estate
• c. they attempted to disband the estate all together
• d. they prevented delegates from attending the Estates
General
• e. They demanded that each individual should have a
vote in the Estates General
• The cahiers, or grievance lists, prepared prior
to the meeting of the French Estates General
in 1789 showed that the people wanted
• Freedom of religion and the press
• Equality before the law
• Equal taxation
• Equal opportunity for positions in government
• All of the above
• The cahiers, or grievance lists, prepared prior
to the meeting of the French Estates General
in 1789 showed that the people wanted
• Freedom of religion and the press
• Equality before the law
• Equal taxation
• Equal opportunity for positions in government
• All of the above
• The cahiers de doleances presented to the
king included all of the following grievances
EXCEPT criticism of
• a. indirect taxes
• b. the hunting rights of the aristocracy
• c. the institution of monarchy as a whole
• d. corruption
• e. government waste
• The cahiers de doleances presented to the
king included all of the following grievances
EXCEPT criticism of
• a. indirect taxes
• b. the hunting rights of the aristocracy
• c. the institution of monarchy as a whole
• d. corruption
• e. government waste
• When the French people drew up cahiers(list of
grievances) in 1789 for the Estates to consider, which
of the following would NOT have been likely
• a. the peasants wanted relief from feudal dues
• b. the bourgeoisie called for access to high office in the
military and government
• c. shopkeepers wanted an end to unnessary taxes on
commerce
• d. the nobles wanted an expansion of royal power
• e. the clergy wanted protection of monastic
• When the French people drew up cahiers(list of
grievances) in 1789 for the Estates to consider, which
of the following would NOT have been likely
• a. the peasants wanted relief from feudal dues
• b. the bourgeoisie called for access to high office in the
military and government
• c. shopkeepers wanted an end to unnessary taxes on
commerce
• d. the nobles wanted an expansion of royal power
• e. the clergy wanted protection of monastic
• Throughout the winter and spring of 1789, the
high prices for this commodity produced riots
• a. wine
• b. cotton
• c. beef
• d. cheese
• e. bread
• Throughout the winter and spring of 1789, the
high prices for this commodity produced riots
• a. wine
• b. cotton
• c. beef
• d. cheese
• e. bread
• Maupeou wished to do away with the old parlements
of France because
• They interfered with the king’s efforts to raise an army
• The judges were frequently corrupt
• They blocked tax reform by declaring new measures
unconstitutional
• They had close ties to the Church
• They were carryovers from the Middle Ages and,
therefore, hopelessly out of touch with modern politics
• Maupeou wished to do away with the old parlements
of France because
• They interfered with the king’s efforts to raise an army
• The judges were frequently corrupt
• They blocked tax reform by declaring new measures
unconstitutional
• They had close ties to the Church
• They were carryovers from the Middle Ages and,
therefore, hopelessly out of touch with modern politics
• Which of the following characterized European warfare
between the Peace of Utrecht (1713)
and the
outbreak of the French Revolution (1789)?
• (A) Standing armies pursuing limited strategic goals
• (B) Citizen armies fighting for their native lands
• (C) Feudal armies fighting for their lords
• (D) Mass armies pursuing global strategies
• (E) Highly mobile armies unhampered by traditional
defenses
• Which of the following characterized European warfare
between the Peace of Utrecht (1713)
and the
outbreak of the French Revolution (1789)?
• (A) Standing armies pursuing limited strategic goals
• (B) Citizen armies fighting for their native lands
• (C) Feudal armies fighting for their lords
• (D) Mass armies pursuing global strategies
• (E) Highly mobile armies unhampered by traditional
defenses
• Which of the following best characterizes eighteenthcentury France just prior to the Revolution of 1789 ?
• (A) The economic status of the peasantry was
improving dramatically.
• (B) The aristocracy’s power had eroded completely.
• (C) The privileges of the clergy were declining.
• (D) The French monarchy was experiencing a
deepening financial crisis.
• (E) The participation of the bourgeoisie in legislative
affairs was increasing dramatically
• Which of the following best characterizes eighteenthcentury France just prior to the Revolution of 1789 ?
• (A) The economic status of the peasantry was
improving dramatically.
• (B) The aristocracy’s power had eroded completely.
• (C) The privileges of the clergy were declining.
• (D) The French monarchy was experiencing a
deepening financial crisis.
• (E) The participation of the bourgeoisie in legislative
affairs was increasing dramatically
• Absolute monarchy declined in pre-1789 France
primarily because of the
•
• (A) growth of judicial and aristocratic opposition
• (B) strength of peasant uprisings
• (C) increased power of the Estates-General
• (D) king’s refusal to involve France in foreign wars
• (E) decline in the French population
• Absolute monarchy declined in pre-1789 France
primarily because of the
•
• (A) growth of judicial and aristocratic opposition
• (B) strength of peasant uprisings
• (C) increased power of the Estates-General
• (D) king’s refusal to involve France in foreign wars
• (E) decline in the French population
• Which of the following best describes the French Third
Estate?
• (A) The palace at the Tuileries, which was the chief
royal residence after Versailles and the Louvre
• (B) The nobility of the robe, who acquired noble rank
by purchase
• (C) The non-noble, nonclerical section of the EstatesGeneral
• (D) The revolutionary faction that launched the Reign
of Terror
• (E) Counterrevolutionary provinces that resisted the
National Assembly
• Which of the following best describes the French Third
Estate?
• (A) The palace at the Tuileries, which was the chief
royal residence after Versailles and the Louvre
• (B) The nobility of the robe, who acquired noble rank
by purchase
• (C) The non-noble, nonclerical section of the EstatesGeneral
• (D) The revolutionary faction that launched the Reign
of Terror
• (E) Counterrevolutionary provinces that resisted the
National Assembly
• Which of the following best describes the French Third
Estate?
• (A) The palace at the Tuileries, which was the chief royal
residence after Versailles and the Louvre
• (B) The nobility of the robe, who acquired noble rank by
purchase
• (C) The non-noble, nonclerical section of the EstatesGeneral
• (D) The revolutionary faction that launched the Reign of
Terror
• (E) Counterrevolutionary provinces that resisted the
National Assembly
•
• Which of the following best describes the French Third
Estate?
• (A) The palace at the Tuileries, which was the chief royal
residence after Versailles and the Louvre
• (B) The nobility of the robe, who acquired noble rank by
purchase
• (C) The non-noble, nonclerical section of the EstatesGeneral
• (D) The revolutionary faction that launched the Reign of
Terror
• (E) Counterrevolutionary provinces that resisted the
National Assembly
•
• The calling of the Estates-General in France by King
Louis XVI in 1789 was the direct result of:
• (A) an uprising of the sans-culottes in Paris
• (B) France's defeats in the Seven Years' War by Great
Britain
• (C) the impact of the ideology advocated in the
American Revolution
• (D) the failure of the Assembly of Notables to endorse
the monarch's program of tax reform
• (E) the recommendation by the French Director
General of Finance, Jacques Necker
• The calling of the Estates-General in France by King
Louis XVI in 1789 was the direct result of:
• (A) an uprising of the sans-culottes in Paris
• (B) France's defeats in the Seven Years' War by Great
Britain
• (C) the impact of the ideology advocated in the
American Revolution
• (D) the failure of the Assembly of Notables to endorse
the monarch's program of tax reform
• (E) the recommendation by the French Director
General of Finance, Jacques Necker
• The immediate cause of the outbreak of
revolution in 1789 was
• Grinding poverty among all classes of society
• Government oppression
• The ideas of the philosophes
• The insensitivity of Marie Antoinette
• The government’s financial crisis
• The immediate cause of the outbreak of
revolution in 1789 was
• Grinding poverty among all classes of society
• Government oppression
• The ideas of the philosophes
• The insensitivity of Marie Antoinette
• The government’s financial crisis
• . Louis XVI of France convened the Estates General in 1789
for the first time in over 150 years becausand state
• e. e
• He wanted to show support for the growing democratic
movement
• He wanted approval to exempt the First and Second Estates
from taxation
• He wanted approval for taxing all landowners in the realm
• He needed funds to help support the American cause
against the British
• He needed a legislative body to check the powers of
Parlement of Paris
• . Louis XVI of France convened the Estates General in 1789
for the first time in over 150 years becausand state
• e. e
• He wanted to show support for the growing democratic
movement
• He wanted approval to exempt the First and Second Estates
from taxation
• He wanted approval for taxing all landowners in the realm
• He needed funds to help support the American cause
against the British
• He needed a legislative body to check the powers of
Parlement of Paris
• Which best describes the Third Estate prior to the
French Revolution?
• a. it consisted of the peasantry
• b. the First and Second Estates outnumbered it in
terms of population
• c. it included the middle class, peasants, and
urban workers
• d. it had the right to tax peasants for its own
profit
• e. it was an expempt for the tithe
• Which best describes the Third Estate prior to the
French Revolution?
• a. it consisted of the peasantry
• b. the First and Second Estates outnumbered it in
terms of population
• c. it included the middle class, peasants, and
urban workers
• d. it had the right to tax peasants for its own
profit
• e. it was an expempt for the tithe
• The least important impact of the American
Revolution on France was
• a. providing young men with a taste of
revolutionary action and ideals
• b. providing a revolutionary role model
• c. providing revenge against the hated English
• d. increasing burdens of the state
• e. providing proof tat a republic could be created
and function
• The least important impact of the American
Revolution on France was
• a. providing young men with a taste of
revolutionary action and ideals
• b. providing a revolutionary role model
• c. providing revenge against the hated English
• d. increasing burdens of the state
• e. providing proof tat a republic could be created
and function
• . The list of grievances, or cahiers de doleances,
brought by the members of the Estates-Genral to
Versailles in 1789 called for
• a. the immediate overthrow of Louis XVI
• b. unvisersal adult suffrage
• c. tax equity
• d. the separation of church
• e. renewal of provincial and city charters
•
• . The list of grievances, or cahiers de doleances,
brought by the members of the Estates-Genral to
Versailles in 1789 called for
• a. the immediate overthrow of Louis XVI
• b. unvisersal adult suffrage
• c. tax equity
• d. the separation of church
• e. renewal of provincial and city charters
•
• When the French people drew up cahiers(list of
grievances) in 1789 for the Estates General to consider,
which of the following would NOT have been likely
• The peasants wanted relief from feudal dues
• The bourgeoisie called for access to high office in the
military and government
• Shopkeepers wanted an end to unnecessary taxes on
commerce
• The nobles wanted an expansion of royal power
• The clergy wanted protection of monastic lands
• When the French people drew up cahiers(list of
grievances) in 1789 for the Estates General to consider,
which of the following would NOT have been likely
• The peasants wanted relief from feudal dues
• The bourgeoisie called for access to high office in the
military and government
• Shopkeepers wanted an end to unnecessary taxes on
commerce
• The nobles wanted an expansion of royal power
• The clergy wanted protection of monastic lands
• The significance of the storming of the Bastille was that
• It put ammunition into the hands of the Paris crowd
• It marked the beginning of a radical phase of the
revolution
• It freed important leaders from prisoners
• It demonstrated that the crowd could be an important
ally for the Assembly
• It demonstrated that the crowd was tired of monarchy
• The significance of the storming of the Bastille was that
• It put ammunition into the hands of the Paris crowd
• It marked the beginning of a radical phase of the
revolution
• It freed important leaders from prisoners
• It demonstrated that the crowd could be an important
ally for the Assembly
• It demonstrated that the crowd was tired of monarchy
• . The Great Fear of the summer 1789
• Politicized the urban workers of Paris
• Catalyzed a European coalition against the French
Revolution
• Put greater pressure on the Assembly to enact
more radical legislation
• Strengthened the position of the nobility
• Demonstrated the desperation of an overtaxed
peasantry
• . The Great Fear of the summer 1789
• Politicized the urban workers of Paris
• Catalyzed a European coalition against the French
Revolution
• Put greater pressure on the Assembly to enact
more radical legislation
• Strengthened the position of the nobility
• Demonstrated the desperation of an overtaxed
peasantry
• When members of the Third Estate took the
Tennis Court Oath (1789) at the start of the
French Revolution, they were attempting to
• A. establish a military government.
• B. draft a new national constitution.
• C. restore the king to power.
• D. persuade Napoleon to gain power
• When members of the Third Estate took the
Tennis Court Oath (1789) at the start of the
French Revolution, they were attempting to
• A. establish a military government.
• B. draft a new national constitution.
• C. restore the king to power.
• D. persuade Napoleon to gain power
• The Bastille was a symbol of royal power
because
• The king used it as his residence in Paris
• It had housed political prisoners
• Wheat for bread was stored there
• It was located at Versailles
• It was built by Louis XVI with forced labor
• The Bastille was a symbol of royal power
because
• The king used it as his residence in Paris
• It had housed political prisoners
• Wheat for bread was stored there
• It was located at Versailles
• It was built by Louis XVI with forced labor
• The significance of the women’s march on
Versailles on October 5, 1789 was that
• It led to cheaper bread prices
• It resulted in the king being brought back to Paris
• The leaders of the march were immediately
arrested
• It was used by the Jacobins as justification for the
elimination of Girondists
• It marked the only instance in which women
participated in the events of the revolution
• The significance of the women’s march on
Versailles on October 5, 1789 was that
• It led to cheaper bread prices
• It resulted in the king being brought back to Paris
• The leaders of the march were immediately
arrested
• It was used by the Jacobins as justification for the
elimination of Girondists
• It marked the only instance in which women
participated in the events of the revolution
• The Tennis Court Oath refers to an oath taken by
the
• a. National Assembly to give France a constitution
• b. monarchy of Louis XVI to squelch any hint of
possible rebellion with the utmost severity
• c. National Assembly to unite all those not of
noble birth or clerical relations and represent
“the people” of France
• d. monarchy of Louis XVI to bring France’s people
together as on
• The Tennis Court Oath refers to an oath taken by
the
• a. National Assembly to give France a constitution
• b. monarchy of Louis XVI to squelch any hint of
possible rebellion with the utmost severity
• c. National Assembly to unite all those not of
noble birth or clerical relations and represent
“the people” of France
• d. monarchy of Louis XVI to bring France’s people
together as on
• The Declaration of the Rights of Man and
Citizen was modeled after the
• American colonies’ Declaration of
Independence
• Magna Carta
• Declaration of Rights adopted by Virginia
• Tennis Court Oath
• American colonies’ 1787 constitiution
• The Declaration of the Rights of Man and
Citizen was modeled after the
• American colonies’ Declaration of
Independence
• Magna Carta
• Declaration of Rights adopted by Virginia
• Tennis Court Oath
• American colonies’ 1787 constitiution
• The result of the Tennis Court Oath was the
formation of the
• Sans-culottes
• Second Estate
• Third Estate
• National Assembly
• Estates General
• The result of the Tennis Court Oath was the
formation of the
• Sans-culottes
• Second Estate
• Third Estate
• National Assembly
• Estates General
• In What is the Third Estate?, Abbe Sieyes called
for
• The elimination of the Third Estate
• The creation of a republic
• The overthrow of the monarchy
• A dominant role for commoners in French
political kllife
• The boycott by the Third Estate of the
proceedings at Versailles
• In What is the Third Estate?, Abbe Sieyes called
for
• The elimination of the Third Estate
• The creation of a republic
• The overthrow of the monarchy
• A dominant role for commoners in French
political kllife
• The boycott by the Third Estate of the
proceedings at Versailles
• The decision by the representatives of the Third
Estate to declare themselves, on 17 June 1789, to
be the National Assembly of France signified
• Their intention to form a republic
• Their belief that political sovereignty belonged to
the nation as a whole
• Their intention to overthrow the monarchy
• Their belief in democracy
• Their willingness to go to war with Germany
• The decision by the representatives of the Third
Estate to declare themselves, on 17 June 1789, to
be the National Assembly of France signified
• Their intention to form a republic
• Their belief that political sovereignty belonged to
the nation as a whole
• Their intention to overthrow the monarchy
• Their belief in democracy
• Their willingness to go to war with Germany
• In the French Revolution, the March to Versailles
that occurred in October of 1789 illustrates
• The conservative nature of the sans-culottes
• The power of the French army
• The beginning of the radical phase of the
revolution
• The fact that the crowds of Paris did not yet look
upon Louis XVI as their enemy
• The brilliance of Napolean as a military leader
• In the French Revolution, the March to Versailles
that occurred in October of 1789 illustrates
• The conservative nature of the sans-culottes
• The power of the French army
• The beginning of the radical phase of the
revolution
• The fact that the crowds of Paris did not yet look
upon Louis XVI as their enemy
• The brilliance of Napolean as a military leader
• Which of these first demonstrated that
popular protest would play a role in the
French Revolution?
• A. The reign of the Committee of Public
Safety.
• B. The trial of Louis XIV.
• C. The fall of the Bastille.
• D. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy.
• Which of these first demonstrated that
popular protest would play a role in the
French Revolution?
• A. The reign of the Committee of Public
Safety.
• B. The trial of Louis XIV.
• C. The fall of the Bastille.
• D. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy.
• The “Great Fear” in the summer of 1789 was the
result in rumors that
• The harvest was far smaller than expected
• The great French estates were not to be broken
up and redistributed among the peasants
• The monarchy was about to be restored
• Aristocrats were plotting to attack peasants
• French farms would be collective
• The “Great Fear” in the summer of 1789 was the
result in rumors that
• The harvest was far smaller than expected
• The great French estates were not to be broken
up and redistributed among the peasants
• The monarchy was about to be restored
• Aristocrats were plotting to attack peasants
• French farms would be collective
• Sieyes’s What is the Third Estate? Argued that
• The clergy and the nobility contributed little to
the life of the country
• The estates should vote by estates
• The third estate should have the right to vote
• Taxes on the poor should be reduced
• All citizens should be equal before the law
• Sieyes’s What is the Third Estate? Argued that
• The clergy and the nobility contributed little to
the life of the country
• The estates should vote by estates
• The third estate should have the right to vote
• Taxes on the poor should be reduced
• All citizens should be equal before the law
• The first political use of the terms “right” and “left” was to describe
the
•
• (A) division of France into predominantly Protestant and
predominantly Roman Catholic areas
• (B) seating arrangements in the French National Assembly chamber
during the French Revolution
• (C) party alliances in the English House of Commons during the
debates prior to the American
Revolution
• (D) two wings of the Versailles palace that housed the Roman
Catholic and the Huguenot nobility
• (B) factions in the English Parliament that supported James II or
William of Orange
•
• The first political use of the terms “right” and “left” was to describe
the
•
• (A) division of France into predominantly Protestant and
predominantly Roman Catholic areas
• (B) seating arrangements in the French National Assembly chamber
during the French Revolution
• (C) party alliances in the English House of Commons during the
debates prior to the American
Revolution
• (D) two wings of the Versailles palace that housed the Roman
Catholic and the Huguenot nobility
• (B) factions in the English Parliament that supported James II or
William of Orange
•
• . During the Great Fear:
• a. the nobility refused to make concessions to the
peasantry
• b. peasants demanded the execution of Louis XVI
• c. Aristocrats in Paris went into hiding
• d. the liberal nobles attained new titles and
wealth
• e. peasants reclaimed the rights and property
they had lost to aristocratic resurgence
• . During the Great Fear:
• a. the nobility refused to make concessions to the
peasantry
• b. peasants demanded the execution of Louis XVI
• c. Aristocrats in Paris went into hiding
• d. the liberal nobles attained new titles and
wealth
• e. peasants reclaimed the rights and property
they had lost to aristocratic resurgence
• The sequence of events that led to the French Revolution of
1789 is best summarized by
which of the following?
• (A) Lafayette’s call for democracy, royal suppression of the
National Assembly, Robespierre’s
leading a peasant
revolution
• (B) Peasant uprisings, royal abdication, election of the
National Assembly
• (C) Franco-Austrian war, urban riots, convening of the
Assembly of Notables
• (D) Widespread famine, repression of riots, guerrilla war
• (E) Royal financial crisis, convening of the Estates General,
storming of the Bastille
• The sequence of events that led to the French Revolution of
1789 is best summarized by
which of the following?
• (A) Lafayette’s call for democracy, royal suppression of the
National Assembly, Robespierre’s
leading a peasant
revolution
• (B) Peasant uprisings, royal abdication, election of the
National Assembly
• (C) Franco-Austrian war, urban riots, convening of the
Assembly of Notables
• (D) Widespread famine, repression of riots, guerrilla war
• (E) Royal financial crisis, convening of the Estates General,
storming of the Bastille
• The main purpose of the women’s march to Versailles in
October 1789 was to
•
• (A) provide the National Assembly and the king with a
declaration of support
• (B) protest the seizure of Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette
by the National Guard
• (C) present the women’s concerns to Marie-Antoinette
• (D) ensure the king’s support for the Declaration of Rights
and cheap bread for Paris
• (E) protest the lack of representation for women in the
National Assembly
• The main purpose of the women’s march to Versailles in
October 1789 was to
•
• (A) provide the National Assembly and the king with a
declaration of support
• (B) protest the seizure of Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette
by the National Guard
• (C) present the women’s concerns to Marie-Antoinette
• (D) ensure the king’s support for the Declaration of Rights
and cheap bread for Paris
• (E) protest the lack of representation for women in the
National Assembly
• . Although the storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789,
is celebrated as the “start of the French Revolution, “
the first act of revolution may have been the resolve of
the Third Estate to write a constitution. It is of
• The first session of the Estates General
• The swearing of the Tennis Court Oath
• The storming of the Tuileries
• The forming of the National Assembly
• The public proclamation of the Declaration of the
Rights of Man “Men are born and remain free and
equal in rights”
• . Although the storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789,
is celebrated as the “start of the French Revolution, “
the first act of revolution may have been the resolve of
the Third Estate to write a constitution. It is of
• The first session of the Estates General
• The swearing of the Tennis Court Oath
• The storming of the Tuileries
• The forming of the National Assembly
• The public proclamation of the Declaration of the
Rights of Man “Men are born and remain free and
equal in rights”
• What document supporting a new order of
government has the above line as its first article?
• The Declaration of Independence
• The US Constitution
• The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the
Citizen
• Thomas Paine’s Common Sense
• What Is The Third Estate?
• What document supporting a new order of
government has the above line as its first article?
• The Declaration of Independence
• The US Constitution
• The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the
Citizen
• Thomas Paine’s Common Sense
• What Is The Third Estate?
• . In the French Revolution, the March to Versailles
that occurred in October of 1789 illustrates
• The conservative nature of the sans culottes
• The power of the French army
• The beginning of the radical phase of the
revolution
• The fact that the crowds of Paris did not yet look
upon Louis XVI as their enemy
• The brilliance of Napolean as a military leader
• . In the French Revolution, the March to Versailles
that occurred in October of 1789 illustrates
• The conservative nature of the sans culottes
• The power of the French army
• The beginning of the radical phase of the
revolution
• The fact that the crowds of Paris did not yet look
upon Louis XVI as their enemy
• The brilliance of Napolean as a military leader
• Which of the following forced Louis XVI and
Marie Antoinette to return to Paris from
Versailles?
• An assassination attempt
• An angry mob of Parisian women
• The fall of the Bastille
• the Paris Parlement
• e. a destructive fire set by the sans-culottes
• Which of the following forced Louis XVI and
Marie Antoinette to return to Paris from
Versailles?
• An assassination attempt
• An angry mob of Parisian women
• The fall of the Bastille
• the Paris Parlement
• e. a destructive fire set by the sans-culottes
• The event most responsible for turning the
people of Paris against Louis XVI was
• His attempt to flee Paris in 1791
• His decision to execute Robespierre
• His decision to raise taxes
• His decision to crush the Paris Commune
• His decision to issue the Civil Constitution of
the Clergy
• The event most responsible for turning the
people of Paris against Louis XVI was
• His attempt to flee Paris in 1791
• His decision to execute Robespierre
• His decision to raise taxes
• His decision to crush the Paris Commune
• His decision to issue the Civil Constitution of
the Clergy
• During the French Revolution, assignats the
new paper money, were backed by
• Church property
• Noble property
• Gold
• Silver
• Tax revenues
• During the French Revolution, assignats the
new paper money, were backed by
• Church property
• Noble property
• Gold
• Silver
• Tax revenues
• . The Civil Constitution of the Clergy
• Allied the clergy with the Assembly
• Curbed the power of the clergy but alienated
many Catholics
• Brought the Assembly greater support among the
Catholic population
• Reaffirmed the central place of the Church in the
French government
• Made Catholicism illegal in France
• . The Civil Constitution of the Clergy
• Allied the clergy with the Assembly
• Curbed the power of the clergy but alienated
many Catholics
• Brought the Assembly greater support among the
Catholic population
• Reaffirmed the central place of the Church in the
French government
• Made Catholicism illegal in France
• .During the French Revolution, the Civil
Constitution of the Clergy required
• The conversion fo churches into “temples of
reason”
• The clergy’s swearing an oath of loyalty to the
state
• That the Church turn over its property to the
government
• That the Church no longer collect the tithe
• That nuns renounce their vows
• .During the French Revolution, the Civil
Constitution of the Clergy required
• The conversion fo churches into “temples of
reason”
• The clergy’s swearing an oath of loyalty to the
state
• That the Church turn over its property to the
government
• That the Church no longer collect the tithe
• That nuns renounce their vows
• . Which of the following best describes the
form of government pursued by the National
Constituent Assembly?
• a. oligarchy
• b. democracy
• c. dictatorship
• d. constititutional monarchy
• e. theocracy
• . Which of the following best describes the
form of government pursued by the National
Constituent Assembly?
• a. oligarchy
• b. democracy
• c. dictatorship
• d. constititutional monarchy
• e. theocracy
• . Sieyes’ What is the Third Estate? Argued that
• a. the clergy and the nobility contributed little
to the life of the country
• b. the estates should vote by estates
• c. the third estate should have the right to
vote
• d. taxes on the poor should be reduced
• e. all citizens should be equal before the law
• . Sieyes’ What is the Third Estate? Argued that
• a. the clergy and the nobility contributed little
to the life of the country
• b. the estates should vote by estates
• c. the third estate should have the right to
vote
• d. taxes on the poor should be reduced
• e. all citizens should be equal before the law
• When members of the Third Estate took the
Tennis Court Oath (1789) at the start of the
French Revolution , they were attempting to
• a. establish a military government
• b. draft a new national constititution
• c. restore the king
• d. persuade Napolean to gain power
• When members of the Third Estate took the
Tennis Court Oath (1789) at the start of the
French Revolution , they were attempting to
• a. establish a military government
• b. draft a new national constititution
• c. restore the king
• d. persuade Napolean to gain power
• . The Declaration of the Rights of Man and
Citizens was modeled after the
• a. American colonies’ Declaration of
Independence
• b. Magna Carta
• c. Declaration of Rights adopted by Virginia
• d. Tennis Court Oath
• e. American colonies’ 1787 constitution
• . The Declaration of the Rights of Man and
Citizens was modeled after the
• a. American colonies’ Declaration of
Independence
• b. Magna Carta
• c. Declaration of Rights adopted by Virginia
• d. Tennis Court Oath
• e. American colonies’ 1787 constitution
• The result of the Tennis Court Oath was the
formation of the
• a. sans-culottes
• b. Second Estate
• c. Third Estate
• d. National Assembly
• e. Estates General
• The result of the Tennis Court Oath was the
formation of the
• a. sans-culottes
• b. Second Estate
• c. Third Estate
• d. National Assembly
• e. Estates General
• During the French Revolution, emigres were
• Members of the Jacobin group
• Women who were denied admission to the
Convention
• Foreigners who wanted to join the sans-culottes
in the Revolution
• Aristocrats who relocated on the French border
and tried to stimulate a counter-revolution
• Immigrants from the French colonies who sought
political refuge in France
• During the French Revolution, emigres were
• Members of the Jacobin group
• Women who were denied admission to the
Convention
• Foreigners who wanted to join the sans-culottes
in the Revolution
• Aristocrats who relocated on the French border
and tried to stimulate a counter-revolution
• Immigrants from the French colonies who sought
political refuge in France
• They Chapelier Law in France originated during
the Revolution and remained in place for many
years. The Chapelier Law
• Established wage and price controls
• Made it illegal for women to participate in
political clubs
• Declared labor unions and strikes illegal
• Established equal taxation
• Made all citizens equal before the law
• They Chapelier Law in France originated during
the Revolution and remained in place for many
years. The Chapelier Law
• Established wage and price controls
• Made it illegal for women to participate in
political clubs
• Declared labor unions and strikes illegal
• Established equal taxation
• Made all citizens equal before the law
•
•
•
•
•
•
The Chapelier Law
a. expunged residual feudal fees
b. put a protective tariff on wine imports
c. forbade workers’ associations
d. put an end to eccesiatical taxes
e. granted female suffrage
•
•
•
•
•
•
The Chapelier Law
a. expunged residual feudal fees
b. put a protective tariff on wine imports
c. forbade workers’ associations
d. put an end to eccesiatical taxes
e. granted female suffrage
• . The Roman Catholic Church
• a. accepted the French Revolution
• b. was a driving force behind the French
Revolution
• c. enthusiastically supported the French
Revolution
• d. ignored the French Revolution
• e. condemned the French Revolution
• . The Roman Catholic Church
• a. accepted the French Revolution
• b. was a driving force behind the French
Revolution
• c. enthusiastically supported the French
Revolution
• d. ignored the French Revolution
• e. condemned the French Revolution
• . Which of the following caused the deepest and
most persistent internal opposition to the
French Revolution?
• (A) The Great Fear
• (B) The storming of the Bastille
• (C) The publication of Burke’s Reflections on the
Revolution in France
• (D) The advent of the Thermidorean reaction
• (E) The enactment of the Civil Constitution of the
Clergy
• . Which of the following caused the deepest and
most persistent internal opposition to the
French Revolution?
• (A) The Great Fear
• (B) The storming of the Bastille
• (C) The publication of Burke’s Reflections on the
Revolution in France
• (D) The advent of the Thermidorean reaction
• (E) The enactment of the Civil Constitution of the
Clergy
• The most significant impact of the Civil Constitution of
the Clergy on the course of the French Revolution was
• The alliance it created between the clergy and the
National Assembly
• That it made the clergy subservient to the state
• That it alienated much of the Catholic population from
the revolution
• Its reaffirmation of the central place of the Church and
the French government
• That it made Catholicism illegal in France
• The most significant impact of the Civil Constitution of
the Clergy on the course of the French Revolution was
• The alliance it created between the clergy and the
National Assembly
• That it made the clergy subservient to the state
• That it alienated much of the Catholic population from
the revolution
• Its reaffirmation of the central place of the Church and
the French government
• That it made Catholicism illegal in France
• The Civil Constitution of the Clergy
• Allied the clergy with the Assembly
• Curbed the power of the clergy but alienated
many Catholics
• Brought the Assembly greater support among the
Catholic population
• Reaffirmed the central place of the Church in the
French government
• Made Catholicism illegal in France
• The Civil Constitution of the Clergy
• Allied the clergy with the Assembly
• Curbed the power of the clergy but alienated
many Catholics
• Brought the Assembly greater support among the
Catholic population
• Reaffirmed the central place of the Church in the
French government
• Made Catholicism illegal in France
• . Which of the following alienated the most
French Catholic clerics and believers?
• The provision of freedom of religion in the
Declaration of the Rights of Man
• The determination of the various revolutionary
governments to collect taxes from the Third
Estate
• The seizure of church lands
• The Civil Constitution of the Clergy
• The abolition of monasteries
• . Which of the following alienated the most
French Catholic clerics and believers?
• The provision of freedom of religion in the
Declaration of the Rights of Man
• The determination of the various revolutionary
governments to collect taxes from the Third
Estate
• The seizure of church lands
• The Civil Constitution of the Clergy
• The abolition of monasteries
• The event most responsible for turning the
people of Paris against Louis XVI was
• His attempt to flee Paris in June of 1791
• His decision to execute Robespierre
• His decision to raise taxes
• His decision to crush the Paris Commune
• His decision to issue the Civil Constitution of
the Clergy
• The event most responsible for turning the
people of Paris against Louis XVI was
• His attempt to flee Paris in June of 1791
• His decision to execute Robespierre
• His decision to raise taxes
• His decision to crush the Paris Commune
• His decision to issue the Civil Constitution of
the Clergy
• Which of the following did not contribute to
the radicalization of the French Revolution
• Austria and Prussia’s declaration of war on the
French Republic
• The flight to Varennes
• Factionalization of the Assembly
• The execution of Louis XVI
• The rise of the sans culottes
• Which of the following did not contribute to
the radicalization of the French Revolution
• Austria and Prussia’s declaration of war on the
French Republic
• The flight to Varennes
• Factionalization of the Assembly
• The execution of Louis XVI
• The rise of the sans culottes
• During the Jacobins domination of France in
1793, the government did all of the following
EXCEPT
• Institute the metric system
• Make all property communal
• Change the calendar
• Set price limits on bread
• Attempt to move the people away from their
allegiance to Catholicism
• During the Jacobins domination of France in
1793, the government did all of the following
EXCEPT
• Institute the metric system
• Make all property communal
• Change the calendar
• Set price limits on bread
• Attempt to move the people away from their
allegiance to Catholicism
•
•
•
•
The sans-cullottes
Were tied to the Girondists
Recoiled from the use of violence
Failed to recognized the legitimacy of the
National Guard
• Were primarily peasants
• e.Consisted of the working class people of
Paris
•
•
•
•
The sans-cullottes
Were tied to the Girondists
Recoiled from the use of violence
Failed to recognized the legitimacy of the
National Guard
• Were primarily peasants
• e.Consisted of the working class people of
Paris
• . In his Reflections on the Revolution in
France(1790) Edmund Burke was critical of
• British failure to formulate an effective response
to events in France
• The removal of Louis XVI from the throne
• France’s inability to evolve from constitutional
monarchy to republic
• France’s refusal to honor its national debt
• The rapid diminishing of the authority of the
monarchy and the Church
• . In his Reflections on the Revolution in
France(1790) Edmund Burke was critical of
• British failure to formulate an effective response
to events in France
• The removal of Louis XVI from the throne
• France’s inability to evolve from constitutional
monarchy to republic
• France’s refusal to honor its national debt
• The rapid diminishing of the authority of the
monarchy and the Church
• Who were the sans culottes, and what was their role in
the revolution?
• They were the bourgeois factory owners who
supported the revolution financially
• They were the leaders of the revolution who ran the
new government
• They were an underground political party who
supported the monarchy
• They were poor city dwellers who added zeal and
brutality to the revolution
• They were scholars who created a new calendar for the
republic
• Who were the sans culottes, and what was their role in
the revolution?
• They were the bourgeois factory owners who
supported the revolution financially
• They were the leaders of the revolution who ran the
new government
• They were an underground political party who
supported the monarchy
• They were poor city dwellers who added zeal and
brutality to the revolution
• They were scholars who created a new calendar for the
republic
• Many historians divide the French Revolution into
these three distinct stages:
• “The Great Fear,” “The Reign of Terror” and “The
Directory”
• The Monarchy, the Republic, the Empire
• The radical, moderate, and the reactionary stages
• The moderate, the radical, and the reactionary
stages
• The storming of the Bastille, of the Tuileries, of
the National Convention
• Many historians divide the French Revolution into
these three distinct stages:
• “The Great Fear,” “The Reign of Terror” and “The
Directory”
• The Monarchy, the Republic, the Empire
• The radical, moderate, and the reactionary stages
• The moderate, the radical, and the reactionary
stages
• The storming of the Bastille, of the Tuileries, of
the National Convention
• All of the following are accurate EXCEPT
• France had a nonrepresentative government before
the French Revolution
• The Revolution destroyed the vestiges of manorialism
• The Revolution failed to end the legal inequalities
between the classes
• The Revolution influenced French society to measure
status by ability rather than birth
• The ideals of the French revolution spread throughout
Europe
• All of the following are accurate EXCEPT
• France had a nonrepresentative government before
the French Revolution
• The Revolution destroyed the vestiges of manorialism
• The Revolution failed to end the legal inequalities
between the classes
• The Revolution influenced French society to measure
status by ability rather than birth
• The ideals of the French revolution spread throughout
Europe
•
•
•
•
•
•
. In Thermidor
The nobility reasserted its power
France was defeated by the European coalition
The French monarchy was restored
The sans culottes chose to govern France directly
The moderate portion of the propertied
bourgeoisie reasserted its power
•
•
•
•
•
•
. In Thermidor
The nobility reasserted its power
France was defeated by the European coalition
The French monarchy was restored
The sans culottes chose to govern France directly
The moderate portion of the propertied
bourgeoisie reasserted its power
• The core value of the republic of virtue
created by the revolution was
• a. individual interests over the general will
• b. public good over the private good
• c. private good over public good
• d. liberty for all
• e. equality for all
• The core value of the republic of virtue
created by the revolution was
• a. individual interests over the general will
• b. public good over the private good
• c. private good over public good
• d. liberty for all
• e. equality for all
• Which of the following was not part of the
ideology embraced by Maximilian Robespierre?
• a. establishment of equal rights of women
• b. renunciation of self- interested politics
• c. the assault on foreign and domestic enemies of
the revolution
• d. embrace Christianity
• e. wholehearted support of the republican
government
•
• Which of the following was not part of the
ideology embraced by Maximilian Robespierre?
• a. establishment of equal rights of women
• b. renunciation of self- interested politics
• c. the assault on foreign and domestic enemies of
the revolution
• d. embrace Christianity
• e. wholehearted support of the republican
government
•
• . Many victims of the Reign of Terror were
subject to this “humane” form of execution
• a. shooting
• b. hanging
• c. poisoning
• d. starvation
• e. guillotine
• . Many victims of the Reign of Terror were
subject to this “humane” form of execution
• a. shooting
• b. hanging
• c. poisoning
• d. starvation
• e. guillotine
• The Thermidorian reaction resulted in all of
the following EXCEPT
• a. a pull back from the radical revolution
• b. a new constititution
• c. the closing of the Paris Jacobin Club
• d. the reduction of the political power of the
sans-culottes
• e. an end to political violence
• The Thermidorian reaction resulted in all of
the following EXCEPT
• a. a pull back from the radical revolution
• b. a new constititution
• c. the closing of the Paris Jacobin Club
• d. the reduction of the political power of the
sans-culottes
• e. an end to political violence
• . During the French Revolution, the
Thermidorean Reaction was
• At the beginning of the Directory
• Year One of the Republic
• The end of the Reign of Terror
• The execution of Louis XVI
• The coup d’etat of 1797
• . During the French Revolution, the
Thermidorean Reaction was
• At the beginning of the Directory
• Year One of the Republic
• The end of the Reign of Terror
• The execution of Louis XVI
• The coup d’etat of 1797
• Which of the following events occurred during
the Directory period of the French Revolution.
1795-1799?
• Napolean set up the Cisalpine Republic in
northern Italy
• The Reign of Terror occurred
• The Revolutionary calendar renamed the months
and days
• France adopted the metric system
• Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette were executed
• Which of the following events occurred during
the Directory period of the French Revolution.
1795-1799?
• Napolean set up the Cisalpine Republic in
northern Italy
• The Reign of Terror occurred
• The Revolutionary calendar renamed the months
and days
• France adopted the metric system
• Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette were executed
• The phase of the French Revolution known as
“Thermidor” was characterized by
• A reassertion of control by the nobility
• The defeat of France by Austrian
• The restoration of the monarchy
• The rule of the Committee of Public Safety
• A reassertion of control by the moderate
portion of the propertied bourgeoisie
• The phase of the French Revolution known as
“Thermidor” was characterized by
• A reassertion of control by the nobility
• The defeat of France by Austrian
• The restoration of the monarchy
• The rule of the Committee of Public Safety
• A reassertion of control by the moderate
portion of the propertied bourgeoisie
• The French Reign of Terror is most closely
associated with the:
• (A) women's march to Versailles
• (B) establishment of the Committee of Public
Safety
• (C) issuance of the Civil Constitution of the
Clergy
• (D) drafting of the Declaration of the Rights of
Man and Citizen
• (E) reform of civil and criminal law
• The French Reign of Terror is most closely
associated with the:
• (A) women's march to Versailles
• (B) establishment of the Committee of Public
Safety
• (C) issuance of the Civil Constitution of the
Clergy
• (D) drafting of the Declaration of the Rights of
Man and Citizen
• (E) reform of civil and criminal law
• . The Reign of Terror
• Was necessary, according to Robespierre, to
establish a democratic republic
• Was opposed by the Parisian crowd
• Was aimed only at the nobility
• Was anticlerical
• Was worst in the countryside
• . The Reign of Terror
• Was necessary, according to Robespierre, to
establish a democratic republic
• Was opposed by the Parisian crowd
• Was aimed only at the nobility
• Was anticlerical
• Was worst in the countryside
• During the French Revolution, Robespierre
asserted that terror was necessary because
• There was no God
• The revolution fought against genuine tyranny
• The aims of the revolution were virtuous
• The people were not loyal
• The king had betrayed the people
• During the French Revolution, Robespierre
asserted that terror was necessary because
• There was no God
• The revolution fought against genuine tyranny
• The aims of the revolution were virtuous
• The people were not loyal
• The king had betrayed the people
• The general purpose behind the Terror was to
• Make France a republic by eliminating Marie
Antoinette
• Make a statement to France’s enemies
• Eliminate any opposition to the revolution
• Clear out the overcrowded prisons
• Punish the clergy who refused to sign an oath of
loyalty to the revolution
•
• The general purpose behind the Terror was to
• Make France a republic by eliminating Marie
Antoinette
• Make a statement to France’s enemies
• Eliminate any opposition to the revolution
• Clear out the overcrowded prisons
• Punish the clergy who refused to sign an oath of
loyalty to the revolution
•
• Following the end of the Reign of Terror, the
Jacobins
• were imprisoned
• took control of the Republic
• were summarily executed
• were made to conform their views to the e.
more moderate views of the Thermidorians
• were exiled
• Following the end of the Reign of Terror, the
Jacobins
• were imprisoned
• took control of the Republic
• were summarily executed
• were made to conform their views to the e.
more moderate views of the Thermidorians
• were exiled
• The founder of civic religion, the Cult of the
Supreme Being,
• Louis XVI
• Danton
• Rousseau
• Robespierre
• Marie Antoinette
• The founder of civic religion, the Cult of the
Supreme Being,
• Louis XVI
• Danton
• Rousseau
• Robespierre
• Marie Antoinette
• . By the standards of the 20th century, the
slaughter of French citizens during the reign of
Terror was relatively small in number. It claimed
approximately how many victims?
• 4 million
• 1 million
• 400,000
• 40,000
• 4,000
• . By the standards of the 20th century, the
slaughter of French citizens during the reign of
Terror was relatively small in number. It claimed
approximately how many victims?
• 4 million
• 1 million
• 400,000
• 40,000
• 4,000
• Which event occurred during the radical stage
of the French Revolution?
• Formation of the national assembly
• The Great Fear
• Napolean’s military dictatorship
• The Terror
• The Storming of the Bastille
• Which event occurred during the radical stage
of the French Revolution?
• Formation of the national assembly
• The Great Fear
• Napolean’s military dictatorship
• The Terror
• The Storming of the Bastille
• . All of the following precipitated the radical
turn of the revolution EXCEPT
• The rise of the sans culottes
• The flight of the king
• The division of the Assembly into factions
• The execution of the kings
• The outbreak of war with Austria and Prussia
• . All of the following precipitated the radical
turn of the revolution EXCEPT
• The rise of the sans culottes
• The flight of the king
• The division of the Assembly into factions
• The execution of the kings
• The outbreak of war with Austria and Prussia
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