1789: Twelve Authors Explore A Year of Rebellion, Revolution, and Change Chapter Sampler
1789: Twelve Authors Explore A Year of Rebellion, Revolution, and Change Chapter Sampler
1789: Twelve Authors Explore A Year of Rebellion, Revolution, and Change Chapter Sampler
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TWELVE AUTHORS EXPLORE
A YEAR OF REBELLION,
REVOLUTION, AND CHANGE
E dit e d by
M ar c Arons o n a n d
Susan Cam p bell Ba rt o le t t i
Compilation copyright © 2020 by Marc Aronson and Susan Campbell Bartoletti
“ ‘The Fishwives Make the Rules’: The October Days of the French Revolution”
copyright © 2020 by Tanya Lee Stone
“The Contradictory King: Gustav III and the Unlikely Beginnings of Class Equality
in Sweden” copyright © 2020 by Karen Engelmann
“Pi, Vega, and the Battle at Belgrade” copyright © 2020 by Amy Alznauer
“The Queen’s Chemise: Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, Portraitist of Marie Antoinette”
copyright © 2020 by Susan Campbell Bartoletti
“The Choice: Paris, 1789” copyright © 2020 by Marc Aronson
“ ‘All Men Are Created Equal’: The Global Journey of Olaudah Equiano”
copyright © 2020 by Joyce Hansen
“The Wesleyans in the West Indies” copyright © 2020 by Summer Edward
“Who Counted in America? The Beginning of an Endless Conversation”
copyright © 2020 by Cynthia Levinson and Sanford Levinson
“Mary Jemison and the Seneca Nation: 1789” copyright © 2020 by Christopher Turner
“Challenging Time: Dr. James Hutton, the Father of Geology” copyright © 2020 by Sally M. Walker
“Mutiny on the Bounty: Breadfruit, Flogging, Impossible Navigation, and Revolutionary Ideas—
There Ought to Be a Musical” copyright © 2020 by Steve Sheinkin
Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, Marie Antoinette in Court Dress; Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun,
Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat; Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, Marie Antoinette with a Rose,
printed with permission from Getty. Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, La reine en gaulle, 1783,
printed with permission from Niday Picture Library, Alamy Stock Photos.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in an
information retrieval system in any form or by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including
photocopying, taping, and recording, without prior written permission from the publisher.
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E X H I L A R AT I O N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
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A B O M I N AT I O N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
THE CHOICE
BY MARC ARONSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
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C O N C LU S I O N S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
CHALLENGING TIME
BY SALLY M. WALKER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
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A UTHOR N OTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
S OURCE N OTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
B IBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186
I NDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
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INTRODUC TION
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THE AGE OF REVOLUTIONS
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RAT I ON
W E see the solemn and majestic spectacle of a Nation
opening its commission, under the auspices of its Creator,
to establish a government; a scene so new, and so transcendently
unequalled by anything in the European world, that the name of a
revolution is diminutive of its character, and it rises into a regenera-
tion of man.
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I HAVE lived to see the rights of men better understood than
ever; and nations panting for liberty, which seemed to have lost
the idea of it. I have lived to see THIRTY MILLIONS of people, indig-
nant and resolute, spurning at slavery, and demanding liberty with
an irresistible voice.
TANYA LE E ST O N E
October 6, 1789
By dawn, upward of thirty thousand well-armed French had joined
the Dames and were a formidable sight. After a cold, wet night,
the people wanted in. When an open gate was discovered, a crowd
pushed its way through.
By eight a.m., there were people rushing into the courtyards and
into some of the buildings. When Louis XVI learned of this develop-
ment, he sent word to his troops not to shoot. But in the confusion,
one royal guard already had, firing from a window into the chaos of
the courtyard. He struck and killed a seventeen-year-old boy.
Enraged, the crowd went on attack. One man seized a guard,
claiming his life in return for the boy’s. Another guard’s head was
hacked off with an ax. The crowd was in a frothy fit.
A military commander from the province of Champagne, sleep-
ing in a bedroom at the palace that looked out onto the Royal Court,
“The Fishwives Make the Rules” 4 17
awoke with a start to the sounds of stomping and shouting. “I jumped
from my bed and ran to the window,” he later wrote to his wife. He
saw what had happened to the guards and heard the loud footsteps
of people flooding into the building. “I really thought it was the last
instant of my life.”
But it was the queen’s life that was really in danger. The king
had already given the people a good-faith showing of much of what
they asked for, sending the delegates back to Paris with bread and
promises to sign the Declaration. Marie Antoinette, alas, had fallen
from their favor. When that teenage boy was killed, a group went
gunning for the queen, invading her bedchamber. Finding it empty,
they slashed her sheets.
She had made a narrow escape just minutes before. Upon hearing
the scuffle with her guardsmen as the invaders approached her apart-
ments, the queen had just enough time to flee up a hidden staircase.
The stairs went through her children’s rooms and to her husband’s—
but when she reached the door to his chambers, it was locked!
She pounded and pounded on the door, hollering for help.
Finally, her frantic voice was heard above the din, and she was let in.
But the king was not there. Scared for her life, he had raced down-
stairs to save his queen while she was slipping through the secret
passage upstairs. They had just missed each other. King Louis was
quick to assess the situation, though, and ran back to his room, the
royal couple safely reunited.
Meanwhile, Lafayette, who had gone to bed thinking things
were calm, awoke and galloped back to the palace on horseback. The
National Guard had managed to move the mob out of the palace, but
the courtyards were still spilling over with people parading, and—
as had been done at the Bastille—hiking up pikes that held those
guards’ severed heads.
18 4 1789
Shouts of “Le Roi à Paris! Le Roi à Paris!”
aris!” rang out loud and clear,
ordering the king to relocate to Paris.
Only an hour or so had passed, yet despite the flurry of violence,
what le peuple truly wanted was for their king to assure them he
would abide by their wishes.
It was time for a response from Louis XVI.
Lafayette sought to calm the crowds, preparing them for the
king’s presence. Stepping onto a balcony above the great gathering,
Lafayette said, “Messieurs, I gave my word of honor to the king that
there would not be any harm done to all that belongs to His Majesty.
These Messieurs are his Body Guards [royal guards]], if anything
would happen to them you would make me break my word of honor
that I gave, I would no longer be worthy to be your leader.”
With the king now standing next to Lafayette, a roar rose from
the crowd: “Vive le roi, vive le roi!”
Louis XVI asked Lafayette to show the people a sign of unity.
Bringing a royal guard onto the balcony, Lafayette removed his own
tricolor cockade—representing support for the Revolution—pre-
sented it to the man, and hugged him. This sparked a chain reaction
in the ranks, with royal guards ripping off their sashes and replacing
them with red, white, and blue cockades offered by nearby National
Guardsmen.
The crowd went crazy, with sustained shouts of “Long live the
Body Guards!”
But not all were forgiven. The people demanded an appearance
by the queen—alone. When Lafayette encouraged her to oblige and
show her face, she cried, “What! Alone on the balcony? Haven’t you
heard and seen the threats that have been made against me?”
“Yes, Madame, go ahead” was his simple reply. So she stepped out
onto the balcony, composed and serene—at least outwardly. Lafayette
bent and kissed her hand, and her presence was immediately (and
“The Fishwives Make the Rules” 4 19
perhaps somewhat surprisingly) rewarded with a clamorous “Long
live the queen!”
Louis XVI and Lafayette then announced the news: the royal
family would be moving back to Paris immediately. The king’s
younger sister, Madame Élisabeth, described the family’s proces-
sion in a letter to a friend. “At one o’clock we got into our carriages.
Versailles greeted our departure with demonstrations of joy.” This
time, the thousands of parading people had loaves of bread—instead
of heads—stuck on their staves. It took nearly seven hours, but by
evening they arrived en masse.
The king and queen were taken to the Tuileries Palace, where a
few French monarchs in the family had lived before. A month later,
the National Assembly followed suit, moving into the largest indoor
space in Paris, the covered riding ring at the Tuileries.
Of course, this is not the end of the story of the French Revolution;
in fact, it is just the beginning.
But the women had done it—taking charge of their own fate, help-
ing to alter the course of future events with the critical relocation of
the king, shattering any illusion that the monarchy was untouchable,
and standing as a symbol of the powerful will of the people. Perhaps
most importantly, the women showed that the Revolution should
and would include them—and that they should and would include
themselves.
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TH E
C ONTR A DIC
IC TORY
KING
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GUS TAV I I I A ND TH E
U NLI K E LY B E GIN N INGS
O F CLAS S E Q UALITY
IN S WE DE N
KA RE N EN G EL MANN