Deck 19: A Revolution in Politics: The Era of the French Revolution and Napoleon

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Compare and contrast the French Revolution with previous revolutions in England and America. How did they differ in their causes, ideals, and impact?
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Bill of Rights
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How was France changed by the revolutionary events of 1789-1792? Who benefited the most from these changes?
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What grievances caused the American Revolution, and how did they reflect Enlightenment attitudes? What impact did the conflict and its consequences have on Europe?
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revolution
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Was the French Revolution caused by long-term problems, short-term crises, or both?
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the marquis de Lafayette
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Declaration of Independence
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Talk about :
the Constitution of 1789
Question
Does Napoleon's military record, as described in the text, support or challenge assertions that he was the greatest general of all time? What were his biggest military successes, and what were his biggest military failures? Do the successes outweigh the failures in assessing his reputation? Why or why not?
Question
Napoleon said that perhaps the world would have been better off if neither he nor Rousseau had ever lived. What did he mean?
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In what ways did Napoleon's policies repudiate the accomplishments of the French Revolution? In what ways did his policies strengthen the accomplishments of the French Revolution?
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Talk about :
Yorktown
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How did the leaders of the Reign of Terror justify its violence, and what does the Reign of Terror indicate about the changing goals and practices of the French Revolution?
Question
Compare and contrast Napoleon with the enlightened absolutists in eastern Europe. Was he more enlightened or more absolutist?
Question
How did the French Revolution affect the roles of women in society? Did the Revolution and its consequences ultimately benefit or hurt female citizens? Did men win more out of this event than women? Why?
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the Bastille
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natural rights
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the taille
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First and Second Estates
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Third Estate
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sans-culottes
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Paris Commune
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National Convention
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old order
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Girondins and the Mountain
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escape to Varennes
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the Tennis Court Oath
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the National Assembly
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Olympe de Gouges
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Women's March to Versailles
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the Jacobins
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French Parlements
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Abbé Sieyès
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Georges Danton
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the Vendée
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Civil Constitution of the Clergy
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the bourgeoisie
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Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
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Declaration of Pillnitz
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Gracchus Babeuf
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Continental System
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Thermidorean Reaction
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Maximilien Robespierre
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prefects
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Committee of Public Safety
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Napoleon Bonaparte
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Reign of Terror
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Temple of Reason
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the guillotine
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First Consul and Emperor
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Josephine de Beauharnais
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Germaine de Staël
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the Concordat
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Directory
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Talk about :
the Civil Code
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Talk about :
Law of General Maximum
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Talk about :
nation in arms
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Talk about :
Toussaint L'Ouverture
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Talk about :
de-Christianization
Question
Talk about :
nationalism
Question
The American Revolution affected Europeans by

A)proving that military force was the final diplomatic authority.
B)ending colonial expansion around the world.
C)proving that the new United States was the most powerful nation.
D)proving that the ideas of the Enlightenment could be realized politically.
E)proving that the patriotic shedding of vast amounts of blood could bring revolutionary change.
Question
Talk about :
the Grand Army and Russian invasion
Question
The Bill of Rights ratified by the new United States guaranteed

A)freedom of religion.
B)a prohibition of against firearms except by soldiers and officers of justice.
C)the end of the slave trade but did not free slaves already in America.
D)trials managed only by trained, professional judges, educated with a university degree.
E)all of the above.
Question
On July 4, 1776, the delegates of the Second Continental Congress approved

A)the Declaration of the Rights of the Man and the Citizen.
B)the Constitution.
C)the Declaration of Independence.
D)the Olive Branch Petition.
E)George Washington as commander of the Continental Army.
Question
A key conduit of "enlightened" American political and moral ideas back to Europe came in the form of

A)returning British prisoners of war.
B)the hundreds of literate and influential French army and navy officers who had fought on the American side during the Revolutionary War.
C)European nobles returning from expeditions to the new American frontier.
D)missionary priests returning from evangelical campaigns deep in the U.S. back country.
E)official proclamations sent to the governments of Europe by George Washington.
Question
In the fifty years before the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789, the French economy was

A)growing due to an expansion of foreign trade and industrial production.
B)stagnant due to foreign competition in industry and trade.
C)declining rapidly due to overuse of arable land.
D)ruined by the collapse of the textile industry.
E)entirely based upon agricultural production.
Question
The Third Estate was composed of all of the following except

A)shopkeepers.
B)peasants.
C)the unemployed.
D)skilled craftsmen.
E)the lower aristocrats.
Question
By the eighteenth century, the French bourgeoisie and nobility were

A)growing further apart in social status.
B)increasingly less distinguishable from each other.
C)rapidly losing social status to the Third Estate.
D)openly hostile and frequently involved in street battles.
E)almost completely dominated by the clergy of the First Estate.
Question
Talk about :
fraternité
Question
Talk about :
Austerlitz and Trafalgar
Question
The colonists won their war for independence due to

A)generous military and financial aid from various European states, especially France.
B)the collapse of the English colonial system.
C)apathy of the English military.
D)flaws in the English mercantile system.
E)all of the above
Question
In France, the First Estate was composed of

A)the nobility.
B)the clergy.
C)the peasants.
D)the military.
E)The nobility.
Question
When the government called for the Estates-General to meet,

A)it abolished the Third Estate.
B)it halved the number of representatives from the Third Estate.
C)it doubled the number of representatives from the Second Estate.
D)it doubled the number of representatives from the Third Estate.
E)it kept the number of delegates for each of the estates at approximately 300.
Question
During the 1760s British policy makers sought to raise revenues from the American colonies for the purpose of

A)defraying costs of the British empire in India.
B)creating a new royal palace designed to rival Versailles.
C)contributing to Britain's extensive policies of poor relief.
D)building a new Mediterranean fleet.
E)paying for the expenses of the British army in its defense of the colonies.
Question
By summoning the Estates-General in 1789, the government

A)showed its autocratic strength, since it possessed absolute control over the representatives.
B)was following its obligation for regular meetings of the traditional representative assembly.
C)was merely looking for a way to solve the immediate financial crisis.
D)indicated its intentions to launch a major reform of the French political system.
E)all of the above.
Question
In 1789, the Estates-General was

A)Louis XVI's primary advisory body, often consulted by the king on matters of state.
B)in unanimous agreement that only radical changes could solve France's problems.
C)dominated by the First Estate, composed mostly of urban lawyers.
D)unanimously in agreement about the necessity of immediately creating a new representative assembly.
E)divided over the issue of voting by orders or by head.
Question
Talk about :
Elba, Waterloo, and Saint Helena
Question
The most immediate cause of the French Revolution was

A)the government's failure to resolve its debts and other economic problems.
B)the blocking of attempted reforms by the French Parlements.
C)the radical calls of the philosophes for reform.
D)Louis XVI's rejection of the cahiers de doléances .
E)violent uprisings by the common people who were demanding political and economic equality.
Question
In considering the revolutionary era, which of the following is not true?

A)The French Revolution was less complex, less violent, and far less radical than the American Revolution.
B)The American Revolution proved in the long run to be far less important in Europe than the French Revolution.
C)The French Revolution provided a model of revolution for Europe.
D)The American Revolution proved to many Europeans that the ideas of the Enlightenment were more than utopian ideals.
E)The French Revolution has been considered the political movement that inaugurated the modern political world.
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Deck 19: A Revolution in Politics: The Era of the French Revolution and Napoleon
1
Compare and contrast the French Revolution with previous revolutions in England and America. How did they differ in their causes, ideals, and impact?
Answers may vary.
2
Talk about :
Bill of Rights
Answers may vary.
3
How was France changed by the revolutionary events of 1789-1792? Who benefited the most from these changes?
Answers may vary.
4
What grievances caused the American Revolution, and how did they reflect Enlightenment attitudes? What impact did the conflict and its consequences have on Europe?
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5
Talk about :
revolution
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6
Was the French Revolution caused by long-term problems, short-term crises, or both?
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7
Talk about :
the marquis de Lafayette
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8
Talk about :
Declaration of Independence
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9
Talk about :
the Constitution of 1789
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10
Does Napoleon's military record, as described in the text, support or challenge assertions that he was the greatest general of all time? What were his biggest military successes, and what were his biggest military failures? Do the successes outweigh the failures in assessing his reputation? Why or why not?
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11
Napoleon said that perhaps the world would have been better off if neither he nor Rousseau had ever lived. What did he mean?
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12
In what ways did Napoleon's policies repudiate the accomplishments of the French Revolution? In what ways did his policies strengthen the accomplishments of the French Revolution?
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13
Talk about :
Yorktown
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14
How did the leaders of the Reign of Terror justify its violence, and what does the Reign of Terror indicate about the changing goals and practices of the French Revolution?
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15
Compare and contrast Napoleon with the enlightened absolutists in eastern Europe. Was he more enlightened or more absolutist?
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16
How did the French Revolution affect the roles of women in society? Did the Revolution and its consequences ultimately benefit or hurt female citizens? Did men win more out of this event than women? Why?
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17
Talk about :
the Bastille
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18
Talk about :
natural rights
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19
Talk about :
the taille
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20
Talk about :
First and Second Estates
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21
Talk about :
Third Estate
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22
Talk about :
sans-culottes
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23
Talk about :
Paris Commune
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24
Talk about :
National Convention
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25
Talk about :
old order
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26
Talk about :
Girondins and the Mountain
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27
Talk about :
escape to Varennes
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28
Talk about :
the Tennis Court Oath
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29
Talk about :
the National Assembly
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30
Talk about :
Olympe de Gouges
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31
Talk about :
Women's March to Versailles
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32
Talk about :
the Jacobins
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33
Talk about :
French Parlements
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34
Talk about :
Abbé Sieyès
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35
Talk about :
Georges Danton
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36
Talk about :
the Vendée
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37
Talk about :
Civil Constitution of the Clergy
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38
Talk about :
the bourgeoisie
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39
Talk about :
Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
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40
Talk about :
Declaration of Pillnitz
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41
Talk about :
Gracchus Babeuf
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42
Talk about :
Continental System
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43
Talk about :
Thermidorean Reaction
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44
Talk about :
Maximilien Robespierre
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45
Talk about :
prefects
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46
Talk about :
Committee of Public Safety
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47
Talk about :
Napoleon Bonaparte
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48
Talk about :
Reign of Terror
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49
Talk about :
Temple of Reason
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50
Talk about :
the guillotine
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51
Talk about :
First Consul and Emperor
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52
Talk about :
Josephine de Beauharnais
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53
Talk about :
Germaine de Staël
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54
Talk about :
the Concordat
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55
Talk about :
Directory
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56
Talk about :
the Civil Code
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57
Talk about :
Law of General Maximum
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58
Talk about :
nation in arms
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59
Talk about :
Toussaint L'Ouverture
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60
Talk about :
de-Christianization
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61
Talk about :
nationalism
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62
The American Revolution affected Europeans by

A)proving that military force was the final diplomatic authority.
B)ending colonial expansion around the world.
C)proving that the new United States was the most powerful nation.
D)proving that the ideas of the Enlightenment could be realized politically.
E)proving that the patriotic shedding of vast amounts of blood could bring revolutionary change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Talk about :
the Grand Army and Russian invasion
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
The Bill of Rights ratified by the new United States guaranteed

A)freedom of religion.
B)a prohibition of against firearms except by soldiers and officers of justice.
C)the end of the slave trade but did not free slaves already in America.
D)trials managed only by trained, professional judges, educated with a university degree.
E)all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
On July 4, 1776, the delegates of the Second Continental Congress approved

A)the Declaration of the Rights of the Man and the Citizen.
B)the Constitution.
C)the Declaration of Independence.
D)the Olive Branch Petition.
E)George Washington as commander of the Continental Army.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
A key conduit of "enlightened" American political and moral ideas back to Europe came in the form of

A)returning British prisoners of war.
B)the hundreds of literate and influential French army and navy officers who had fought on the American side during the Revolutionary War.
C)European nobles returning from expeditions to the new American frontier.
D)missionary priests returning from evangelical campaigns deep in the U.S. back country.
E)official proclamations sent to the governments of Europe by George Washington.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
In the fifty years before the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789, the French economy was

A)growing due to an expansion of foreign trade and industrial production.
B)stagnant due to foreign competition in industry and trade.
C)declining rapidly due to overuse of arable land.
D)ruined by the collapse of the textile industry.
E)entirely based upon agricultural production.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
The Third Estate was composed of all of the following except

A)shopkeepers.
B)peasants.
C)the unemployed.
D)skilled craftsmen.
E)the lower aristocrats.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
By the eighteenth century, the French bourgeoisie and nobility were

A)growing further apart in social status.
B)increasingly less distinguishable from each other.
C)rapidly losing social status to the Third Estate.
D)openly hostile and frequently involved in street battles.
E)almost completely dominated by the clergy of the First Estate.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Talk about :
fraternité
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71
Talk about :
Austerlitz and Trafalgar
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k this deck
72
The colonists won their war for independence due to

A)generous military and financial aid from various European states, especially France.
B)the collapse of the English colonial system.
C)apathy of the English military.
D)flaws in the English mercantile system.
E)all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
In France, the First Estate was composed of

A)the nobility.
B)the clergy.
C)the peasants.
D)the military.
E)The nobility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
When the government called for the Estates-General to meet,

A)it abolished the Third Estate.
B)it halved the number of representatives from the Third Estate.
C)it doubled the number of representatives from the Second Estate.
D)it doubled the number of representatives from the Third Estate.
E)it kept the number of delegates for each of the estates at approximately 300.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
During the 1760s British policy makers sought to raise revenues from the American colonies for the purpose of

A)defraying costs of the British empire in India.
B)creating a new royal palace designed to rival Versailles.
C)contributing to Britain's extensive policies of poor relief.
D)building a new Mediterranean fleet.
E)paying for the expenses of the British army in its defense of the colonies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
By summoning the Estates-General in 1789, the government

A)showed its autocratic strength, since it possessed absolute control over the representatives.
B)was following its obligation for regular meetings of the traditional representative assembly.
C)was merely looking for a way to solve the immediate financial crisis.
D)indicated its intentions to launch a major reform of the French political system.
E)all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
In 1789, the Estates-General was

A)Louis XVI's primary advisory body, often consulted by the king on matters of state.
B)in unanimous agreement that only radical changes could solve France's problems.
C)dominated by the First Estate, composed mostly of urban lawyers.
D)unanimously in agreement about the necessity of immediately creating a new representative assembly.
E)divided over the issue of voting by orders or by head.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
Talk about :
Elba, Waterloo, and Saint Helena
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Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
The most immediate cause of the French Revolution was

A)the government's failure to resolve its debts and other economic problems.
B)the blocking of attempted reforms by the French Parlements.
C)the radical calls of the philosophes for reform.
D)Louis XVI's rejection of the cahiers de doléances .
E)violent uprisings by the common people who were demanding political and economic equality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
In considering the revolutionary era, which of the following is not true?

A)The French Revolution was less complex, less violent, and far less radical than the American Revolution.
B)The American Revolution proved in the long run to be far less important in Europe than the French Revolution.
C)The French Revolution provided a model of revolution for Europe.
D)The American Revolution proved to many Europeans that the ideas of the Enlightenment were more than utopian ideals.
E)The French Revolution has been considered the political movement that inaugurated the modern political world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
locked card icon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.