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The French Revolution | The March on Versailles 

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March on Versailles 1789
The Women’s March on Versailles, also known as The October March, The October Days, or simply The March on Versailles, was one of the earliest and most significant events of the French Revolution. On the morning of October 5, 1789, women in the marketplaces of Paris were near rioting over the high price and scarcity of bread. Their demonstrations quickly became intertwined with the activities of revolutionaries seeking liberal political reforms and a constitutional monarchy for France.
At the end of the Ancien Régime, the fear of famine became an ever-present dread for the lower strata of the Third Estate. Rampant rumors of a conspiracy theory held that foods, especially grain, were purposely withheld from the poor for the benefit of the privileged (the Pacte de Famine). Stories of a plot to destroy wheat crops in order to starve the population provoked the so-called Great Fear in the summer of 1789.
Despite its post-revolutionary mythology, the march was not a spontaneous event. Speakers at the Palais-Royal mentioned it regularly and the idea of a march on Versailles had been widespread. The final trigger came from a royal banquet held on October 1 at which the officers at Versailles welcomed the officers of new troops, a customary practice when a unit changed its garrison. The royal family briefly attended the affair. The lavish banquet was reported in newspapers as nothing short of a gluttonous orgy. Worst of all, the papers dwelt scornfully on the reputed desecration of the tricolor cockade; drunken officers were said to have stamped upon this symbol of the nation and professed their allegiance solely to the white cockade of the House of Bourbon. This embellished tale of the royal banquet became the source of intense public outrage.
The march symbolized a new balance of power that displaced the ancient privileged orders of the French nobility and favored the nation’s common people, collectively termed the Third Estate. Bringing together people representing sources of the Revolution in their largest numbers yet, the march on Versailles proved to be a defining moment of that Revolution.
The Day of the March
On the morning of October 5, a young woman struck a marching drum at the edge of a group of market women who were infuriated by the chronic shortage and high price of bread. From their starting point in the markets of the eastern section of Paris, the angry women forced a nearby church to toll its bells. More women from other nearby marketplaces joined in, many bearing kitchen blades and other makeshift weapons. As more women and men arrived, the crowd outside the city hall reached between 6,000 and 7,0000 and perhaps as high as 10,000. One of the men was Stanislas-Marie Maillard, a prominent conqueror of the Bastille, who by unofficial acclamation was given a leadership role.
When the crowd finally reached Versailles, members of the National Assembly greeted the marchers and invited Maillard into their hall. As he spoke, the restless Parisians came pouring into the Assembly and sank exhausted on the deputies’ benches. Hungry, fatigued, and bedraggled from the rain, they seemed to confirm that the siege was mostly a demand for food. With few other options available, the President of the Assembly, Jean Joseph Mounier, accompanied a deputation of market-women into the palace to see the king. A group of six women were escorted into the king’s apartment, where they told him of the crowd’s privations. The king responded sympathetically and after this brief but pleasant meeting, arrangements were made to disburse some food from the royal stores with more promised. Some in the crowd felt that their goals had been satisfactorily met.
However, at about 6 a.m., some of the protesters discovered a small gate to the palace was unguarded. Making their way inside, they searched for the queen’s bedchamber. The royal guards fired their guns at the intruders, killing a young member of the crowd. Infuriated, the rest surged towards the breach and streamed inside.
Although the fighting ceased quickly and the royal troops cleared the palace, the crowd was still everywhere outside. Lafayette (commander-in-chief of the National Guard), who had earned the court’s indebtedness, convinced the king to address the crowd. When the two men stepped out on a balcony an unexpected cry went up: “Vive le Roi!” The relieved king briefly conveyed his willingness to return to Paris. After the king withdrew, the exultant crowd would not be denied the same accord from the queen and her presence was demanded loudly. Lafayette brought her to the same balcony, accompanied by her young son and daughter. However pleased it may have been by the royal displays, the crowd insisted that the king come back with them to Paris. At about 1 p.m. on October 6, the vast throng escorted the royal family and a complement of 100 deputies back to the capital, this time with the armed National Guards leading the way.

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20 июн 2020

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Комментарии : 69   
@bobbystewart5701
@bobbystewart5701 2 года назад
Marie Antoinette on the balcony is the best part of the movie
@azazel166
@azazel166 2 года назад
Let them have cake.(I know she didn't say that, but still)
@joydip9044
@joydip9044 4 месяца назад
Can you tell me the name of the movie
@grammaticalchainsaw7318
@grammaticalchainsaw7318 4 месяца назад
@@joydip9044The French Revolution (1989) Jane Seymour as Marie Antoinette.
@thedawnoftheblackhearts2745
This movie is monumental
@inigobantok1579
@inigobantok1579 Год назад
This was the moment that the sovereignity of France was transfered from his majesty to the people
@verb5066
@verb5066 Год назад
Disagree entirely, small stepping stone in a river bed
@lisarino1180
@lisarino1180 Год назад
this is the moment when France almost goes to Hell
@Eodat
@Eodat Месяц назад
This is the moment the french people fucked the world forever
@revolutionariesoffreedom2374
This fight was the fight of Freedom against monarchism
@verb5066
@verb5066 Год назад
Pretty black and white elementary take but okay
@spottymcgee1118
@spottymcgee1118 2 года назад
This gonna be America if we don't wake up
@revolutionariesoffreedom2374
@revolutionariesoffreedom2374 2 года назад
american revolution inspired French Revolution… if you don’t support the people, you are the enemy of freedom
@adamferencszi797
@adamferencszi797 2 года назад
Doubt it. Americans are too lazy for another revolution. We have arms but not the spirit.
@redadmiralofvalyria867
@redadmiralofvalyria867 Год назад
If we havnt noticed the signs already
@matrix91234
@matrix91234 Год назад
I hope it happens in America, down with corrupt autocrats, clergy people and aristocrats. Get them in jail and mob violence due to the corrupt voting system of two party system, less money in politics. Dont bend the knee, just give it to them!
@SteveInLava
@SteveInLava Год назад
What would the American version of the French Revolution look like? We kill the rich people?
@AbrahamLincoln4
@AbrahamLincoln4 3 года назад
These woman were feminists before feminists were cool.
@kittycatwithinternetaccess2356
@kittycatwithinternetaccess2356 3 года назад
Look at feminism nowadays
@paulbentley1705
@paulbentley1705 3 года назад
Feminism was never cool.
@democracyisnon-negociable3819
@democracyisnon-negociable3819 3 года назад
Yeah lol… they fought against oppression
@redadmiralofvalyria867
@redadmiralofvalyria867 2 года назад
@Golden Zapdos ehhh sorta see, 🇫🇷 already HAD financial problems simply because VERSAILLES was built Marie antoinette was ALREADY hated for being Austrian(and she did do some good just not much) Louie well.......he is a classic case of "trying and failing MISERABLE " people wanted FAIRNESS+EQUALITY but radicals said "them or us" "down with the monarchy" and such Even during Marie's trial people WANTED her back in 🇦🇹 buuut sadly the "Republicans" through a "trial under fairness" would strengthen the republic News flash......it didn't just made more blood and terror come
@TheKnowledgeMan101
@TheKnowledgeMan101 2 года назад
@@kittycatwithinternetaccess2356 Why because the Patriarchy can't stand that women are finally standing up for their rights and equality and not be subjegated by sexist men who wish they remain submissive to whatever the men want?
@alaskacosplay
@alaskacosplay Год назад
I always did wonder, what if Marie Antoinette never bowed before her people on the balcony?
@martavega2860
@martavega2860 7 месяцев назад
She actually never did according tl historians
@anneshields2010
@anneshields2010 2 года назад
What movie is this and who’s playing the Queen i. Just seen Kirsten Dunst pay Marie Antoinette and she was good made her more like a teen Queen ahead of her time
@Rickigi
@Rickigi 2 года назад
The French Revolution 1989, it has Sam Neill in it from Jurassic Park and Christopher Lee (Played Saruman in Lord of The Rings)
@Rickigi
@Rickigi 2 года назад
oh and Jane Seymour is playing the Queen (Marie Antoinette)
@anneshields2010
@anneshields2010 2 года назад
Girl power you go girls
@richardfey5574
@richardfey5574 2 года назад
Ultimate girl power
@Jakegothicsnake
@Jakegothicsnake 11 месяцев назад
Those women were raging against a Queen who never intentionally did them any harm…….
@gamerboy-jh3qx
@gamerboy-jh3qx Год назад
Looks like January 6th 2021
@monsettaroco841
@monsettaroco841 Год назад
8:01 axe works 🤣
@oscarmelendez7356
@oscarmelendez7356 10 месяцев назад
This what we need that US it’s time for us to meet against the common enemy
@thepanda1044
@thepanda1044 Месяц назад
It's coming. I give it another couple of years
@grossleg123
@grossleg123 4 года назад
Just give them the bloody cake
@odiriokorare1454
@odiriokorare1454 4 года назад
Dave Glam it wont work man
@odiriokorare1454
@odiriokorare1454 4 года назад
They Will Since Be Mad
@anneshields2010
@anneshields2010 2 года назад
Marie Antoinette didn’t really say that maybe because she ate the cake herself
@alaskacosplay
@alaskacosplay 2 года назад
@@anneshields2010 she never said let them eat cake. That line was from a book that was published when Marie Antoinette was only a little girl so it wasn't associated with her until the time the peasants rose up against her. I would have preferred if they never marched on Versailles and executed the Nobility.
@RandomVidsforthought
@RandomVidsforthought 2 года назад
@@anneshields2010 The quote is a myth
@DennisLiewDennis
@DennisLiewDennis 2 года назад
which movie is this?
@AbrahamLincoln4
@AbrahamLincoln4 2 года назад
La Revolution Francaise 1989.
@thedukeofswellington1827
@thedukeofswellington1827 2 года назад
The mob is so fickle...napoleon, TR, Lincoln, GW...they all despised chaos and the mob
@lemon__j
@lemon__j Год назад
Agreed, but they're needed, a useful tool.
@inigobantok1579
@inigobantok1579 Год назад
@@lemon__j useful, yes this occasion they are useful but after the march of October 1789, no, especially those Sans cullots a holes
@basimlatif2346
@basimlatif2346 Год назад
This movie reflects my life #louisismydaddy
@joeregretsbetterthanu
@joeregretsbetterthanu 10 месяцев назад
louis xv in the one painting is so papi
@Idontknowu519
@Idontknowu519 11 месяцев назад
Poor guards
@thepanda1044
@thepanda1044 Месяц назад
There heads were stuck on pikes and marched down the streets.
@jefflisondra8555
@jefflisondra8555 11 месяцев назад
Aha,so this is the reason why the french revolution broke out! The french people had no bread to eat
@62peppe62
@62peppe62 11 месяцев назад
As a result they still had no bread and couldn't even complain otherways they would be beheaded as counter revolutionaries.
@am-vy1fb
@am-vy1fb 2 года назад
How many times women get their way because of lust, this is example.
@azazel166
@azazel166 2 года назад
I'm not sure being taxed from every sense and not being able to afford bread counts as lust.
@matrix91234
@matrix91234 Год назад
Oh geeh you dont like it that Handmaid's Tale society isnt real you incel?
@aslaneeracks6674
@aslaneeracks6674 7 месяцев назад
What the actual fuck are you talking about? What about storming into this property is lustful?
@CarlosMartinez-tt4qp
@CarlosMartinez-tt4qp 3 месяца назад
Those women worked with fish and didn't have the means to buy bread, so which lust are you talking about?
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