From March 24, 1794 to October 31, 1795
March 24, 1794: French Revolutionary political journalist and leader of the radical group called Hébertists, Jacques-René Hébert was executed on order of Maximilien Robespierre.March 29, 1794: a mysterious death of Marquis de Condorcet, French philosopher, mathematician, and political scientist.
April 5, 1794: execution of Georges Jaques Danton, a leading figure in the early stages of the French Revolution.
May 8, 1794: execution of French chemist Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier.
June 8, 1794: Festival of the Supreme Being
June 10, 1794: the Law of 22 Prairial which gave the Revolutionary Tribunal greater powers was adopted by the National Convention.
June 26, 1794: French forces defeated the Austrian Army in the Battle of Fleurus. France occupied the Austrian Netherlands (today's Southern Netherlands).
July 28, 1794: Maximilien Robespierre was executed by guillotine in Paris. The overthrow of the Jacobins ended the radical phase of the French Revolution.
July 28, 1794: French revolutionary leader Louis Antoine Léon de Saint-Just was executed in Paris.
April 1, 1795: the 12th Germinal Riot in Paris was suppressed.
April 5, 1795: France and Prussia signed the Peace of Basel.
September 23, 1795: the Constitution of 1795 was adopted by the National Convention.
October 5, 1795: 26-year old Napoleon Bonaparte suppressed the royalist uprising in Paris.
October 31, 1795: after the dissolution of the National Convention, the new regime - Directory begins. The executive power was held by a five-member Directory, while the legislative power consisted of the Council of Five Hundred and the Council of Ancients (250 members). The Council of Five Hundred and the Council of Ancients were elected every year.



