<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[French Revolution]]></title><description><![CDATA[Articles]]></description><link>http://www.french-revolution-timeline.com/</link><copyright><![CDATA[Copyright French Revolution]]></copyright><generator>sNews CMS</generator><item><title><![CDATA[From March 2, 1796 to November 9, 1799]]></title><description><![CDATA[  Cheap Tickets   :   Branded HIPS, HIPS, White Label HIPS   - we'll provide you with a discount from our standard client price of £299 + VAT.    Waste disposal   :   Ice Cream Van   :   slot machine gambling games   :   casino guide   :   casino guide online   :   Assurant Health   :   international market research   International market research industry magazine online edition   
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   book jersey hotels, hotel  Book your jersey hotels at seymourhotels.com.     Florida Green Homes   : March 2, 1796: Napoleon Bonaparte was promoted to Général de Division.    
March 9, 1796: Napoleon Bonaparte married Josephine.    
May 10, 1796: the Conspiracy of the Equals, an insurrection against the Directory, led by François-Noël Babeuf
failed.    
September 4, 1797: the 18 Fructidor Coup at Paris - Paul François Jean Nicolas Barras, Jean-François Rewbell, and
Louis Marie de La Révellière-Lépeaux with support of French Generals (also Napoleon Bonaparte) executed the coup d'état.    
October 17, 1797: the Treaty of Campo Formio - end of the War of the First Coalition.    
February 9, 1798: Switzerland, occupied by the French Revolutionary Forces, was proclaimed Helvetic Republic    
June 12/13, 1798: France captured Malta.
    
July 21, 1798: Napoleon Bonaparte defeated the local Mamluk forces in the Battle of the Pyramids.    
January 23, 1799: the Kingdom of Neaples, occupied by the French, was proclaimed the Parthenopaean Republic.    
March 1, 1799: France declared war on Austria - beginning of the War of the Second Coalition.    
November 9, 1799: the Coup d'Etat of 18 Brumaire and the end of the French Revolution - Napoleon Bonaparte
overthrew the Directory government and replaced it with the Consulate.]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2007 19:04:22 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.french-revolution-timeline.com/french-revolution-timeline/from-march-2-1796-to-november-9-1799/</link><guid>http://www.french-revolution-timeline.com/french-revolution-timeline/from-march-2-1796-to-november-9-1799/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[From March 24, 1794 to October 31, 1795]]></title><description><![CDATA[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.]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2007 19:00:49 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.french-revolution-timeline.com/french-revolution-timeline/from-march-24-1794-to-october-31-1795/</link><guid>http://www.french-revolution-timeline.com/french-revolution-timeline/from-march-24-1794-to-october-31-1795/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[From September 2, 1792 to December 8, 1793]]></title><description><![CDATA[  NCPLH   Innpacked Ltd are BII providers of training & courses for the NCPLH, the Level 2 National Certificate for Personal Licence Holders.     Theory    :   Conveyancing  Find a UK conveyancing solicitor easily with the YBS conveyancing service. Fast conveyancing quotes whether you are buying or selling a home in the UK.    Hindi Lyrics  Find the biggest collection of Hindi Lyrics from latest bollywood movies, old songs, album songs only at hindilyrics.org.  
 
  bingo bonus    September 2 - September 7, 1792: the September Massacres. Mass executions of prisoners were organized by Jean-Paul
Marat and Georges Jaques Danton.    
September 20, 1792: the first session of the National Convention.    
September 20, 1792: the French Revolutionary Army defeated the Prussians in the Battle of Valmy.    
September 21, 1792: the National Convention proclaimed the deposition of Louis XVI.    
September 22, 1792: France was declared a Republic (the First French Republic) by the National Convention.    
January 17, 1793: Louis XVI was sentenced to death by the National Convention.    
January 21, 1793: Louis XVI was guillotined.    
March 10, 1793: the Revolutionary Tribunal was established.    
April 6, 1793: the Committee of Public Safety was established - beginning of the Reign of Terror.    
June 2, 1793: the expulsion of the Girondins from the National Convent and the ascendancy of the Jacobins
under leadership of Maximilien Robespierre.    
June 24, 1793: the National Convention adopted the democratic constitution of 1793 but it was not never put into
effect.    
July 13, 1793: French Revolutionary Jean-Paul Marat was stabbed to death.    
August 23, 1793: the Levée en masse (the mass conscription) was decreed by the National Convention.    
September 27, 1793: the Maximum Price Act which established the maximum legal prices of grain passed by the
National Convention.    
October 5, 1793: the French Republican Calendar or French Revolutionary Calendar was adopted by the National Convention.
The French Revolutionary Calendar counted from September 22, 1792.    
October 16, 1793: the wife of Louis XVI Marie Antoinette was executed.    
October 30, 1793: the Committee of Public Safety ordered the execution of Girondist leaders.    
November 6, 1793: Louis Philippe Joseph II, Duke of Orléans or Philippe Égalité was guillotined.    
December 8, 1793: the mistress of Louis XVI, Marie Jeanne du Barry was guillotined.    
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  Offer in Compromise   Site gives indepth information on IRS offers in compromise, the best way to achieve it, as well as professional services to negotiate on your behalf.  July 17, 1791: the Champ de Mars massacre. The National Guard opened fire on protesters seeking the removal of King
Louis XVI and establishment of the republic.    
September 3, 1791: French Constitution of 1791 was adopted. France was declared constitutional monarchy.    
September 14, 1791: Louis XVI accepted the constitution. The Constituent National Assembly was not able to minimalise the contradictory political and economical interests
in France. Besides most part of clergy, many former officers, nobles and monarchists emigrated and joined the
counter-revolutionary movement. Hostile were towards revolutionary government also poor citizens which wanted a
republic. The followers of the French Revolution were divided into two clubs: the Feuillants and Jacobins.    
September 30, 1791: the Constituent National Assembly was dissolved.  
  
October 1, 1791: the Legislative Assembly was established.    
October 1, 1791 - September 20, 1792: the Legislative Assembly was dominated by the Feuillants which
wanted to preserve the constitutional monarchy. Within Jacobins rised the power of the Girondists, a political
group of moderate republicans.    
April 20, 1792: the Legislative Assembly declared war on Austria which was joined by Prussia (the War of the
First Coalition). Unsuccess in war against Austria and Prussia led to the rising power of left-wing Jacobins.    
August 10, 1792: Storming of the Tuileries Palace - after unsuccessful attempt to flee, Louis XVI and the Royal
Family were arrested by the Paris Commune.   
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          August 4/5, 1789: the National Constituent Assembly abolished feudalism but the unrest continued.    
August 26, 1789: the National Constituent Assembly issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen,
proclaiming liberty, equality, and fraternity.    
October 5, 1789: After the storm of Parisians on Versailles, Louis XVI and the National Assembly moved to Paris.    
October 10, 1789: the National Constituent Assembly nationalized the church property.
Assembly issued also a series of laws which radically reorganized France. The new administrative division on départements
replaced the historical provinces. King of France shares his power with an elected assembly by voters with property
qualifications (from 26 million the right to vote had only 4 millions of French citizens).
Continued unrest and social turmoils throughout France led to the Le Chapelier law which prohibited any association of
workers or of employers.    
December 9, 1789: Assignats (banknotes) were first issued by the the National Constituent Assembly.    
June 19, 1790: the National Constituent Assembly abolished nobility.  
  
July 12, 1790: the law of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy subordinated the Church to the French government.    
April 2, 1791: French writer and revolutionary Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, marquis et comte de Mirabeau died.    
June 21, 1791: Louis XVI tried to flee from Paris to organize a contra revolution with help from abroad but he was
captured and interned in Tuileries.]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2007 18:13:11 +0000</pubDate><link>http://www.french-revolution-timeline.com/french-revolution-timeline/from-august-4-1789-to-june-21-1791/</link><guid>http://www.french-revolution-timeline.com/french-revolution-timeline/from-august-4-1789-to-june-21-1791/</guid></item></channel></rss>