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Girondins

The Girondins (US: /(d)ʒɪˈrɒndɪnz/ ji-RON-dinz, zhi-,[3] French: [ʒiʁɔ̃dɛ̃] ), or Girondists, were a political group during the French Revolution. From 1791 to 1793, the Girondins were active in the Legislative Assembly and the National Convention. Together with the Montagnards, they initially were part of the Jacobin movement. They campaigned for the end of the monarchy, but then resisted the spiraling momentum of the Revolution, which caused a conflict with the more radical Montagnards. They dominated the movement until their fall in the insurrection of 31 May – 2 June 1793, which resulted in the domination of the Montagnards and the purge and eventual mass execution of the Girondins. This event is considered to mark the beginning of the Reign of Terror.

Girondins
LeaderMarquis de Condorcet
Jean-Marie Roland
Jacques Pierre Brissot
Pierre Victurnien Vergniaud
Founded1791; 232 years ago (1791)
Dissolved1793; 230 years ago (1793)
HeadquartersBordeaux, Gironde
NewspaperPatriote français
Le Courrier de Provence
La chronique de Paris
IdeologyAbolitionism[1]
Republicanism[2]
Classical liberalism[2]
Economic liberalism[2]
Colors  Blue

The Girondins were a group of loosely affiliated individuals rather than an organized political party and the name was at first informally applied because the most prominent exponents of their point of view were deputies to the Legislative Assembly from the département of Gironde in southwest France.[4] Girondin leader Jacques Pierre Brissot proposed an ambitious military plan to spread the Revolution internationally, therefore the Girondins were the war party in 1792–1793. Other prominent Girondins included Jean Marie Roland and his wife Madame Roland. They also had an ally in the English-born American activist Thomas Paine.

Brissot and Madame Roland were executed and Jean Roland (who had gone into hiding) committed suicide when he learned about the execution. Paine was imprisoned, but he narrowly escaped execution. The famous painting The Death of Marat depicts the fiery radical journalist and denouncer of the Girondins Jean-Paul Marat after being stabbed to death in his bathtub by Charlotte Corday, a Girondin sympathizer. Corday did not attempt to flee and was arrested and executed.

Death of Marat by Jacques-Louis David

Identity edit

The collective name "Girondins" is used to describe "a loosely knit group of French deputies who contested the Montagnards for control of the National Convention".[5]

They were never an official organization or political party.[6][7] The name itself was bestowed not by any of its alleged members but by the Montagnards, "who claimed as early as April 1792 that a counterrevolutionary faction had coalesced around deputies of the department of the Gironde".[5][8] Jacques-Pierre Brissot, Jean Marie Roland and François Buzot were among the most prominent of such deputies and contemporaries called their supporters Brissotins, Rolandins, or Buzotins, depending on which politician was being blamed for their leadership.[5] Other names were employed at the time too, but "Girondins" ultimately became the term favored by historians.[5] The term became standard with Alphonse de Lamartine's History of the Girondins in 1847.[9]

History edit

Rise edit

 
Madame Roland

Twelve deputies represented the département of the Gironde and there were six who sat for this département in both the Legislative Assembly of 1791–1792 and the National Convention of 1792–1795. Five were lawyers: Pierre Victurnien Vergniaud, Marguerite-Élie Guadet, Armand Gensonné, Jean Antoine Laffargue de Grangeneuve and Jean Jay (who was also a Protestant pastor). The other, Jean François Ducos, was a tradesman. In the Legislative Assembly, they represented a compact body of opinion which, though not as yet definitely republican (i.e. against the monarchy), was considerably more "advanced" than the moderate royalism of the majority of the Parisian deputies.[4]

A group of deputies from elsewhere became associated with these views, most notably the Marquis de Condorcet, Claude Fauchet, Marc David Lasource, Maximin Isnard, the Comte de Kersaint, Henri Larivière and above all Jacques Pierre Brissot, Jean Marie Roland and Jérôme Pétion, who was elected mayor of Paris in succession to Jean Sylvain Bailly on 16 November 1791.[4]

Madame Roland, whose salon became their gathering place, had a powerful influence on the spirit and policy of the Girondins with her "romantic republicanism".[10] The party cohesion they possessed was connected to the energy of Brissot, who came to be regarded as their mouthpiece in the Assembly and in the Jacobin Club,[citation needed] hence the name "Brissotins" for his followers.[11] The group was identified by its enemies at the start of the National Convention (20 September 1792). "Brissotins" and "Girondins" were terms of opprobrium used by their enemies in a separate faction of the Jacobin Club, who freely denounced them as enemies of democracy.[4]

Foreign policy edit

In the Legislative Assembly, the Girondins represented the principle of democratic revolution within France and patriotic defiance to the European powers.[4] They supported an aggressive foreign policy and constituted the war party in the period 1792–1793, when revolutionary France initiated a long series of revolutionary wars with other European powers. Brissot proposed an ambitious military plan to spread the Revolution internationally, one that Napoleon later pursued aggressively.[12] Brissot called on the National Convention to dominate Europe by conquering the Rhineland, Poland and the Netherlands with a goal of creating a protective ring of satellite republics in Great Britain, Spain and Italy by 1795. The Girondins also called for war against Austria, arguing it would rally patriots around the Revolution, liberate oppressed peoples from despotism, and test the loyalty of King Louis XVI.[13]

Montagnards versus Girondins edit

 
The Girondins in the La Force Prison after their arrest, a woodcut from 1845

Girondins at first dominated the Jacobin Club, where Brissot's influence had not yet been ousted by Maximilien Robespierre and they did not hesitate to use this advantage to stir up popular passion and intimidate those who sought to stay the progress of the Revolution. They compelled the king in 1792 to choose a ministry composed of their partisans, among them Roland, Charles François Dumouriez,[13] Étienne Clavière and Joseph Marie Servan de Gerbey; and they forced a declaration of war against Habsburg Austria the same year. In all of this activity, there was no apparent line of cleavage between La Gironde and The Mountain. Montagnards and Girondins alike were fundamentally opposed to the monarchy; both were democrats as well as republicans; and both were prepared to appeal to force in order to realise their ideals.[4] Despite being accused of wanting to weaken the central government ("federalism"), the Girondins desired as little as the Montagnards to break up the unity of France.[14] From the first, the leaders of the two parties stood in avowed opposition, in the Jacobin Club as in the Assembly.[4]

Temperament largely accounts for the dividing line between the parties. The Girondins were doctrinaires and theorists rather than men of action. They initially encouraged armed petitions, but then were dismayed when this led to the émeute (riot) of 20 June 1792. Jean-Marie Roland was typical of their spirit, turning the Ministry of the Exterior into a publishing office for tracts on civic virtues while riotous mobs were burning the châteaux unchecked in the provinces. Girondins did not share the ferocious fanaticism or the ruthless opportunism of the future Montagnard organisers of the Reign of Terror. As the Revolution developed, the Girondins often found themselves opposing its results; the overthrow of the monarchy on 10 August 1792 and the September Massacres of 1792 occurred while they still nominally controlled the government, but the Girondins tried to distance themselves from the results of the September Massacres.[4]

When the National Convention first met on 22 September 1792, the core of like-minded deputies from the Gironde expanded as Jean-Baptiste Boyer-Fonfrède, Jacques Lacaze and François Bergoeing joined five of the six stalwarts of the Legislative Assembly (Jean Jay, the Protestant pastor, drifted toward the Montagnard faction). Their numbers were increased by the return to national politics by former National Constituent Assembly deputies such as Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne, Pétion and Kervélégan, as well as some newcomers as the writer Thomas Paine and popular journalist Jean Louis Carra.

Decline and fall edit

The Girondins proposed suspending the king and summoning of the National Convention, but they agreed not to overthrow the monarchy until Louis XVI became impervious to their counsels. Once the king was overthrown in 1792 and a republic was established, they were anxious to stop the revolutionary movement that they had helped to set in motion. Girondins and historian Pierre Claude François Daunou argues in his Mémoires that the Girondins were too cultivated and too polished to retain their popularity for long in times of disturbance, and so they were more inclined to work for the establishment of order, which would mean the guarantee of their own power. The Girondins, who had been the radicals of the Legislative Assembly (1791–1792), became the conservatives of the Convention (1792–1795).[15][16]

The Revolution failed to deliver the immediate gains that had been promised and this made it difficult for the Girondins to draw it to a close easily in the minds of the public. Moreover, the Septembriseurs (the supporters of the September Massacres such as Robespierre, Danton, Marat and their lesser allies) realised that not only their influence but their safety depended on keeping the Revolution alive. Robespierre, who hated the Girondins, had proposed to include them in the proscription lists of September 1792: The Mountain Club to a man who desired their overthrow.[17] A group including some Girondins prepared a draft constitution known as the Girondin constitutional project, which was presented to the National Convention in early 1793. Thomas Paine was one of the signers of this proposal.

The crisis came in March 1793. The Girondins, who had a majority in the Convention, controlled the executive council and filled the ministries, believed themselves invincible. Their orators had no serious rivals in the hostile camp—their system was established in mere reason, but the Montagnards made up for what they lacked in talent or in numbers through their boldness and energy.[17] This was especially fruitful since uncommitted delegates accounted for almost half the total number, even though the Jacobins and Brissotins formed the largest groups.[citation needed] The more radical rhetoric of the Jacobins attracted the support of the revolutionary Paris Commune, the Revolutionary Sections (mass assemblies in districts) and the National Guard of Paris and they had gained control of the Jacobin club, where Brissot, absorbed in departmental work, had been superseded by Robespierre. At the trial of Louis XVI in 1792, most Girondins had voted for the "appeal to the people" and so laid themselves open to the charge of "royalism".[citation needed] They denounced the domination of Paris and summoned provincial levies to their aid and so fell under suspicion of "federalism" as on September 25, 1792.[18] They strengthened the revolutionary Commune by first decreeing its abolition but withdrawing the decree at the first sign of popular opposition.[17]

In the suspicious temper of the times, their vacillation was fatal. Marat never ceased his denunciations of the faction by which France was being betrayed to her ruin and his cry of Nous sommes trahis! ("We are betrayed!") was echoed from group to group in the streets of Paris.[19] The growing hostility of Paris to the Girondins received a fateful demonstration by the election on 15 February 1793 of the bitter ex-Girondin Jean-Nicolas Pache to the mayoralty. Pache had twice been minister of war in the Girondins government, but his incompetence had laid him open to strong criticism and on 4 February 1793 he had been replaced as minister of war by a vote of the Convention. This was enough to secure him the votes of the Paris electors when he was elected mayor ten days later. The Mountain was strengthened by the accession of a significant ally whose one idea was to use his new power to avenge himself on his former colleagues.[17] Mayor Pache, with procureur of the Commune Pierre Gaspard Chaumette and deputy procureur Jacques René Hébert, controlled the armed militias of the 48 revolutionary Sections of Paris and prepared to turn this weapon against the Convention.[20] The abortive émeute of 10 March warned the Girondins of their danger and they responded with defensive moves. They unintentionally increased the prestige of their most vocal and bitter critic Marat by prosecuting him before the Revolutionary Tribunal, where his acquittal in April 1793 was a foregone conclusion. The Commission of Twelve was appointed of on 24 May, including the arrest of Varlat and Hébert and other precautionary measures.[21] The ominous threat by Girondin leader Maximin Isnard, uttered on 25 May, to "march France upon Paris" was instead met by Paris marching hastily upon the Convention. The Girondin role in the government was undermined by the popular uprisings of 27 and 31 May and finally on 2 June 1793, when François Hanriot, head of the Paris National Guards, purged the Convention of the Girondins[17] (see Insurrection of 31 May – 2 June 1793).

Reign of Terror edit

A list drawn up by the Commandant-General of the Parisian National Guard François Hanriot (with help from Marat) and endorsed by a decree of the intimidated Convention, included 22 Girondin deputies and 10 of the 12 members of the Commission of Twelve, who were ordered to be detained at their lodgings "under the safeguard of the people". Some submitted, among them Gensonné, Guadet, Vergniaud, Pétion, Birotteau and Boyer-Fonfrède. Others, including Brissot, Louvet, Buzot, Lasource, Grangeneuve, Larivière and François Bergoeing, escaped from Paris and, joined later by Guadet, Pétion and Birotteau, set to work to organise a movement of the provinces against the capital. This attempt to stir up civil war made the wavering and frightened Convention suddenly determined. On 13 June 1793, it voted that the city of Paris deserved well of the country and ordered the imprisonment of the detained deputies, the filling up of their places in the Assembly by their suppléants and the initiation of vigorous measures against the movement in the provinces. The assassination of Marat by Charlotte Corday on 13 July 1793 only served to increase the unpopularity of the Girondins and seal their fate.[17][22]

The excuse for the Terror that followed was the imminent peril of France, menaced on the east by the advance of the armies of the First Coalition (Austria, Prussia and Great Britain) on the west by the Royalist Revolt in the Vendée and the need for preventing at all costs the outbreak of another civil war. On 28 July 1793, a decree of the Convention proscribed 21 deputies, five of whom were from the Gironde, as traitors and enemies of their country (Charles-Louis Antiboul, Boilleau the younger, Boyer-Fonfrêde, Brissot, Carra, Gaspard-Séverin Duchastel, the younger Ducos, Dufriche de Valazé, Jean Duprat, Fauchet, Gardien, Gensonné, Lacaze, Lasource, Claude Romain Lauze de Perret, Lehardi, Benoît Lesterpt-Beauvais, the elder Minvielle, the Marquis de Sillery, Vergniaud and Louis-François-Sébastien Viger). Those were sent to trial. Another 39 were included in the final acte d'accusation, accepted by the Convention on 24 October 1793, which stated the crimes for which they were to be tried as their perfidious ambition, their hatred of Paris, their "federalism" and above all their responsibility for the attempt of their escaped colleagues to provoke civil war.[17][23][24]

1793 trial of Girondins edit

 
Brissot et 20 de ses complices condamnés à mort par le tribunal révolutionnaire (Brissot and 20 of his accomplices are sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Tribunal)

The trial of the 22 began before the Revolutionary Tribunal on 24 October 1793. The verdict was a foregone conclusion. On 31 October, they were borne to the guillotine. It took 36 minutes to decapitate all of them, including Charles Éléonor Dufriche de Valazé, who had committed suicide the previous day upon hearing the sentence he was given.[25]

Of those who escaped to the provinces, after wandering about singly or in groups most were either captured and executed or committed suicide. They included Barbaroux, Buzot, Condorcet, Grangeneuve, Guadet, Kersaint, Pétion, Rabaut de Saint-Etienne and Rebecqui. Roland killed himself at Rouen on 15 November 1793, a week after the execution of his wife. A very few escaped, including Jean-Baptiste Louvet de Couvrai, whose Mémoires give a detailed picture of the sufferings of the fugitives.[17][26]

Girondins as martyrs edit

 
The Last Meal of the Girondins (François Flameng, c. 1850) — the body of Charles Éléonor Dufriche-Valazé, who stabbed himself in the courtroom, is in the foreground.
 
Execution of the Girondins, woodcut from 1862

The survivors of the party made an effort to re-enter the Convention after the fall of Robespierre on 27 July 1794, but it was not until 5 March 1795 that they were formally re-instated[citation needed] forming the Council of Five Hundred under the Directory.[8] On 3 October of that same year (11 Vendémiaire, year IV), a solemn fête in honour of the Girondins, "martyrs of liberty", was celebrated in the Convention.[17][27]

In her autobiography, Madame Roland reshapes her historical image by stressing the popular connection between sacrifice and female virtue. Her Mémoires de Madame Roland (1795) was written from prison where she was held as a Girondin sympathizer. It covers her work for the Girondins while her husband Jean-Marie Roland was Interior Minister. The book echoes such popular novels as Rousseau's Julie or the New Héloise by linking her feminine virtue and motherhood to her sacrifice in a cycle of suffering and consolation. Roland says her mother's death was the impetus for her "odyssey from virtuous daughter to revolutionary heroine" as it introduced her to death and sacrifice—with the ultimate sacrifice of her own life for her political beliefs. She helped her husband escape, but she was executed on 8 November 1793. A week later he committed suicide.[28]

A monument to the Girondins was erected in Bordeaux between 1893 and 1902 dedicated to the memory of the Girondin deputies who were victims of the Terror.[29] The vagueness of who actually made up the Girondins led to the monument not having any names inscribed on it until 1989.[7] Even then, the deputies to the Convention who were memorialized were only those hailing from the Gironde department, omitting notable people like Brissot and Madame Roland.[30]

Ideology edit

The words Girondin and Montagnard are defined as political groups—more specific definitions are the subject of theorizing by historians. The two words were much tossed about by partisans with various understandings of what they were intended to represent. The two groups lacked formal political structures, and the differences between them have never been satisfactorily explained. It has been suggested that the word Girondin as a useful term be abandoned.[31]

Influenced by classical liberalism and the concepts of democracy, human rights and Montesquieu's separation of powers, the Girondins initially supported the constitutional monarchy, but after the Flight to Varennes in which Louis XVI tried to flee Paris in order to start a counter-revolution the Girondins became mostly republicans, with a royalist minority. Like the Jacobins, they were also influenced by the writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.[32]

In its early times of government, the Gironde supported a free market - opposing price controls on goods (e.g., a 1793 maximum on grain prices),[33] supported by a constitutional right to public assistance for the poor and public education.[citation needed] With Brissot, they advocated exporting the Revolution through aggressive foreign policies including war against the surrounding European monarchies.[10] The Girondins were also one of the first supporters of abolitionism in France with Brissot leading the anti-slavery Society of the Friends of the Blacks.[34] Certain Girondins such as Condorcet supported women's suffrage and political equality.

They sat to the left of the centrist[35] Feuillants, but later sat on the right of the National Assembly after the neutralization of the Feuillants.[36] They were the principal conservative political party in France at the time and opposed the radical course of the revolution, leading to the Reign of Terror.[37] Generally, historians divide the Convention into the left-wing Jacobin Montagnards, the centrist The Plain and the right-wing Girondins.[10]

The Girondins supported democratic reform, secularism and a strong legislature at the expense of a weaker executive and judiciary as opposed to the authoritarian left-wing Montagnards, who supported public acknowledgement of a Supreme Being and a strong executive.[38]

Prominent members edit

Electoral results edit

Legislative Assembly
Election year No. of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
No. of
overall seats won
+/– Leader
National Convention
1792 705,600 (3rd) 21.4
160 / 749

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ David Barry Gaspar; David Patrick Geggus (1997). A Turbulent Time: The French Revolution and the Greater Caribbean. Indiana University Press. p. 262.
  2. ^ a b c "Girondin". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  3. ^ "Girondin". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Phillips 1911, p. 49.
  5. ^ a b c d Fremont-Barnes, Gregory, ed. (2007). Encyclopedia of the Age of Political Revolutions and New Ideologies, 1760–1815. Vol. 1. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 306. ISBN 978-0313334450.
  6. ^ Furet & Ozouf, p. 351.
  7. ^ a b Doyle, William (2013). Alex Fairfax-Cholmeley; Colin Jones (eds.). "II.2. In Search of the Girondins" (PDF). E-France. Reading, UK: University of Reading. 4 (New Perspectives on the French Revolution): 37. ISSN 1756-0535.
  8. ^ a b Chris Cook; John Paxton (1981). European Political Facts 1789–1848. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 10.
  9. ^ Bosher, pp. 185–191.
  10. ^ a b c Fremont-Barnes 2007, p. 403.
  11. ^ Thompson, James Matthew (1932). Leaders Of The French Revolution. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. p. 78.
  12. ^ Thomas Lalevée, "National Pride and Republican grandezza: Brissot's New Language for International Politics in the French Revolution 2017-05-17 at the Wayback Machine", French History and Civilisation (Vol. 6), 2015, pp. 66–82.
  13. ^ a b Brace, Richard Munthe (April 1951). "General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792–1793". The American Historical Review. 56 (3): 493–509. doi:10.2307/1848434. JSTOR 1848434.
  14. ^ Bill Edmonds, "'Federalism' and Urban Revolt in France in 1793", Journal of Modern History (1983) 55#1 pp. 22–53,
  15. ^ Phillips 1911, pp. 49–50.
  16. ^ Alderson, p. 9.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i Phillips 1911, p. 50.
  18. ^ Gabourd, Amédée (1859). Histoire de la révolution et de l'empire (in French). Vol. 3. Paris: Jacques Lecoffre et Cie. pp. 10–12.
  19. ^ Jack Fruchtman Jr. (1996). Thomas Paine: Apostle of Freedom. p. 303. ISBN 978-1568580630.[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ Oliver, pp. 55–56.
  21. ^ "Mocavo and Findmypast are coming together | findmypast.com". www.findmypast.com.
  22. ^ Linton, pp. 174–175.
  23. ^ D.M.G. Sutherland, France 1789–1815. Revolution and Counter-Revolution (2nd ed. 2003) ch. 5.
  24. ^ Schama, ch. 18.
  25. ^ Schama, pp. 803–805.
  26. ^ Oliver, pp. 83–89.
  27. ^ Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (2005). Recollections of a Provincial Past. Oxford UP. p. 274. ISBN 978-0195113693.
  28. ^ Lesley H. Walker, "Sweet and Consoling Virtue: The Memoirs of Madame Roland", Eighteenth-Century Studies (2001) 34#3 pp 403–419
  29. ^ "Monument élevé à la mémoire des Girondins". POP : la plateforme ouverte du patrimoine, Ministère de la Culture.
  30. ^ Doyle 2013, pp. 37–38.
  31. ^ Fremont-Barnes 2007, pp. 307–309.
  32. ^ Fremont-Barnes 2007, p. 307.
  33. ^ Schama, Simon (1989). Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 719. ISBN 0-394-55948-7.
  34. ^ Guadet, J (1889). Les Girondins; leur vie privée, leur vie publique, leur proscription et leur mort. Paris: Perrin et Cie. p. 30.
  35. ^ Israel, Jonathan (2014). Revolutionary Ideas: An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre. Princeton University Press. p. 222.
  36. ^ Luca Einaudi (2020). "The Early Symbols of Political Parties During the French revolution". University of Cambridge. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  37. ^ Reilly, Benjamin. "Polling the Opinions: A Reexamination of Mountain, Plain, and Gironde in the National Convention." Social Science History, vol. 28, no. 1, 2004, pp. 53–73. doi:10.2307/40267833. Accessed 7 Dec. 2020.
  38. ^ Jonathan Israel (2015). Revolutionary Ideas: An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre.[ISBN missing]

General bibliography edit

  • Alderson, Robert J. (2008). This Bright Era of Happy Revolutions: French Consul Michel-Ange-Bernard Mangourit and International Republicanism in Charleston, 1792–1794. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1570037450.
  • Bosher, John F. (1989) [1988]. The French Revolution. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 039395997X.
  • Furet, François; Ozouf, Mona, eds. (1989). A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution. Translated by Arthur Goldhammer. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674177282.
  • Linton, Marisa (2013). Choosing Terror: Virtue, Friendship, and Authenticity in the French Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199576302.
  • Oliver, Bette W. (2009). Orphans on the Earth: Girondin Fugitives from the Terror, 1793–94. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0739140680.
  • Schama, Simon (1989). Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution. New York: Vintage. ISBN 0679726101.

Attribution:

Further reading edit

  • Brace, Richard Munthe. "General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792–1793", American Historical Review (1951) 56#3 pp. 493–509. JSTOR 1848434.
  • de Luna, Frederick A. "The 'Girondins' Were Girondins, After All", French Historical Studies (1988) 15: 506–518. JSTOR 286372.
  • DiPadova, Theodore A. "The Girondins and the Question of Revolutionary Government", French Historical Studies (1976) 9#3 pp. 432–450 JSTOR 286230.
  • Ellery, Eloise. Brissot De Warville: A Study in the History of the French Revolution (1915) excerpt and text search.
  • François Furet and Mona Ozouf. eds. La Gironde et les Girondins. Paris: éditions Payot, 1991.
  • Higonnet, Patrice. "The Social and Cultural Antecedents of Revolutionary Discontinuity: Montagnards and Girondins", English Historical Review (1985): 100#396 pp. 513–544 JSTOR 568234.
  • Thomas Lalevée, "National Pride and Republican grandezza: Brissot's New Language for International Politics in the French Revolution", French History and Civilisation (Vol. 6), 2015, pp. 66–82.
  • Lamartine, Alphonse de. History of the Girondists, Volume I: Personal Memoirs of the Patriots of the French Revolution (1847) online free in Kindle edition; Volume 1, Volume 2, Volume 3.
  • Lewis-Beck, Michael S., Anne Hildreth, and Alan B. Spitzer. "Was There a Girondist Faction in the National Convention, 1792–1793?" French Historical Studies (1988) 11#4 pp.: 519–536. JSTOR 286373.
  • Linton, Marisa, Choosing Terror: Virtue, Friendship and Authenticity in the French Revolution (Oxford University Press, 2013).
  • Loomis, Stanley, Paris in the Terror. (1964).
  • Patrick, Alison. "Political Divisions in the French National Convention, 1792–93". Journal of Modern History (Dec. 1969) 41#4, pp. 422–474. JSTOR 1878003; rejects Sydenham's argument & says Girondins were a real faction.
  • Patrick, Alison. The Men of the First French Republic: Political Alignments in the National Convention of 1792 (1972), comprehensive study of the group's role.
  • Scott, Samuel F., and Barry Rothaus. Historical Dictionary of the French Revolution 1789–1799 (1985) Vol. 1 pp. 433–436 online 2020-05-05 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Sutherland, D. M. G. France 1789–1815: Revolution and Counter-Revolution (2nd ed., 2003) ch. 5.[ISBN missing]
  • Sydenham, Michael J. "The Montagnards and Their Opponents: Some Considerations on a Recent Reassessment of the Conflicts in the French National Convention, 1792–93", Journal of Modern History (1971) 43#2 pp. 287–293 JSTOR 1876547; argues that the Girondins faction was mostly a myth created by Jacobins.
  • Whaley, Leigh Ann. Radicals: Politics and Republicanism in the French Revolution. Gloucestershire, England: Sutton Publishing, 2000.[ISBN missing]

External links edit

girondins, dinz, french, ʒiʁɔ, girondists, were, political, group, during, french, revolution, from, 1791, 1793, were, active, legislative, assembly, national, convention, together, with, montagnards, they, initially, were, part, jacobin, movement, they, campa. The Girondins US d ʒ ɪ ˈ r ɒ n d ɪ n z ji RON dinz zhi 3 French ʒiʁɔ dɛ or Girondists were a political group during the French Revolution From 1791 to 1793 the Girondins were active in the Legislative Assembly and the National Convention Together with the Montagnards they initially were part of the Jacobin movement They campaigned for the end of the monarchy but then resisted the spiraling momentum of the Revolution which caused a conflict with the more radical Montagnards They dominated the movement until their fall in the insurrection of 31 May 2 June 1793 which resulted in the domination of the Montagnards and the purge and eventual mass execution of the Girondins This event is considered to mark the beginning of the Reign of Terror GirondinsLeaderMarquis de CondorcetJean Marie RolandJacques Pierre BrissotPierre Victurnien VergniaudFounded1791 232 years ago 1791 Dissolved1793 230 years ago 1793 HeadquartersBordeaux GirondeNewspaperPatriote francaisLe Courrier de ProvenceLa chronique de ParisIdeologyAbolitionism 1 Republicanism 2 Classical liberalism 2 Economic liberalism 2 Colors BluePolitics of FrancePolitical partiesElectionsThe Girondins were a group of loosely affiliated individuals rather than an organized political party and the name was at first informally applied because the most prominent exponents of their point of view were deputies to the Legislative Assembly from the departement of Gironde in southwest France 4 Girondin leader Jacques Pierre Brissot proposed an ambitious military plan to spread the Revolution internationally therefore the Girondins were the war party in 1792 1793 Other prominent Girondins included Jean Marie Roland and his wife Madame Roland They also had an ally in the English born American activist Thomas Paine Brissot and Madame Roland were executed and Jean Roland who had gone into hiding committed suicide when he learned about the execution Paine was imprisoned but he narrowly escaped execution The famous painting The Death of Marat depicts the fiery radical journalist and denouncer of the Girondins Jean Paul Marat after being stabbed to death in his bathtub by Charlotte Corday a Girondin sympathizer Corday did not attempt to flee and was arrested and executed Death of Marat by Jacques Louis DavidContents 1 Identity 2 History 2 1 Rise 2 2 Foreign policy 2 3 Montagnards versus Girondins 2 4 Decline and fall 2 5 Reign of Terror 2 6 1793 trial of Girondins 2 7 Girondins as martyrs 3 Ideology 4 Prominent members 5 Electoral results 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 General bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksIdentity editThe collective name Girondins is used to describe a loosely knit group of French deputies who contested the Montagnards for control of the National Convention 5 They were never an official organization or political party 6 7 The name itself was bestowed not by any of its alleged members but by the Montagnards who claimed as early as April 1792 that a counterrevolutionary faction had coalesced around deputies of the department of the Gironde 5 8 Jacques Pierre Brissot Jean Marie Roland and Francois Buzot were among the most prominent of such deputies and contemporaries called their supporters Brissotins Rolandins or Buzotins depending on which politician was being blamed for their leadership 5 Other names were employed at the time too but Girondins ultimately became the term favored by historians 5 The term became standard with Alphonse de Lamartine s History of the Girondins in 1847 9 History editRise edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Girondins news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Madame RolandTwelve deputies represented the departement of the Gironde and there were six who sat for this departement in both the Legislative Assembly of 1791 1792 and the National Convention of 1792 1795 Five were lawyers Pierre Victurnien Vergniaud Marguerite Elie Guadet Armand Gensonne Jean Antoine Laffargue de Grangeneuve and Jean Jay who was also a Protestant pastor The other Jean Francois Ducos was a tradesman In the Legislative Assembly they represented a compact body of opinion which though not as yet definitely republican i e against the monarchy was considerably more advanced than the moderate royalism of the majority of the Parisian deputies 4 A group of deputies from elsewhere became associated with these views most notably the Marquis de Condorcet Claude Fauchet Marc David Lasource Maximin Isnard the Comte de Kersaint Henri Lariviere and above all Jacques Pierre Brissot Jean Marie Roland and Jerome Petion who was elected mayor of Paris in succession to Jean Sylvain Bailly on 16 November 1791 4 Madame Roland whose salon became their gathering place had a powerful influence on the spirit and policy of the Girondins with her romantic republicanism 10 The party cohesion they possessed was connected to the energy of Brissot who came to be regarded as their mouthpiece in the Assembly and in the Jacobin Club citation needed hence the name Brissotins for his followers 11 The group was identified by its enemies at the start of the National Convention 20 September 1792 Brissotins and Girondins were terms of opprobrium used by their enemies in a separate faction of the Jacobin Club who freely denounced them as enemies of democracy 4 Foreign policy edit In the Legislative Assembly the Girondins represented the principle of democratic revolution within France and patriotic defiance to the European powers 4 They supported an aggressive foreign policy and constituted the war party in the period 1792 1793 when revolutionary France initiated a long series of revolutionary wars with other European powers Brissot proposed an ambitious military plan to spread the Revolution internationally one that Napoleon later pursued aggressively 12 Brissot called on the National Convention to dominate Europe by conquering the Rhineland Poland and the Netherlands with a goal of creating a protective ring of satellite republics in Great Britain Spain and Italy by 1795 The Girondins also called for war against Austria arguing it would rally patriots around the Revolution liberate oppressed peoples from despotism and test the loyalty of King Louis XVI 13 Montagnards versus Girondins edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Girondins news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Girondins in the La Force Prison after their arrest a woodcut from 1845Girondins at first dominated the Jacobin Club where Brissot s influence had not yet been ousted by Maximilien Robespierre and they did not hesitate to use this advantage to stir up popular passion and intimidate those who sought to stay the progress of the Revolution They compelled the king in 1792 to choose a ministry composed of their partisans among them Roland Charles Francois Dumouriez 13 Etienne Claviere and Joseph Marie Servan de Gerbey and they forced a declaration of war against Habsburg Austria the same year In all of this activity there was no apparent line of cleavage between La Gironde and The Mountain Montagnards and Girondins alike were fundamentally opposed to the monarchy both were democrats as well as republicans and both were prepared to appeal to force in order to realise their ideals 4 Despite being accused of wanting to weaken the central government federalism the Girondins desired as little as the Montagnards to break up the unity of France 14 From the first the leaders of the two parties stood in avowed opposition in the Jacobin Club as in the Assembly 4 Temperament largely accounts for the dividing line between the parties The Girondins were doctrinaires and theorists rather than men of action They initially encouraged armed petitions but then were dismayed when this led to the emeute riot of 20 June 1792 Jean Marie Roland was typical of their spirit turning the Ministry of the Exterior into a publishing office for tracts on civic virtues while riotous mobs were burning the chateaux unchecked in the provinces Girondins did not share the ferocious fanaticism or the ruthless opportunism of the future Montagnard organisers of the Reign of Terror As the Revolution developed the Girondins often found themselves opposing its results the overthrow of the monarchy on 10 August 1792 and the September Massacres of 1792 occurred while they still nominally controlled the government but the Girondins tried to distance themselves from the results of the September Massacres 4 When the National Convention first met on 22 September 1792 the core of like minded deputies from the Gironde expanded as Jean Baptiste Boyer Fonfrede Jacques Lacaze and Francois Bergoeing joined five of the six stalwarts of the Legislative Assembly Jean Jay the Protestant pastor drifted toward the Montagnard faction Their numbers were increased by the return to national politics by former National Constituent Assembly deputies such as Jean Paul Rabaut Saint Etienne Petion and Kervelegan as well as some newcomers as the writer Thomas Paine and popular journalist Jean Louis Carra Decline and fall edit See also Days of 31 May and 2 June 1793 The Girondins proposed suspending the king and summoning of the National Convention but they agreed not to overthrow the monarchy until Louis XVI became impervious to their counsels Once the king was overthrown in 1792 and a republic was established they were anxious to stop the revolutionary movement that they had helped to set in motion Girondins and historian Pierre Claude Francois Daunou argues in his Memoires that the Girondins were too cultivated and too polished to retain their popularity for long in times of disturbance and so they were more inclined to work for the establishment of order which would mean the guarantee of their own power The Girondins who had been the radicals of the Legislative Assembly 1791 1792 became the conservatives of the Convention 1792 1795 15 16 The Revolution failed to deliver the immediate gains that had been promised and this made it difficult for the Girondins to draw it to a close easily in the minds of the public Moreover the Septembriseurs the supporters of the September Massacres such as Robespierre Danton Marat and their lesser allies realised that not only their influence but their safety depended on keeping the Revolution alive Robespierre who hated the Girondins had proposed to include them in the proscription lists of September 1792 The Mountain Club to a man who desired their overthrow 17 A group including some Girondins prepared a draft constitution known as the Girondin constitutional project which was presented to the National Convention in early 1793 Thomas Paine was one of the signers of this proposal The crisis came in March 1793 The Girondins who had a majority in the Convention controlled the executive council and filled the ministries believed themselves invincible Their orators had no serious rivals in the hostile camp their system was established in mere reason but the Montagnards made up for what they lacked in talent or in numbers through their boldness and energy 17 This was especially fruitful since uncommitted delegates accounted for almost half the total number even though the Jacobins and Brissotins formed the largest groups citation needed The more radical rhetoric of the Jacobins attracted the support of the revolutionary Paris Commune the Revolutionary Sections mass assemblies in districts and the National Guard of Paris and they had gained control of the Jacobin club where Brissot absorbed in departmental work had been superseded by Robespierre At the trial of Louis XVI in 1792 most Girondins had voted for the appeal to the people and so laid themselves open to the charge of royalism citation needed They denounced the domination of Paris and summoned provincial levies to their aid and so fell under suspicion of federalism as on September 25 1792 18 They strengthened the revolutionary Commune by first decreeing its abolition but withdrawing the decree at the first sign of popular opposition 17 In the suspicious temper of the times their vacillation was fatal Marat never ceased his denunciations of the faction by which France was being betrayed to her ruin and his cry of Nous sommes trahis We are betrayed was echoed from group to group in the streets of Paris 19 The growing hostility of Paris to the Girondins received a fateful demonstration by the election on 15 February 1793 of the bitter ex Girondin Jean Nicolas Pache to the mayoralty Pache had twice been minister of war in the Girondins government but his incompetence had laid him open to strong criticism and on 4 February 1793 he had been replaced as minister of war by a vote of the Convention This was enough to secure him the votes of the Paris electors when he was elected mayor ten days later The Mountain was strengthened by the accession of a significant ally whose one idea was to use his new power to avenge himself on his former colleagues 17 Mayor Pache with procureur of the Commune Pierre Gaspard Chaumette and deputy procureur Jacques Rene Hebert controlled the armed militias of the 48 revolutionary Sections of Paris and prepared to turn this weapon against the Convention 20 The abortive emeute of 10 March warned the Girondins of their danger and they responded with defensive moves They unintentionally increased the prestige of their most vocal and bitter critic Marat by prosecuting him before the Revolutionary Tribunal where his acquittal in April 1793 was a foregone conclusion The Commission of Twelve was appointed of on 24 May including the arrest of Varlat and Hebert and other precautionary measures 21 The ominous threat by Girondin leader Maximin Isnard uttered on 25 May to march France upon Paris was instead met by Paris marching hastily upon the Convention The Girondin role in the government was undermined by the popular uprisings of 27 and 31 May and finally on 2 June 1793 when Francois Hanriot head of the Paris National Guards purged the Convention of the Girondins 17 see Insurrection of 31 May 2 June 1793 Reign of Terror edit Main article Reign of Terror See also Federalist revolts A list drawn up by the Commandant General of the Parisian National Guard Francois Hanriot with help from Marat and endorsed by a decree of the intimidated Convention included 22 Girondin deputies and 10 of the 12 members of the Commission of Twelve who were ordered to be detained at their lodgings under the safeguard of the people Some submitted among them Gensonne Guadet Vergniaud Petion Birotteau and Boyer Fonfrede Others including Brissot Louvet Buzot Lasource Grangeneuve Lariviere and Francois Bergoeing escaped from Paris and joined later by Guadet Petion and Birotteau set to work to organise a movement of the provinces against the capital This attempt to stir up civil war made the wavering and frightened Convention suddenly determined On 13 June 1793 it voted that the city of Paris deserved well of the country and ordered the imprisonment of the detained deputies the filling up of their places in the Assembly by their suppleants and the initiation of vigorous measures against the movement in the provinces The assassination of Marat by Charlotte Corday on 13 July 1793 only served to increase the unpopularity of the Girondins and seal their fate 17 22 The excuse for the Terror that followed was the imminent peril of France menaced on the east by the advance of the armies of the First Coalition Austria Prussia and Great Britain on the west by the Royalist Revolt in the Vendee and the need for preventing at all costs the outbreak of another civil war On 28 July 1793 a decree of the Convention proscribed 21 deputies five of whom were from the Gironde as traitors and enemies of their country Charles Louis Antiboul Boilleau the younger Boyer Fonfrede Brissot Carra Gaspard Severin Duchastel the younger Ducos Dufriche de Valaze Jean Duprat Fauchet Gardien Gensonne Lacaze Lasource Claude Romain Lauze de Perret Lehardi Benoit Lesterpt Beauvais the elder Minvielle the Marquis de Sillery Vergniaud and Louis Francois Sebastien Viger Those were sent to trial Another 39 were included in the final acte d accusation accepted by the Convention on 24 October 1793 which stated the crimes for which they were to be tried as their perfidious ambition their hatred of Paris their federalism and above all their responsibility for the attempt of their escaped colleagues to provoke civil war 17 23 24 1793 trial of Girondins edit nbsp Brissot et 20 de ses complices condamnes a mort par le tribunal revolutionnaire Brissot and 20 of his accomplices are sentenced to death by the Revolutionary Tribunal The trial of the 22 began before the Revolutionary Tribunal on 24 October 1793 The verdict was a foregone conclusion On 31 October they were borne to the guillotine It took 36 minutes to decapitate all of them including Charles Eleonor Dufriche de Valaze who had committed suicide the previous day upon hearing the sentence he was given 25 Of those who escaped to the provinces after wandering about singly or in groups most were either captured and executed or committed suicide They included Barbaroux Buzot Condorcet Grangeneuve Guadet Kersaint Petion Rabaut de Saint Etienne and Rebecqui Roland killed himself at Rouen on 15 November 1793 a week after the execution of his wife A very few escaped including Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvrai whose Memoires give a detailed picture of the sufferings of the fugitives 17 26 Girondins as martyrs edit nbsp The Last Meal of the Girondins Francois Flameng c 1850 the body of Charles Eleonor Dufriche Valaze who stabbed himself in the courtroom is in the foreground nbsp Execution of the Girondins woodcut from 1862The survivors of the party made an effort to re enter the Convention after the fall of Robespierre on 27 July 1794 but it was not until 5 March 1795 that they were formally re instated citation needed forming the Council of Five Hundred under the Directory 8 On 3 October of that same year 11 Vendemiaire year IV a solemn fete in honour of the Girondins martyrs of liberty was celebrated in the Convention 17 27 In her autobiography Madame Roland reshapes her historical image by stressing the popular connection between sacrifice and female virtue Her Memoires de Madame Roland 1795 was written from prison where she was held as a Girondin sympathizer It covers her work for the Girondins while her husband Jean Marie Roland was Interior Minister The book echoes such popular novels as Rousseau s Julie or the New Heloise by linking her feminine virtue and motherhood to her sacrifice in a cycle of suffering and consolation Roland says her mother s death was the impetus for her odyssey from virtuous daughter to revolutionary heroine as it introduced her to death and sacrifice with the ultimate sacrifice of her own life for her political beliefs She helped her husband escape but she was executed on 8 November 1793 A week later he committed suicide 28 A monument to the Girondins was erected in Bordeaux between 1893 and 1902 dedicated to the memory of the Girondin deputies who were victims of the Terror 29 The vagueness of who actually made up the Girondins led to the monument not having any names inscribed on it until 1989 7 Even then the deputies to the Convention who were memorialized were only those hailing from the Gironde department omitting notable people like Brissot and Madame Roland 30 Ideology editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Girondins news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The words Girondin and Montagnard are defined as political groups more specific definitions are the subject of theorizing by historians The two words were much tossed about by partisans with various understandings of what they were intended to represent The two groups lacked formal political structures and the differences between them have never been satisfactorily explained It has been suggested that the word Girondin as a useful term be abandoned 31 Influenced by classical liberalism and the concepts of democracy human rights and Montesquieu s separation of powers the Girondins initially supported the constitutional monarchy but after the Flight to Varennes in which Louis XVI tried to flee Paris in order to start a counter revolution the Girondins became mostly republicans with a royalist minority Like the Jacobins they were also influenced by the writings of Jean Jacques Rousseau 32 In its early times of government the Gironde supported a free market opposing price controls on goods e g a 1793 maximum on grain prices 33 supported by a constitutional right to public assistance for the poor and public education citation needed With Brissot they advocated exporting the Revolution through aggressive foreign policies including war against the surrounding European monarchies 10 The Girondins were also one of the first supporters of abolitionism in France with Brissot leading the anti slavery Society of the Friends of the Blacks 34 Certain Girondins such as Condorcet supported women s suffrage and political equality They sat to the left of the centrist 35 Feuillants but later sat on the right of the National Assembly after the neutralization of the Feuillants 36 They were the principal conservative political party in France at the time and opposed the radical course of the revolution leading to the Reign of Terror 37 Generally historians divide the Convention into the left wing Jacobin Montagnards the centrist The Plain and the right wing Girondins 10 The Girondins supported democratic reform secularism and a strong legislature at the expense of a weaker executive and judiciary as opposed to the authoritarian left wing Montagnards who supported public acknowledgement of a Supreme Being and a strong executive 38 Prominent members editJacques Pierre Brissot leader Jean Marie Roland Madame Roland Maximin Isnard Jacques Guillaume Thouret Jean Baptiste Treilhard Pierre Victurnien Vergniaud Armand Gensonne Marquis de Condorcet Pierre Claude Francois Daunou Marguerite Elie Guadet Jacques Claude Beugnot Louis Gustave le Doulcet Claude Fauchet Francois Buzot Charles Jean Marie Barbaroux Francois Aubry Charles Louis Antiboul Leger Felicite Sonthonax Jerome PetionElectoral results editLegislative AssemblyElection year No ofoverall votes ofoverall vote No ofoverall seats won LeaderNational Convention1792 705 600 3rd 21 4 160 749 Jacques Pierre BrissotSee also editHistoriography of the French Revolution Liberalism and radicalism in FranceReferences editCitations edit David Barry Gaspar David Patrick Geggus 1997 A Turbulent Time The French Revolution and the Greater Caribbean Indiana University Press p 262 a b c Girondin Encyclopaedia Britannica Girondin Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 28 August 2019 a b c d e f g h Phillips 1911 p 49 a b c d Fremont Barnes Gregory ed 2007 Encyclopedia of the Age of Political Revolutions and New Ideologies 1760 1815 Vol 1 Westport CT Greenwood Publishing Group p 306 ISBN 978 0313334450 Furet amp Ozouf p 351 a b Doyle William 2013 Alex Fairfax Cholmeley Colin Jones eds II 2 In Search of the Girondins PDF E France Reading UK University of Reading 4 New Perspectives on the French Revolution 37 ISSN 1756 0535 a b Chris Cook John Paxton 1981 European Political Facts 1789 1848 Palgrave Macmillan p 10 Bosher pp 185 191 a b c Fremont Barnes 2007 p 403 Thompson James Matthew 1932 Leaders Of The French Revolution Oxford Basil Blackwell p 78 Thomas Lalevee National Pride and Republican grandezza Brissot s New Language for International Politics in the French Revolution Archived 2017 05 17 at the Wayback Machine French History and Civilisation Vol 6 2015 pp 66 82 a b Brace Richard Munthe April 1951 General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792 1793 The American Historical Review 56 3 493 509 doi 10 2307 1848434 JSTOR 1848434 Bill Edmonds Federalism and Urban Revolt in France in 1793 Journal of Modern History 1983 55 1 pp 22 53 Phillips 1911 pp 49 50 Alderson p 9 a b c d e f g h i Phillips 1911 p 50 Gabourd Amedee 1859 Histoire de la revolution et de l empire in French Vol 3 Paris Jacques Lecoffre et Cie pp 10 12 Jack Fruchtman Jr 1996 Thomas Paine Apostle of Freedom p 303 ISBN 978 1568580630 permanent dead link Oliver pp 55 56 Mocavo and Findmypast are coming together findmypast com www findmypast com Linton pp 174 175 D M G Sutherland France 1789 1815 Revolution and Counter Revolution 2nd ed 2003 ch 5 Schama ch 18 Schama pp 803 805 Oliver pp 83 89 Domingo Faustino Sarmiento 2005 Recollections of a Provincial Past Oxford UP p 274 ISBN 978 0195113693 Lesley H Walker Sweet and Consoling Virtue The Memoirs of Madame Roland Eighteenth Century Studies 2001 34 3 pp 403 419 Monument eleve a la memoire des Girondins POP la plateforme ouverte du patrimoine Ministere de la Culture Doyle 2013 pp 37 38 Fremont Barnes 2007 pp 307 309 Fremont Barnes 2007 p 307 Schama Simon 1989 Citizens A Chronicle of the French Revolution New York Alfred A Knopf p 719 ISBN 0 394 55948 7 Guadet J 1889 Les Girondins leur vie privee leur vie publique leur proscription et leur mort Paris Perrin et Cie p 30 Israel Jonathan 2014 Revolutionary Ideas An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre Princeton University Press p 222 Luca Einaudi 2020 The Early Symbols of Political Parties During the French revolution University of Cambridge a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Reilly Benjamin Polling the Opinions A Reexamination of Mountain Plain and Gironde in the National Convention Social Science History vol 28 no 1 2004 pp 53 73 doi 10 2307 40267833 Accessed 7 Dec 2020 Jonathan Israel 2015 Revolutionary Ideas An Intellectual History of the French Revolution from The Rights of Man to Robespierre ISBN missing General bibliography edit Alderson Robert J 2008 This Bright Era of Happy Revolutions French Consul Michel Ange Bernard Mangourit and International Republicanism in Charleston 1792 1794 Columbia University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1570037450 Bosher John F 1989 1988 The French Revolution New York W W Norton ISBN 039395997X Furet Francois Ozouf Mona eds 1989 A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution Translated by Arthur Goldhammer Cambridge Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 0674177282 Linton Marisa 2013 Choosing Terror Virtue Friendship and Authenticity in the French Revolution New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199576302 Oliver Bette W 2009 Orphans on the Earth Girondin Fugitives from the Terror 1793 94 Lanham MD Lexington Books ISBN 978 0739140680 Schama Simon 1989 Citizens A Chronicle of the French Revolution New York Vintage ISBN 0679726101 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Phillips Walter Alison 1911 Girondists In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 49 51 Further reading editBrace Richard Munthe General Dumouriez and the Girondins 1792 1793 American Historical Review 1951 56 3 pp 493 509 JSTOR 1848434 de Luna Frederick A The Girondins Were Girondins After All French Historical Studies 1988 15 506 518 JSTOR 286372 DiPadova Theodore A The Girondins and the Question of Revolutionary Government French Historical Studies 1976 9 3 pp 432 450 JSTOR 286230 Ellery Eloise Brissot De Warville A Study in the History of the French Revolution 1915 excerpt and text search Francois Furet and Mona Ozouf eds La Gironde et les Girondins Paris editions Payot 1991 Higonnet Patrice The Social and Cultural Antecedents of Revolutionary Discontinuity Montagnards and Girondins English Historical Review 1985 100 396 pp 513 544 JSTOR 568234 Thomas Lalevee National Pride and Republican grandezza Brissot s New Language for International Politics in the French Revolution French History and Civilisation Vol 6 2015 pp 66 82 Lamartine Alphonse de History of the Girondists Volume I Personal Memoirs of the Patriots of the French Revolution 1847 online free in Kindle edition Volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3 Lewis Beck Michael S Anne Hildreth and Alan B Spitzer Was There a Girondist Faction in the National Convention 1792 1793 French Historical Studies 1988 11 4 pp 519 536 JSTOR 286373 Linton Marisa Choosing Terror Virtue Friendship and Authenticity in the French Revolution Oxford University Press 2013 Loomis Stanley Paris in the Terror 1964 Patrick Alison Political Divisions in the French National Convention 1792 93 Journal of Modern History Dec 1969 41 4 pp 422 474 JSTOR 1878003 rejects Sydenham s argument amp says Girondins were a real faction Patrick Alison The Men of the First French Republic Political Alignments in the National Convention of 1792 1972 comprehensive study of the group s role Scott Samuel F and Barry Rothaus Historical Dictionary of the French Revolution 1789 1799 1985 Vol 1 pp 433 436 online Archived 2020 05 05 at the Wayback Machine Sutherland D M G France 1789 1815 Revolution and Counter Revolution 2nd ed 2003 ch 5 ISBN missing Sydenham Michael J The Montagnards and Their Opponents Some Considerations on a Recent Reassessment of the Conflicts in the French National Convention 1792 93 Journal of Modern History 1971 43 2 pp 287 293 JSTOR 1876547 argues that the Girondins faction was mostly a myth created by Jacobins Whaley Leigh Ann Radicals Politics and Republicanism in the French Revolution Gloucestershire England Sutton Publishing 2000 ISBN missing External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Girondins Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Girondins amp oldid 1184835221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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