Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD:...

21
Bellringer • Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. • Look over your notes for your Quest! • BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Transcript of Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD:...

Page 1: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Bellringer

• Put your signed gradesheet in the bin.

• Look over your notes for your Quest!

• BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Page 2: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Announcements

• Remediation—have you gone to get it done?

• Homework–Now due by the next test—no

exceptions!

• Mercy Passes–Will be given out next class

Page 3: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

The Causes of the French Revolution

Page 4: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Background• Louis the XIV ruled absolutely, but

by the end of his reign, the country was failing– Rich getting richer, and the poor

getting poorer– High taxes and high prices for food

because of debt due to 7 Years/French and Indian War

• Louis XVI and his wife, Marie Antoinette, inherited the throne from his grandfather– Marie Antoinette was from Austria,

a longtime enemy of France– Louis XVI was a weak ruler—he did

not pay much attention to the government

Page 5: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Cause 1 of the War: The Old Regime (France in the 1780s)

• France’s society was divided into three classes or estates– 1st and 2nd: privileged and did not have to

pay taxes– 3rd: 90% of the population, responsible for

all taxes, and had no government privileges

• The 3rd Estate resented the other two, and wanted to change the government–What changes do you think they’d want?

Page 6: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Cause 2: The Enlightenment

• France was the center of the Enlightenment in the 1700s

• The ideas of Locke, Rousseau, and Montesquieu encouraged the people to think about taking power from the government

Page 7: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Cause 3: The American Revolution• Americans listened to

the ideas of the Enlightenment and with the help of France, overthrew Britain and formed their own government.

• Stories of the revolution spread throughout France and encouraged people (especially lower-class people) to wonder if they could overthrow the French government

Hobbes vs. Locke?

Page 8: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Processing

• Which cause do you think had the biggest effect on the French Revolution? Why?

• If you were a member of the 3rd Estate, which cause would have affected you the most?

Page 9: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Bellringer

• Look over your new assignment sheet—what have you completed? Do you have late work to turn in?

• Please have out your notes from last class.

• BJOTD: What do you get when you cross a cobra tamer with a playwright?

Page 10: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Experiencing the Meeting of the Estates General

• Step 1: The King assembles the Estate General for advice.

• Step 2: The Three Estates prepare to meet.• Step 3: Each Estate proposes a plan to save

France• Step 4: The king proposes a plan to save

France• Step 5: The Estates General votes on the

king’s plan• Step 6: Severe famine occurs• Step 7: The Third Estate responds to the

situation.

Page 11: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?
Page 12: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Effect: The Meeting of the Estates General

• Louis and Marie spent France into bankruptcy. To get out of it, he wanted to tax the nobles (the 2nd Estate)

• The nobles forced Louis to call the Estates together to approve the taxes

• The 3rd Estate, being the largest, felt that they should have a major say in the decision

• The King refused to grant the people of the 3rd Estate their own votes and so the 1st and 2nd Estates dominated the decision. – Result: Taxes remained the burden of the 3rd Estate

Page 13: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Effect: The National Assembly

• Upset at the King, the 3rd Assembly left the Estates General and called themselves the National Assembly– Wanted to pass laws to reform the government for the

people

• June 17, 1789: the Assembly voted to end the monarchy and start a representative government

• 3 days later: the Assembly was kicked out of its meeting room. Instead, they met on an indoor tennis court and pledged to stay there until they had a new constitution– Known as the Tennis Court Oath

Page 14: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?
Page 15: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Effect: Storming the Bastille

• Louis tried to make peace with the 3rd Estate by giving into their demands– BUT—he was nervous, and called in Swiss guards

to Paris to keep order

• In Paris, people thought the guards were coming to massacre them, and took to the streets in protest

• July 14, 1789: the people stormed the Bastille, a French prison in Paris. This became a symbol of revolution to the French.– Like our 4th of July

Page 16: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?
Page 17: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Effect: The Great Fear

• The violence and fear in Paris soon spread throughout the country

• The Great Fear: wave of senseless panic that took over France– Peasants became outlaws

• October 1789: 6,000 Parisian women (and some men) rioted over high bread prices– Marched on Versailles, took over, and forced

Louis, Marie Antoinette, and their children to go to Paris

Page 18: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

Processing

• Do you think the French Revolution was inevitable? Why or why not?– Think about: Louis’ leadership skills,

the national debt, Enlightenment ideas

• What do you think will happen to Louis and Marie Antoinette?

Page 19: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

French Revolution Storybook

• You will be creating an illustrated children’s storybook that chronicles major events of the French Revolution and describes how the revolution contributed to the rise of democracy. It should be written in simple, clear, language so that a 10 year old could read and enjoy it.

• Your storybook will contain ideas generated on Student Handout 1.4 B and will include these features:a) Visually appealing cover with an appropriate titleb) Brief introduction that describes the conditions in France

in the late 1780sc) Sections on each of these six events: meeting of the

Estates General, Tennis Court Oath, Storming of the Bastille, March on Versailles, the Reign of Terror, the Rise of Napoleon

Page 20: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

d) Each section must contain:a) An illustration of the eventb) Thought or voice bubbles coming from the

characters in the illustrationc) Summary describing how the even related

to the French revolutiond) Brief explanation of whether the event

represented a step towards democracye) Use of the vocabulary in the word banks

on Student Handout 1.4 B

Page 21: Bellringer Put your signed gradesheet in the bin. Look over your notes for your Quest! BJOTD: What’s green and sings?

e) A brief conclusion that explains how the events of the French revolution contributed to the growth of democracy

f) Additional touches to make the storybook artistic and visually appealing—use of color, page numbers, additional visuals or graphics, and the like.

• Your storybooks may be designed with stapled or bound paper or on a larger piece of tagboard or butcher paper. They should be written in ink or typed.