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  1. 14 de may. de 2024 · Destacó el liderazgo de Jacques Pierre Brissot. Club de los Jacobinos o Club de los Amigos de la Constitución: favorable a la república. Destacó el liderazgo de Maximilien Robespierre. Club de Cordeliers o franciscanos: favorable a la república y al sufragio universal masculino, bajo el liderazgo de Jean-Paul Marat y Georges-Jacques Danton.

  2. 25 de may. de 2024 · The Girondins championed war against Austria in the fall of 1791. As France moved toward war in April 1792, the journalist-deputy Jacques-Pierre Brissot, a prominent Girondin, became the most powerful figure in the Legislative Assembly, and his faction dominated the ministries.

  3. 25 de may. de 2024 · Prominent Girondins like Jacques Pierre Brissot and Madame Roland envisioned a society based on reason, education and the Enlightenment values of liberty, equality and fraternity. In contrast, the Jacobins, so named for their political club which met in a former Jacobin monastery in Paris, were zealous radicals bent on completely ...

  4. Hace 2 días · They were also known as Brissotists, after their most prominent member, the writer Jacques Pierre Brissot (right). Other well-known Girondins included Nicolas de Bonneville, Étienne Clavière, the Marquis de Condorcet, Claude Fauchet, Jérome Pétion, and Jean Marie Roland.

  5. Hace 2 días · A new decree stated retracting this oath, making war upon the nation, or permitting anyone to do so in his name would be considered abdication. However, radicals led by Jacques Pierre Brissot prepared a petition demanding his deposition, and on 17 July, an immense crowd gathered in the Champ de Mars to sign.

  6. 14 de may. de 2024 · Works/Agency. In 1791, together with Condorcet, Thomas Paine, the Girondin Jacques Pierre Brissot, and a few others, she started a journal, Le Républicain, designed to raise awareness of republican political thought in France.

  7. 25 de may. de 2024 · This site is a collaboration of the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media (George Mason University) and American Social History Project (City University of New York), supported by grants from the Florence Gould Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.