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  1. Hace 3 días · The French Revolution was a period of political and societal change in France that began with the Estates General of 1789, and ended with the coup of 18 Brumaire in November 1799 and the formation of the French Consulate.

  2. Hace 5 días · The National Convention (French: Convention nationale) was the constituent assembly of the Kingdom of France for one day and the French First Republic for its first three years during the French Revolution, following the two-year National Constituent Assembly and the one-year Legislative Assembly.

  3. The Second Republic and Second Empire. The revolution of 1848; The Second Republic, 1848–52; The Second Empire, 1852–70. The authoritarian years; The liberal years; The Franco-German War; The Third Republic. The Commune of Paris; The formative years (1871–1905) Attempts at a restoration; The constitution of the Third Republic; Republican ...

  4. Hace 3 días · The French Second Republic adopted a variant of the tricolour for a few days between 24 February and 5 March 1848. [8] The French tricolore with the royal crown and fleur-de-lys was possibly designed by the Henri, Count of Chambord , in his younger years as a compromise, but which was never made official, and which he himself rejected when ...

  5. Reading about the rise of the second French empire, led by Napoleon's nephew Napoleon the III, it always surprised me how the second French republic, established after the revolution of 1848, was so easily overthrown in a coup d'état, apparently without much resistance from the populace.

  6. Hace 5 días · Bourgeois revolution is motivated by, and eventuates in, a settlement that seeks to discipline the state via constitutionalism and the enveloping fiscal mesh that connects government, national debt, and capitalist markets. True, exasperated middle class loyalty to constitutionalism has often been brought to the brink and beyond of repudiation.

  7. Hace 2 días · When the revived republic collapsed in 1512, as a result of a disastrous pro-French foreign policy, the popolo did not return to the passive acquiescence characteristic of the years between the Ciompi revolt and the rise of the Medici: the Medici rulers were all too aware that Florentines, and particularly the popolo, were unflinchingly attached to their Great Council; the Medici regime became ...