Great Fear
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The "Great Fear" (French: la Grande Peur) occurred in July and August of 1789 in France at the start of the French Revolution. Rumors spread among the peasantry that nobles had hired brigands to march on villages and destroy the peasants' new harvest, adding to this was the lack of good harvests (due to freak weather) beginning in 1787.
In response, peasants ransacked the châteaux of the nobles, burned documentation recording feudal obligations, or compelled those nobles they found in residence to renounce their feudal rights.
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[edit] Causes and Course of the Revolts
As the French historian Georges Lefebvre demonstrated, the revolt in the countryside can be followed in remarkable detail. The revolts had not only economic but political causes, pre-dating the events in Paris and Versailles in the summer of 1789. As Lefebvre commented, "To get the peasant to rise and revolt, there was no need of the Great Fear, as so many historians have suggested: when the panic came, he was already up and away." The rural unrest can be traced back to the spring of 1788, when a drought threatened the prospect of the coming harvest. Storms and floods also destroyed much of the harvest during the summer, leading to a fall in seigneurial dues and defaults on leases. Frosts and snow damaged vines and wrecked chestnut and olive orchards in the south. Vagrancy became a serious problem in the countryside and in some areas, such as the Franche-Comté in late 1788, peasants had gathered to take collective actions against the seigneurs.
In early 1789, the king's financial minister Jacques Necker was warned that the countryside risked a general uprising, and in April peasant uprisings were increasingly organised and anti-seigneurial in character. Demands were made for the cancellation of harvest payments and the restoration of rights, such as that of grazing. The drawing up of the Cahiers de Doleances and subsequent elections contributed to the general expectation of reform. The political temperature rose drastically in July, with news of events in Versailles and riots in Paris and elsewhere contributing to rumors of plots to starve the people. The great numbers of strangers on the roads seeking work could also be taken as brigands in the pay of an unpatriotic aristocracy. In five different regions, peasants began to arm themselves, ringing church bells to warn of danger, and took to attacking the symbols of the seigneurial regime, reclaiming tithes and grain.
The panic began in the Franche-Comté, spread south along the Rhône valley to Provence, east towards the Alps and west towards the centre of France. Almost simultaneously, a panic began in Ruffec, south of Poitiers, and travelled to the Pyrenees, towards Berry and into the Auvergne. The uprising coalesced into a general 'Great Fear' as neighbouring villages mistook armed peasants for brigands. Although the main phase of the Great Fear died out by August, peasant uprisings continued well into 1790, leaving few areas of France untouched (Alsace, Lorraine and Brittany remained largely untouched).[1]
Although the Great Fear is usually associated with the peasantry, all the uprisings tended to involve all sectors of the local community, including some elite participation, such as artisans or well-to-do farmers. Often the bourgeoisie had as much to gain from the destruction of the feudal regime as the poorer peasantry.[2][3].
[edit] Chronology and centres of revolt
- Franche-Comté (from late 1788, and especially 19-31 July 1789)
- Dauphiné (Feb-June and from 27 July 1789)
- Provence
- Hainaut and Cambrésis (riots in Cambrai on 6 and 7 May 1789)
- Lower Normandy (21 July-3 August 1789)
- Mâconnais (26-31 July 1789)
- Alsace (c. 20 July 1789, witnessed by Arthur Young at Strasbourg
- South West (December 1789-March 1790, over 100 châteaux attacked as a response to the seigneurs attempts to collect tithes on a successful harvest.)[4]
and they all died horrbily
[edit] Ergotism
Historian Mary K. Matossian argued that one of the cause of the Great Fear was consumption of ergot, a hallucinogenic this in effect led to the general unrest of the nobility of France.
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ Albert Goodwin, The French Revolution, London, UK: Hutchinson Univ. Library, 1970 ed, 71. ISBN 0091050219.
- ^ Peter M. Jones, The Peasantry and the French Revolution, Cambridge, 1988, ch. 3
- ^ Wiliam Doyle, The Oxford History of the French Revolution, 114-5.
- ^ Jones, 1988