| After
the king of France, Louis XVI, went to the guillotine in 1793, the
Reign of Terror began. Marie
Antoinette led off a parade of prominent and not-so-prominent
citizens to their deaths. The
guillotine, the new instrument of egalitarian justice,
was put to work. Public executions were considered educational. Women
were encouraged to sit and knit during trials and executions. The
Revolutionary Tribunal, with Robespierre at its head, ordered the
execution of 2,400 people in Paris by July 1794. Across France 30,000
people lost their lives.
The
Terror was the most radical phase of the French
Revolution and was masterminded by Robespierre. It was designed
to fight the enemies of the revolution, to prevent counter-revolution
from gaining ground. Most of the people rounded up were not aristocrats,
but ordinary people. A man (and his family) might go to the guillotine
for saying something critical of the revolutionary government. If
an informer happened to overhear, that was all the tribunal needed.
Watch Committees around the nation were encouraged to arrest "suspected
persons, ... those who, either by their conduct or their relationships,
by their remarks or by their writing, are shown to be partisans
of tyranny and federalism and enemies of liberty" (Law
of Suspects, 1793). Civil liberties were suspended. The
Convention ordered that "if material or moral proof exists,
independently of the evidence of witnesses, the latter will not
be heard, unless this formality should appear necessary, either
to discover accomplices or for other important reasons concerning
the public interest." The promises of the Declaration of the
Rights of Man were forgotten. Terror was the order of the day. In
the words of Maximilien Robespierre, "Softness to traitors
will destroy us all."
Robespierre
was the leader of the Committee of Public Safety, the executive
committee of the National Convention, and the most powerful man
in France. He explained how terror would lead to the Republic
of Virtue in a speech to the National Convention:
If
the spring of popular government in time of peace is virtue, the
springs of popular government in revolution are at once virtue
and terror: virtue, without which terror is fatal; terror,
without which virtue is powerless. Terror is nothing other than
justice, prompt, severe, inflexible...It has been said that terror
is the principle of despotic government. Does your government
therefore resemble despotism? Yes, as the sword that gleams in
the hands of the heroes of liberty resembles that with which the
henchmen of tyranny are armed. Maximilien Robespierre Speech
on the Justification of the Use of Terror
The
old maxim "the end justifies the means" describes Robespierre's
policy well.
Even
the radical Jacobins, the supporters of Robespierre, come to feel
that the Terror must be stopped. Danton rose in the Convention calling
for an end to the Terror. He was its next victim. Fearful of Danton's
reputation for eloquence, the Convention passed a decree stating
that any accused person who insulted the court should be prohibited
from speaking in his own defense. Danton was not allowed to speak
in his own defense. Nevertheless after the trial Danton asserted
that "the people will tear my enemies to pieces within 3 months."
As he was led to the guillotine he remarked "Above all, don't
forget to show my head to the people - it's well worth having a
look at." Modesty was never one of his virtues.
When
Robespierre called for a new purge in 1794, he seemed to threaten
the other members of the Committee of Public Safety. The Jacobins
had had enough. Cambon rose in the Convention and said
"It is time to tell the whole truth. One man alone is paralyzing
the will of the Convention. And that man is Robespierre." Others quickly rallied
to his support. Robespierre was arrested and sent to the guillotine
the next day, the last victim of the Reign of Terror.
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