HISTORY 1DD3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Civic Nationalism, Clericalism
Document Summary
From its outbreak in 1789, the revolution touched and transformed social values and political systems in france, europe, and eventually throughout the world. F(cid:396)a(cid:374)ce"s (cid:396)e(cid:448)olutio(cid:374)a(cid:396)y (cid:396)egi(cid:373)e co(cid:374)(cid:395)ue(cid:396)ed (cid:373)uch of weste(cid:396)(cid:374) eu(cid:396)ope (cid:449)ith its a(cid:396)(cid:373)s a(cid:374)d with its ideals, while generating considerable opposition at home and abroad liberty. Even more than the american colonists, the french revolutionaries were profoundly influenced by the enlightenment. Similar to their american counterparts, the first french revolutionaries advocated individual. Liberty included individual freedoms, economic freedom, and political legitimacy through: constitutional government, elections and legislative supremacy. Civil rights: denying the claims of privileged groups, localities, or religions to special treatment and requiring the equality of all citizens before the law. Fraternity: meant all citizens regardless of social class, region, or religion shared a common fate in society, and that the well-being of the nation sometimes superseded the interests of individuals. Like americans, the french helped develop the ideology of civic nationalism.