History, asked by gy835079, 1 month ago

How many politics clubs in France revolution .name them​

Answers

Answered by btathagata864
1

Explanation:

During the French Revolution (1789–1799), multiple differing political groups, clubs, organisations and militias arose, which could often be further subdivided into rival factions. Every group had its own ideas about what the goals of the Revolution were and which course France (and surrounding countries) should follow. They struggled to carry out these plans at the cost of other groups. Various kinds of groups played an important role, such as citizens' clubs, parliamentarians, governmental institutions and paramilitary movements.

Royalists: the term most commonly given to a wide range of supporters of the Ancien Régime who sought to reverse most changes of the Revolution and restore the royal House of Bourbon and the Catholic Church to its pre-1789 authority. Some armed themselves and formed rebel armies, especially in Western France, under the name of Catholic and Royal Army (also called Chouans, see also the Chouannerie), the most important battleground being the War in the Vendée (1793–1796). Others fled France as émigrés, some of whom would also arm themselves and form the Armée des Émigrés (1792–1814), who together with the troops of the First Coalition and Second Coalition sought to bring down the French Republic and restore the Bourbon monarchy.

Jacobins (originally the Society of Friends of the Constitution, but better known by their home base in the old Dominican convent of Saint Jacques, hence the name Jacobins; since 1792 officially Society of Jacobins): revolutionary club originally.

Answered by kumariayushi6157
1

Answer:

From late 1789, political clubs were an important feature of the French Revolution. Beginning as groups of like-minded people, not unlike the salons and circles of the 1780s, these clubs became an important source of ideas and a vehicle for influencing or even pressuring the national government.

Contents

1 Origins

2 The Breton Club

3 The Jacobin Club

4 The Jacobins evolve

5 The Society of 1789

6 The Cordeliers

7 The Feuillants

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