Social Sciences, asked by ILEARN, 3 months ago

what was the contribution of madame roland in french revolution.Give brief answer.​

Answers

Answered by ElegantBoi
4

Answer:

Madame Roland was a revolutionary and a victim of the Revolution. She was one of the main figures of the second generation of revolutionaries, the Girondins.

What role did Madame Roland play during the French Revolution?

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Alexey Tereshchenko

Answered 3 years ago

Madame Roland was a revolutionary and a victim of the Revolution. She was one of the main figures of the second generation of revolutionaries, the Girondins.

Née Marie-Jeanne Phlippon, known to her friends as Manon, she belonged to a well-off middle class family. She acquired a good education. As many people of her generation, she was passionate about the great 18th-century bestseller, Rousseau’s Julie, or the New Heloise. In this book, a young woman marries a much older man whom she admires and respects but does not really love and becomes his trusted companion.

She did the same. When she was 26, she married Jean-Marie Roland, twenty years older than her, and became Madame Roland. She would become her husband’s invaluable secretary, helping him write encyclopaedia articles, technical treatises, official reports and political proclamations. Staying largely in the shadow of her husband, she would influence many of his decisions and build a support base for him.

18th-century France (and, to some extent, Europe) was dominated by salons. A salon was what a popular blog is today. It was led by an educated lady who could entertain an interesting conversation. Poets, academics, lawyers, politicians, businessmen would come into this salon, ostensibly to meet the lady, but also to meet each other. It was in the salons that the links between people were established. It was in the salons that political parties started.

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