The outbreak of revolution in France produced great excitement and a sharp division of opinion in Europe and the United States. On the one hand, liberals and radicals saw a mighty triumph of liberty over despotism. On the other hand, conservative leaders such as British statesman Edmund Burke (1729–
One passionate rebuttal came from a young writer in London, Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–
The kings and nobles of continental Europe, who had at first welcomed the Revolution in France as weakening a competing power, now feared its impact. In June 1791, the royal family was arrested and returned to Paris after trying to slip out of France. To the monarchs of Austria and Prussia, the arrest of a crowned monarch was unacceptable. Two months later, they issued the Declaration of Pillnitz, which professed their willingness to intervene in France to restore Louis XVI’s rule if necessary. It was expected to have a sobering effect on revolutionary France without causing war.
But the crowned heads of Europe misjudged the situation. The new French representative body, called the Legislative Assembly, that convened in October 1791 had new delegates and a different character. Although the delegates were still prosperous, well-
Jacobins and other deputies reacted with patriotic fury to the Declaration of Pillnitz. They said that if the kings of Europe were attempting to incite war against France, then “we will incite a war of people against kings.”1 In April 1792, France declared war on Francis II, the Habsburg monarch.
France’s crusade against tyranny went poorly at first. Prussia joined Austria against the French, who broke and fled at their first military encounter with this First Coalition of foreign powers united against the Revolution. The Legislative Assembly declared the country in danger, and volunteers rallied to the capital. In this wartime atmosphere, rumors of treason by the king and queen spread in Paris. On August 10, 1792, a revolutionary crowd attacked the royal palace at the Tuileries (TWEE-