Looking Back, Looking Ahead

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A great revolutionary wave swept both sides of the Atlantic Ocean in the late eighteenth century. The revolutions in British North America, France, and Haiti were individual and unique, but they shared common origins and consequences for Western and, indeed, world history. The eighteenth century inaugurated monumental changes: population grew, urbanization spread, and literacy increased. Enlightenment ideals influenced all orders of society and reformers increasingly championed limitations on monarchical authority in the name of popular sovereignty.

The Atlantic world was an essential context for this age of revolutions. The movement of peoples, commodities, and ideas across the Atlantic Ocean in the eighteenth century created a world of common debates, conflicts, and aspirations. The high stakes of colonial empire heightened competition among European states, leading to a series of wars that generated crushing costs for overburdened treasuries. For both the British in their North American colonies and the French at home, the desperate need for new taxes weakened government authority and opened the door to revolution. In turn, the ideals of the French Revolution inspired slaves and free people of color in Saint-Domingue, thus opening the promise of liberty, equality, and fraternity to people of all races.

The chain reaction did not end with the birth of an independent Haiti in 1804. On the European continent throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, periodic convulsions occurred as successive generations struggled over political rights first proclaimed by the generation of 1789. Meanwhile, as dramatic political events unfolded, a parallel economic revolution was gathering steam. This was the Industrial Revolution, originating around 1780 and accelerating through the end of the eighteenth century (see Chapter 20). After 1815, the twin forces of industrialization and democratization would combine to transform Europe and the world.

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ONLINE DOCUMENT PROJECT

Toussaint L’Ouverture

How did slaves and free people of color from France’s Caribbean colonies respond to the French Revolution?

Keeping the question above in mind, explore documents that reveal how slaves and free people of color in the colonies and in Paris made their concerns part of the revolutionary dialogue.

See Document Project for Chapter 19.