and of wars with the rest of Europe. These latter did not cease 
until the battle of Waterloo, in 1815. 
8. European sovereigns watched the progress of the Revolution with 
anxiety. No people would have the same respect for monarchy and 
kingly authority, if the French were successful in overthrowing their 
government. Kings made common cause against the common danger 
and resolved to crush this uprising in France. Frederick William II, 
King of Prussia, Emperor Leopold II of Austria and his successor 
Francis II were the first to make war on the French. The French armies 
were so badly beaten at first that the mob in Paris believed that those 
around the king were giving information to the enemy. They 
accordingly made the king an actual prisoner to prevent further 
betrayals. Thereupon the Duke of Brunswick, in command of the 
Prussian army on the borders of France, issued a proclamation 
threatening destruction to Paris if harm should be done to the French 
king. Straightway the mob attacked the palace in which the king was 
prisoner and massacred the Swiss guards. This was on the tenth of
August, 1792, a memorable day in the history of France. 
9. On the twentieth of September the battle of Valmy was fought, in 
which the French defeated their enemies decisively. The next day the 
Republic was formally established, and on the twenty-second began 
Year One of the French Republic. In the January following, the king 
was executed. Prussia, Austria, England, Holland, Sweden, Spain, 
Portugal, the Holy See, and Russia now combined to crush the young 
republic and restore monarchy. La Vendée, one of the western districts 
of France, rose against the radical changes introduced by the 
Revolution. 
10. The National Assembly was succeeded by the Convention, among 
whose members dissensions arose and produced the Reign of Terror, 
from June to October, 1793. Among the excesses of this period was the 
abolition of the Christian religion in France and the substitution 
therefor of the worship of the Goddess of Reason. 
11. The causes which led the French people to rise and overthrow its 
oppressors are fivefold: 
(a). A despotic government. Over a century before the Revolution, 
Louis XIV had said, "L'état, c'est moi." In his opinion the people 
existed merely for him to tax, and despise in exact proportion to the 
burdens which they bore. His successors held the same doctrine. For 
nearly two centuries no king had summoned the national legislative 
body to make laws and lay taxes. Successive kings had, by royal decree, 
enacted such laws as they had seen fit, and had enforced them as they 
pleased. They arrested, imprisoned, and executed citizens, almost as 
they wished. Their taxation was extravagant, for the most part 
unnecessary, unreasonable, and brutal. They lived scandalous lives 
utterly regardless of their responsibility to their people. Their courts 
were notorious for extravagance, frivolity and vice. 
(b). Another cause was a contemptible nobility. In profligacy the nobles 
imitated the kings. They despised their people, and robbed them of the 
little left by the king's tax collectors. They had many ancient feudal 
privileges but were unwilling to relinquish any of them to help the
people. The nobility, like the clergy, on the pretext of saving their 
dignity exempted themselves from the necessity of paying taxes. 
(c). The clergy. It has sometimes happened that oppression of the 
people by religious organizations has been commensurate with the 
tyranny of the ruling classes. On this account the oppressors 
representing religion have been despised by the people, quite as much 
as lay tyrants. The higher clergy, who were lords over nearly one fifth 
of the land of France, did not treat their vassals appreciably better than 
did the nobility. During the violence at the outbreak of the Revolution 
the people in some parts of France burned castles, churches, and 
monasteries alike. As Erckmann and Chatrian say in another work, 
"The peasants were weary of monasteries and châteaux; they wished to 
till the fields for themselves." 
(d). The condition of the people. The life, liberty, and property of the 
peasant were at the mercy of the king and the upper classes. Yet the 
condition of the peasant was not utterly bad. He seems to have been 
oppressed because he was not intelligent enough to better himself. 
(e). Taxation. It was a recognized principle of the French government, 
that the people might be forced to pay taxes and to build roads at 
pleasure. If the peasant did not pay taxes by the time appointed, 
collectors went to his home and seized whatever would satisfy the 
claim, even taking clothes laid on bushes to dry, and sometimes going 
so far as to remove doors from their hinges, or to take beams and 
boards from the buildings and carry them away in place of taxes. 
The salt tax (la    
    
		
	
	
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