ABSTRACT

Among the many questions raised by the French Revolution of 1789, one in particular haunted the imagination of the nineteenth century: its vio­ lence. No one could deny that the Revolution had produced mom entous and lasting changes. The Europe of the ancien regime had been destroyed and all attempts to restore it had foundered. But these changes appeared to be inseparable from the violence that had brought them about. Vio­ lence, it seemed, had not been incidental to the Revolution, but inherent in its popular character. Popular sovereignty had gone together with crowd coercion and a reign of terror. Hunger, long-held grievances and the provo­ cations of the Old Order were among its precipitants. But, by any measure, it had been excessive, and its legacy had been an unforgettable cluster of images of the burning of chateaux, of the destruction of the Bastille, of angry crowds, summary justice and the hanging lamppost (the lanterne), of the execution of a king and queen, and most of the leaders of the Revolution itself, of the Terror and the guillotine, of women w ith the ferocity of 'tigers' - the tricoteuses, knitting while heads fell, of revolutionary armies, of the desecration of churches and the mass drownings (noyades) of Jean-Baptiste Carrier.