Thermidorians
Thermidorians
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Thermidorians Thermidoriens | |
---|---|
Leader | Paul Barras |
Founded | 27 July 1794 |
Dissolved | 10 November 1799 |
Split from | The Mountain |
Headquarters | Hôtel de Noailles, Paris |
Ideology | Anti-radicalism[1] Classical liberalism[2] Conservative liberalism Republicanism (factions)[further explanation needed] |
Political position | Centre[3] |
The Thermidorians (French: Thermidoriens, named after the month of Thermidor),[4] known also a Thermidorian Convention (French: Convention thermidorienne) was a French political group active during the French Revolution between 1794 and 1799.
History[edit]
The group was named for the Thermidorian Reaction in 1794, when its members—led by Paul Barras, Jean-Lambert Tallien and Joseph Fouché—formed a coup d'état against Maximilien Robespierre and Louis Antoine de Saint-Just, who were executed with their supporters on 27 July 1794. The deputies that supported the Reaction were the following:
- Moderates (members of The Marsh) like Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès, Jean de Cambacérès and Boissy d'Anglas
- Montagnards opposite to Robespierre like Tallien and Jean-Baptiste Carrier
- Members of the Committee of Public Safety like Barras, Bertrand Barère, Lazare Carnot, Marc Vadier, Jean Amar and Collot d'Herbois
Over the following days, the Thermidorians took over the majority in the National Convention and in 1795 a new constitution was created, with the National Convention disestablished for the creation of the French Directory. The Thermidorians became a republican and bourgeoisie group—and like the new constitution—also conservative on social themes and liberal on economic themes.
After the election of 1795, the Thermidorians obtained the majority in the Council of Five Hundred, the new lower house. In Paris, the group created a headquarters in the Hôtel de Noailles and Paul Barras became its leader, but also the ruler of the France until 1799, when the coup of 18 Brumaire by Napoleon Bonaparte removed the Barras' Directory to be replaced with a Consulate with himself as First Consul.
After the coup, the various parliamentary forces including the Thermidorians were disestablished.
Electoral results[edit]
Council of Five Hundred | |||||
Election year | No. of overall votes | % of overall vote | No. of overall seats won | +/– | Leader |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1795 | 12,600 (1st) | 42.0 | 242 / 750 | – | |
1797 | Unknown (3rd) | Unknown | 91 / 657 | 151 | |
1798 | Unknown (2nd) | 29.3 | 387 / 807 | 296 |
References[edit]
- ^ Howard G. Brown; Judith A. Miller, eds. (2002). Taking Liberties: Problems of a New Order From the French Revolution to Napoleon. Manchester University Press.
- ^ Katherine Harloe; Neville Morley, eds. (2012). Thucydides and the Modern World: Reception, Reinterpretation and Influence from the Renaissance to the Present. Cambridge University Press. p. 59.
Post-revolutionary French liberals (Thermidorians and doctrinaires) devised the theory of the dichotomy between ancient liberty and modern liberty as a reaction against eighteenth-century republican ideology and its devastating consequences.
- ^ Ido de Haan; Matthijs Lok, eds. (2014). The Politics of Moderation in Modern European History. Springer Nature. p. 38.
... a number of centrist Thermidorians to detach citizens from the highly politicized environment of political clubs. ...
- ^ Abbott, John Stevens Cabot (1887). The French Revolution of 1789 As Viewed in the Light of Republican Institutions. Vol. II. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 379.
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