The people in Paris were worried that King Louis might use the army to defeat the Third Estate or dissolve the National Assembly. Therefore, a mob of Parisians went in search of guns and ammunition with which to protect themselves from any attack. So on 14 July 1789 the mob turned its attention to the Bastille.
The Bastille was a huge prison in Paris to which many French people had been sent without trial. It symbolised everything that was wrong with the ancien régime. Over 100 people died in the attack on the prison. When they succeeded in breaking in, they found only seven prisoners, all of whom were set free. Nevertheless, the fall of the Bastille was of great symbolic importance to the poor of Paris. It is still celebrated every year on the French National holiday of Bastille Day on 14 July.
Who was this mob?
Fig 9.8 The sans-culottes played a very important role in the success of the French Revolution.
The Parisian mob was made up of tradesmen, workers, shopkeepers and the poor of Paris who hoped that change would make their lives easier. They wanted to reduce their taxes and they also wanted the price of bread to be kept as low as possible so they could afford to feed their families. They were known as the sans-culottes (without trousers). They were called this because they could not afford the silk knee-length stockings that were fashionable among the rich. The sans-culottes supported change and were a very important part of the success of the revolution.
✣ By the way
One of the men released from the Bastille had been put there by his family because he was insane. When he was released he travelled all the way home whereupon his family put him straight back into prison.
Fig 9.7 The storming of the Bastille in 1789.
✣ By the way
With the triumph of the sans-culottes at the Bastille a new National Guard (an armed force made up of the ordinary people of Paris) was formed under the leadership of Marquis de Lafayette – a noble who had fought in America and who supported the Third Estate. This National Guard was formed to ensure King Louis would be reluctant to use force against the revolutionaries.
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Louis XVI had such little interest in politics that on 14 July 1789 he wrote in his diary that nothing important had happened that day!