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GALLERY II · OBJECT HALL

The French Revolution

The estates overturned: stratification made visible, then guillotined, then reassembled. The vocabulary of class the modern world still uses was minted here. Walk the cases — press a lit plate to look closer.

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Object 1 · Gallery II

The Three Estates

The Three Estates—clergy, nobility, commoners—embodied Old Regime hierarchy until 1789. Their legal separation, fiscal inequality, and eventual fusion in the National Assembly became the crucible of modern class consciousness and democratic theory.

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Object 2 · Gallery II

Versailles

Versailles—palace, administrative seat, and symbol of absolute monarchy—became the crucible where ancien régime hierarchy was made visible, then violently dismantled. Its architecture encoded the social order the Revolution would invert.

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Object 3 · Gallery II

Bread and Taxes

Bread and Taxes explores the fiscal collapse and subsistence crisis that ignited the French Revolution, revealing how harvest failures, regressive taxation, and the visible stratification of the estates system transformed political theory into guillotine-era practice between 1765 and 1799.

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Object 4 · Gallery II

The Estates-General

The Estates-General of 1789 convened France's three orders—clergy, nobility, commoners—in a body that had not met since 1614. Its failure to reform taxation and representation ignited the Revolution, dissolving feudal hierarchy and birthing modern class vocabulary.

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Object 5 · Gallery II

The Tennis Court Oath

On June 20, 1789, 576 members of the Third Estate and sympathetic clergy swore an oath in a tennis court at Versailles never to disband until France had a constitution. This act crystallized revolutionary will and shattered the ancien régime's claim to immutability.

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Object 6 · Gallery II

The Bastille

The Bastille, a medieval fortress-turned-state prison in Paris, symbolized royal tyranny. Its storming on July 14, 1789, ignited the French Revolution and became the defining act of popular sovereignty against absolutism.

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Object 7 · Gallery II

The Declaration of the Rights of Man

The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789) codified Enlightenment principles into revolutionary law, abolishing feudalism and asserting universal human rights. Adopted by the French National Constituent Assembly, it became the philosophical foundation for modern democracy and human rights discourse.

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Object 8 · Gallery II

The Women's March on Versailles

On October 5–6, 1789, thousands of Parisian women—market vendors, laundresses, fishwives, and bourgeois matrons—marched to Versailles demanding bread, the king's return to Paris, and accountability. This eruption of female political agency forced the royal family from their palace and permanently altered the Revolution's trajectory.

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Object 9 · Gallery II

The Constitution of 1791

The Constitution of 1791 dismantled feudal privilege and codified individual rights, establishing France as a constitutional monarchy. Born from Enlightenment thought and revolutionary upheaval, it created the template for modern democratic governance and class abolition.

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Object 10 · Gallery II

The Flight to Varennes

On June 20–21, 1791, King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette fled Paris in a berline coach, seeking royalist protection at Montmédy near the Belgian border. Intercepted at Varennes-en-Argonne, they were returned to Paris, shattering the myth of royal authority and accelerating the Revolution toward republic and terror.

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Object 11 · Gallery II

The Clubs — Jacobins and Cordeliers

The Jacobin Club and Society of the Friends of the Rights of Man (Cordeliers) were revolutionary political associations that mobilized urban masses, radicalized the French Revolution, and pioneered modern mass political organization between 1789 and 1794.

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Object 12 · Gallery II

The Sans-Culottes

The sans-culottes—urban artisans, laborers, and shopkeepers wearing breeches instead of aristocratic knee-breeches—became the revolutionary vanguard of Paris (1789–1794), embodying radical egalitarianism and direct action that reshaped European politics and class consciousness.

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Object 13 · Gallery II

The Guillotine

The guillotine, perfected during the French Revolution (1789–1799), mechanized execution as democratic ritual. This machine—efficient, egalitarian in theory, terrifying in practice—became the Revolution's most potent symbol, killing 2,798 in Paris alone and reshaping how states administered death.

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Object 14 · Gallery II

The Terror

The Terror (1793–1794) was the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution, when the Committee of Public Safety executed thousands—nobles, clergy, moderates, and eventually its own architects—by guillotine, remaking the vocabulary of state violence and political legitimacy.

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Object 15 · Gallery II

The Committee of Public Safety

The Committee of Public Safety (1793–1794) was the French Revolution's executive terror apparatus, a twelve-member war cabinet that centralized state power, orchestrated mass executions, and embodied the paradox of revolutionary virtue enforced through systematic violence.

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Object 16 · Gallery II

Robespierre

Maximilien Robespierre (1758–1794), architect of the Reign of Terror and the Committee of Public Safety, embodied the Revolution's radical phase. His fall and execution marked the end of the Terror and the beginning of the Directory.

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Object 17 · Gallery II

The Revolutionary Calendar

The Revolutionary Calendar (1793–1805) reimagined French time itself, replacing Christian months with ten-day weeks and secular names. A radical artifact of the Terror and Thermidor, it embodied Enlightenment rationalism and revolutionary rupture with the ancien régime.

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Object 18 · Gallery II

The Metric System

The metric system, born from French Revolutionary ideals of reason and universality, standardized measurement across the decimal base. Adopted incrementally from 1791 onward, it embodied Enlightenment faith in rational reform and became the scientific standard that enabled industrial precision.

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Object 19 · Gallery II

Assignats

Assignats were revolutionary paper currency issued by France (1789–1796) backed by confiscated church and émigré lands. Their hyperinflation and collapse symbolized the Revolution's economic chaos and the limits of fiat money without fiscal discipline.

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Object 20 · Gallery II

The Levée en Masse

The levée en masse (1793) conscripted all able-bodied French males into revolutionary warfare, transforming citizenship into military obligation and creating the modern nation-state army. It mobilized 750,000 soldiers and redefined the social contract.

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Object 21 · Gallery II

Thermidor

Thermidor (July 1794) ended the Reign of Terror, guillotining Robespierre and dismantling the Committee of Public Safety. This pivotal month reversed revolutionary extremism, restored property rights, and installed the Directory—a regime that stabilized France but ultimately paved the way for Napoleon.

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Object 22 · Gallery II

Napoleon

Napoleon Bonaparte (1769–1821), Corsican-born general who seized power during the French Revolution's chaos, remade European law, warfare, and administration. His rise and fall defined the Age of Revolutions' political and military apotheosis.

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Object 23 · Gallery II

Left and Right — the Vocabulary of Class

The French Revolution crystallized the vocabulary of modern class—bourgeoisie, proletariat, aristocracy—transforming abstract hierarchy into visible, contestable, and ultimately lethal stratification. These terms, born in revolutionary fervor, remain the language by which we parse society.

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Object 24 · Gallery II

The Church Overturned

The French Revolution's dismantling of feudal estates created modern class vocabulary and visible social rupture. This exhibit traces how revolutionary ideology overturned centuries of stratification, executed the ancien régime's symbols, and reassembled society on principles of citizenship and rights.

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