Provincial Patriot of the French Revolution: François Buzot, 1760-1794

Provincial Patriot of the French Revolution: François Buzot, 1760-1794

by Bette W. Oliver
Provincial Patriot of the French Revolution: François Buzot, 1760-1794

Provincial Patriot of the French Revolution: François Buzot, 1760-1794

by Bette W. Oliver

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Overview

This biography of François Buzot, a Girondin leader in both the Constituent Assembly (1789-91) and the National Convention (1792-93), illustrates how his early life in Evreux and his training as a lawyer influenced his ideas and actions during the French Revolution, when he championed individual rights and the rule of law in a republic. A provincial leader who distrusted the increasingly centralized government in Paris, Buzot worked tirelessly to defend departmental interests, which led his Jacobin opponents to accuse him of federalism.
Buzot became an active participant in the factional disputes dividing the national assembly in 1792-93, which led to frequent attacks against him and his cohorts by the radical press and demands for their impeachment. Consequently, Buzot and twenty-nine other Girondin deputies were expelled from the assembly in June 1793 and placed under house arrest. While Buzot and some of his friends escaped and fled to Caen, those Girondins who had remained in Paris were executed that October. After their attempt to form a large departmental force to march against the government in Paris had failed, Buzot and his friends fled to St. Emilion, where they survived as fugitives, often hiding in abandoned stone quarries, until June 1794.
Buzot’s memoirs, written when he was on the run in 1793-94, provide an unusual contemporary account of the difficult and dangerous period known as the Terror. In addition, letters to and from his friends, notably Madame Roland, with whom he shared a romantic relationship, offer a more personal view of Buzot than can be found in most texts.
Although Buzot was honored as a local hero by the citizens of Evreux in 1789, by the summer of 1793 the authorities had declared him a traitor and ordered his home demolished, and its furnishings sold at auction. Honored again during the centennial celebration of the French Revolution, by 1989 he had almost been forgotten. This first biographical treatment in English of François Buzot, a “bourgeois gentilhomme,” provides a new dimension to the story of an important revolutionary leader.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739196915
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 03/04/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 180
File size: 303 KB

About the Author

Bette W. Oliver is an independent scholar. She earned a PhD in modern European history from the University of Texas at Austin.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Un Promeneur Solitaire
Chapter 2: On The National Stage
Chapter 3: The Decisive Year, 1791
Chapter 4: Return to Évreux
Chapter 5: The Birth of The Republic
Chapter 6: The Storm Breaks
Chapter 7: From Caen to St. Emilion
Chapter 8: The Last Days

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