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MIGNET, F. A. M., History of the French Revolution from 1789 to 1814, 1919

MORRIS, GOUVERNEUR, A Diary of the French Revolution, ed. Beatrix Cary Davenport, Harrap, 1939, 2 vols.

MORSE-STEPHENS, H., Speeches of the Statesmen and Orators of the Revolution, 1789–1795, Oxford University Press, 1892, 2 vols.

MORTON, J. B., The Bastille Falls and other Studies of the French Revolution, 1936; Brumaire: The Rise of Bonaparte. From the Death of Robespierre to the Establishment of the Consulate, 1948; Saint-Just, 1935

ORIEUX, JEAN, Talleyrand: The Art of Survival, Seeker & Warburg, 1974

PALMER, R. R., Twelve Who Ruled: The Year of the Terror in the French Revolution, Princeton University Press, 1941; The World of the French Revolution, Allen & Unwin, 1971

PATRICK, ALISON, The Men of the First French Republic, John Hopkins University Press, 1972

PERNOUD, GEORGES, The French Revolution, with Sabine Flaissier, trans. Richard Graves, Seeker & Warburg, 1960

REINHARD, MARCEL, La Chute de la royauté 10 août, 1792, Paris, 1969; France du Directoire, Paris, 1956, 2 vols.; Le Grand Carnot, Paris, 1950

ROBERTS, J. M., The French Revolution, Oxford University Press, 1978; French Revolution Documents, ed. with John Hardman and R. C. Cobb, Basil Blackwell, 1966, 1973, 2 vols.

ROBIQUET, JEAN, Daily Life in the French Revolution, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1964

ROEDERER, P. L., Chronique de Cinquante Jours, 1832

ROGERS, CORNWELL B., The Spirit of Revolution in 1789, Princeton University Press, 1949

ROSE, R. B., Gracchus Babeuf: The First Revolutionary Communist, Arnold, 1979

ROSS, MICHAEL, Banners of the King: The War of the Vendée, 1793–4, Seeley Service, 1975

Royal Memoirs of the French Revolution, London, 1823

RUDÉ, GEORGE, The Crowd in History, 1730–1848, A Study of Popular Disturbances in France and England, Wiley, 1964; The Crowd in the French Revolution, Oxford University Press, new edition, 1967; Paris and London in the Eighteenth Century: Studies in Popular Protest, 1970; Revolutionary Europe 1783–1815, Fontana, 1964; Robespierre: Portrait of a Revolutionary Democrat, Collins, 1975

SALVEMINI, GAETANO, The French Revolution, 1788–1792, trans. I. M. Rawson, Cape, 1954

SCOTT, WILLIAM, Terror and Repression in Revolutionary Marseilles, Macmillan, 1973

SOBOUL, ALBERT, The French Revolution, 1787–1799, trans. Alan Forrest and Colin Jones, N. L. B., 1974, 2 vols.; The Parisian Sans-Culottes and the French Revolution, 1793–4, trans., G. Lewis, Oxford University Press, 1964; Le Procès de Louis XVI, Paris, 1966

STAËL, MADAME LA BARONNE DE, Considerations sur les evénéments de la Révolution française, 1818, 3 vols.

STEWART, J. H. (ed.), Documentary Survey of the French Revolution, Collins/Macmillan, 1951

SYDENHAM, M. J., The First French Republic, 1792–1804, Batsford, 1974; The French Revolution, new edition, Methuen, 1969; The Girondins, Athlone Press, 1961

TAYLOR, I. A., Life of Madame Roland, 1911

THIERS, LOUIS ADOLPHE, History of the French Revolution, 1789–1800, 1895, 5 vols.

THOMPSON, J. M., Eye-witnesses of the French Revolution, Blackwell, 1938; The French Revolution, Second edition, Blackwell, 1944; ed., French Revolutionary Documents, 1789–1794, Blackwell, 1933; Leaders of the French Revolution, Blackwell, 1932; Robespierre and the French Revolution, English University Press, 1952

THOMSON, DAVID, The Babeuf Plot, Routledge, 1947

TILLY, CHARLES, The Vendée, Arnold, 1964

TOCQUEVILLE, ALEXIS DE, The Ancien Régime and the French Revolution, trans. Stuart Gilbert with an introduction by Hugh Brogan, Collins/Fontana, 1966

TØNNESON, K. D., La Défaite des Sans-Culottes, Paris, 1959

VOVELLE, M., La Chute de la monarchie, 1789–1792, Paris, 1972

WATSON, S. J., Carnot, Bodley Head, 1954

WELCH, O. J. G., Mirabeau, Cape, 1951

WILLIAMS, G. A., Artisans and Sans-Culottes: Popular Movements in France and Britain during the French Revolution, Arnold, 1968

WOLOCH, ISSER, Jacobin Legacy, Princeton University Press, 1970

WRIGHT, D. G., Revolution and Terror in France, 1789–1795, Longman, 1974

YOUNG, ARTHUR, Travels in France, 1792, 2 vols.

SEARCHABLE TERMS

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.

‘active’ citizens, 147, 153

Adélaïde, Daughter of France, 119

Aiguillon, Armand, Duc d’, 42, 94

Alembert, Jean le Rond d’, 29, 205

Aligre, Étienne d’, 38, 305

Amar, J. A. B., 229, 242, 305

Ancients, Council of, 282, 297, 298, 299, 302

army, its state in 1792, 145; conscription, 216; purges demanded, 168, 215; mood of, 295

Artois, Charles, Comte d’, later King Charles X (1757–1836), 162; personality, 25, 305; and Third Estate, 60; at séance royale, 61, 62; flees abroad, 89; his colour, 90; counter-revolutionary, 117; advocates war, 143; later life, 305

Assembly of Notables, 38, 39, 44

Auch, Martin d’, 60

Augeard, 95, 305

Augereau, Pierre-François, 297, 305

Austria, Declaration of Pillnitz, 143; France at war with, 145, 202; battle of Jemappes, 193; battle of Fleurus, 257; defeated, and Treaty of Campo-Formio, 296

Ayen, Duchesse d’, 247

Azéma, Michel, 159

Babeuf, François-Noel, called Gracchus Babeuf (1760–97), 293–4

Bailly, Jean-Sylvain (1736–93), and Estates General debates, 53, 58; and National Assembly, 60; seeks admission to séance royale, 60; supports Mirabeau, 62; on enthusiasm in Paris, 87, 89; Mayor of Paris, 88; on popularity of Louis XVI, 91; on state of anarchy, 92; confronts mob at Tuileries, 118; and flight of royal family, 124; monarchien, 133; and Champ de Mars massacre, 135; ultimate fate, 135, 142; execution, 224–5

bals des victimes, 274

Barbaroux, Charles, 141–2, 200, 306

Barentin, Charles de, 40, 51, 52, 61, 306

Barère, Bertrand (1755–1841), 90, 271, 272, 274, 306

Barnave, Antoine (1761–93), demands recall of Necker, 88; apologist for murder, 93; and return of royal family to Paris, 128, 129; and Queen, 133; execution, 142, 225

Barras, Paul-François, Vicomte de (1755–1829), Terror at Toulon, 227; on fear of Robespierre, 254; and Robespierre, 258, 266; takes military command, 265; becomes reactionary, 271; and insurrection of Lepeletier sectionnaires, 284; and Bonaparte, 285; and journées of Vendémiaire, 286, 287; unrespected Director, 291; and ‘Conspiracy of Equals’, 294; and coup d’état of 18 Fructidor, 295; and Josephine de Beauharnais, 295; and Ducos, 299; and coup d’état of Brumaire, 302; resigns from Directory, 302; later life, 306