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14th
July - The History of Bastille Day
The French national holiday
commemorates the storming of the Bastille, which took place on 14
July 1789 and marked the beginning of the French Revolution.
Several factors led to the
Revolution. France had the largest population in Europe and not
nearly enough food to feed it. The wealthy and growing bourgeoisie
(the middle-class, merchants and businessmen) were allowed no
political input or power. The poor were in a bad situation and it
was getting worse. The country was nearing bankruptcy. By the late
1780s the people of France were fed up and began speaking out.
Assemblies were held and demands of a constitution were made. When
King Louis XVI and his queen, Marie Antoinette, tried to quiet the
unrest, but the people rebelled.
The Bastille was a prison and a
symbol of the absolute and arbitrary power of Louis the 16th's
Ancient Regime. On July 14, 1789 the masses banded together and
stormed the Bastille prison, a symbol of the corrupt political
system. This began the Revolution and by capturing this symbol,
the people signaled that the king's power was no longer absolute.
Although the Bastille only held seven prisoners at the time of its
capture, the storming of the prison was a symbol of liberty and
the fight against oppression for all French citizens; like the
Tricolore flag, it symbolized the Republic's three ideals:
Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for all French citizens. The
following year on July 14th delegates from all regions of the
France gathered in Paris to celebrate the Fête de la Fédération
and proclaim their allegiance to one national community. This
made France a paragon for the rest of Europe and established them
as a nation of liberty - the first time in history that a people
had claimed their right to self-determination. Thus the storming
of the Bastille marked the end of absolute monarchy, the birth of
the sovereign Nation, and, eventually, the creation of the (First)
Republic, in 1792.
Bastille Day was declared the
French national holiday on 6 July 1880, on Benjamin Raspail's
recommendation, when the new Republic was firmly entrenched.
Bastille Day has such a strong significance for the French because
the holiday symbolizes the birth of the Republic. As in the US,
where the signing of the Declaration of Independence signaled the
start of the American Revolution, in France the storming of the
Bastille began the Great Revolution. In both countries, the
national holiday symbolizes the beginning of a new form of
government.
Etymology -
Bastille
Bastille is an
alternate spelling of bastide: fortification.
Bastide comes
from the Provençal word bastida: built.
There is also a verb
embastiller: to establish troops in a prison.
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