Even though construction started in 1163, it wasn't complete until about 180 years later in 1345. ... The choir was completed in 1183 and in that same year work on the nave started. ... The west front towers were started in 1225 and finished in 1250. ... During the Commune of 1871, the Cathedral was nearly burned by the Communards. ... Luckily, Notre Dame survived the Commune. ...
Even though construction started in 1163, it wasn't complete until about 180 years later in 1345. ... The choir was completed in 1183 and in that same year work on the nave started. ... The west front towers were started in 1225 and finished in 1250. ... During the Commune of 1871, the Cathedral was nearly burned by the Communards. ... Luckily, Notre Dame survived the Commune. ...
Soon after that Louis XVI starts to resist the National Assembly, which leads to the fall of Bastille, the great Fear, and flight of Varennes where Louis XVI try's to flee the country with his family before he looses all his power. ... Soon after the development of the Paris Commune émergés, which were an even more radical group of sans culottes a lower middle class/working class types. The Paris Commune were part of the September Massacres and forced the creation of the Convention. ... In order for a law to get passed it would start out with either the Council of Elders or ...
The Paris Commune took over control of Paris. ... Every citizen was required to carry an identity card issued by his local commune, called Certificates of Good Citizenship. ... The Revolutionary Communes had committees that watched everyone in the neighborhood and special passes were needed to travel from one city to another. ... The purge, the commune, the color red as a symbol of statism, even the political terms Left, Right, and Center came to us from this period. ...
Dickens starts the story by describing the atmosphere in England by illustrating the poverty and the economic situation. ... This started the Reign of terror where anyone who was deemed an enemy of the revolution was thrown in jail and eventually killed. " "He is a traitor since the decree. ... It was the object of hatred to successive generations of French revolutionaries, and was eventually burnt down during the last days of the Commune in 1871 (Woodcock 407). ...
They had to start from nothing and build a government strong enough to govern a volatile, changing nation. ... The new government set up in Paris was weak and was overthrown within four months by counter revolution and the Revolutionary Commune was formed.3 The American and French Revolutions both resulted in Declarations of Independence and Bills of Rights. ...