Compare And Contrast The French Revolution And The American Revolution

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Revolutions by any country share a common thread with regard to the common citizens feeling as if the those in power are ignoring their basic needs. One common complaint that is equally found amongst revolutionaries is a lack of representation. Another common complaint is freedom from bondage. Both the French Revolution, and the American Revolution, were instigated around the subject of food and its taxation, but the outcomes from these two revolutions were very different. America gained its prize of freedom while France had only a short lived success, followed by a return to a government of Monarchy. In the end France did prevail in its desire for an elective legislature which allowed for representation of the common people. Any revolution causes many different effects to those immediately around them and sometimes ripples further away. American and France were no exception as the rest of the world watched.
Both the French Revolution and the American Revolution had food as a catalyst for their fight for freedom. The French Revolution began when the citizens of France were hungry due to the lack
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The short term outcomes were that “The monarchy was removed from power, the king and queen executed, and new forms of government tried in an attempt to find stability” (Wilde). The long-term differences are that France now has an elected legislature, “The idea of three ‘estates’ was abolished, as were noble and church privileges; nobility was completely ended, and church lands were nationalized and sold, causing a full tenth of all land in Franc to change hands” (Wilde). France was not trying to change itself completely but to become better and some of these changes were short-lived. The effects of the French Revolution also “reverberated throughout much of Europe for many decades due to in terms of nation-state divisions and, even more, of larger regional differences”. (Editors