Girondins

Girondins
LeaderMarquis de Condorcet
Jean-Marie Roland
Jacques Pierre Brissot
Pierre Victurnien Vergniaud
Founded1791; 233 years ago (1791)
Dissolved1793; 231 years ago (1793)
HeadquartersBordeaux, Gironde
NewspaperPatriote français
Le Courrier de Provence
La chronique de Paris
IdeologyAbolitionism[1]
Republicanism[2]
Classical liberalism[2]
Economic liberalism[2]
Political positionLeft-wing[3]

The Girondins (US: /(d)ʒɪˈrɒndɪnz/ ji-RON-dinz, zhi-,[4] French: [ʒiʁɔ̃dɛ̃] ), or Girondists, were a political group during the French Revolution. From 1791 to 1793, the Girondins were active in the Legislative Assembly and the National Convention. Together with the Montagnards, they initially were part of the Jacobin movement. They campaigned for the end of the monarchy, but then resisted the spiraling momentum of the Revolution, which caused a conflict with the more radical Montagnards. They dominated the movement until their fall in the insurrection of 31 May – 2 June 1793, which resulted in the domination of the Montagnards and the purge and eventual mass execution of the Girondins. This event is considered to mark the beginning of the Reign of Terror.

The Girondins were a group of loosely affiliated individuals rather than an organized political party and the name was at first informally applied because the most prominent exponents of their point of view were deputies to the Legislative Assembly from the département of Gironde in southwest France.[5] Girondin leader Jacques Pierre Brissot proposed an ambitious military plan to spread the Revolution internationally, therefore the Girondins were the war party in 1792–1793. Other prominent Girondins included Jean Marie Roland and his wife Madame Roland. They also had an ally in the English-born American activist Thomas Paine.

Brissot and Madame Roland were executed and Jean Roland (who had gone into hiding) committed suicide when he learned about the execution. Paine was imprisoned, but he narrowly escaped execution. The famous painting The Death of Marat depicts the fiery radical journalist and denouncer of the Girondins Jean-Paul Marat after being stabbed to death in his bathtub by Charlotte Corday, a Girondin sympathizer. Corday did not attempt to flee and was arrested and executed.

  1. ^ David Barry Gaspar; David Patrick Geggus (1997). A Turbulent Time: The French Revolution and the Greater Caribbean. Indiana University Press. p. 262.
  2. ^ a b c "Girondin". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  3. ^ During the election of new deputies to the legislativeOctober 1 , 1791, it included a majority of 350 moderate "Constitutional" deputies, a right wing made up of more than 250 Feuillants , divided between "Fayettists" and "Lamethists" and a left wing where we note 136 deputies registered with the Jacobins (even if the Girondin general staff was not very assiduous, preferring the salons), among which several provincials (including Guadet, Gensonné and Vergniaud, originally from Gironde, explaining the name of the future Gironde), with a small group of more advanced democrats (Lazare Carnot, Robert Lindet, Georges Couthon). See Michel Vovelle, La Chute de la Royauté, 1787-1792 , volume 1 of the Nouvelle histoire de la France contemporaine , Paris, Le Seuil, 1999, p. 270-271 , and Jean-Claude Bertaud, Camille and Lucile Desmoulins , Presses de la Renaissance, 1986, p. 157.
  4. ^ "Girondin". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  5. ^ Phillips 1911, p. 49.