Federalistic Insurrections

The federalistic Insurrections are risings which burst in province at the time of the French revolution, after the elimination of the Girondins, on June 2nd 1793.

Violently repressed by the mountain Convention, they caused the reinforcement of the Terreur and the central capacity. Dice the installation of the Common of Paris on August 10th 1792, was expressed the dissatisfaction with the provinces in front of revolutionary centralization and the dictatorship of Paris. The crisis became insurrection at the time of the ousting of the chiefs of Gironde who, for the majority, fomented revolts. The insurrection particularly touched the West, South-east and South-west. Marseilles resisted until August 1793. Lyon supported seat a two month old and the town of Toulon, supported by the English, went in particular in December 1793 thanks to the young person Napoleon Bonaparte. The representatives on mission provided with dictatorial capacities, succeeded in overcoming risings but the decentralizing work of the Constitution of 1791 was definitively ruined.

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