Les revolutions
Il n'y a pas beaucoup de pays qui fait les revolutions sans beaucoup de violence. Tous les
revolutions ne sont pas positive. D'habitude un gouverenment mauvaise change a un autre
gouverenment mauvaise. Ce se passe souvent dans les pays de troisieme-monde. C'est
tres rare qu'un gouverenment change en emploiant un system democratique.
Il n'y a pas beaucoup de revolutions democratique. Par example en Russie dans
l'annee 1917 il y avait un grand revolution qui a change la Russie d'un pays avec un
monarchie a un pays communiste. Le gouverenment a change a communist parce que les
gens a deteste les grandes difference social et economique. Le systeme communiste a
egalise tout le monde economiquement et socialment. C'est tres different de le revolution
American parce que en Amerique nous voulions etre egal dans le societe mais pas
economique. Il n'est pas beaucoup de pays qui est devenu communist et meme la Russie
n'est pas encore communiste. Il y a seulment deux pays communiste qui existe
maintenant, la Chine et le Cuba.
Un pays qui avait beaucoup de problems avec les dictature militaire s'appele
Nigeria qui est dans l'Afrique. Le Nigeria a essaie pleusieur fois de changer le
gouverenment a un systeme democratique mais cheque fois le chef de le revolution qui est
toujours un official militaire est devenu avide et il a voulu etre un dictateur. Ce dictateur
n'est jamais un bon chef d'etat le gouverenment est toujour terrible et il y a beaucoup de
corruption. Ce pays devien plus en plus mauvaise parce-que les chef d'etat n'est jamais
assez bon. Un bon chose d'un dictature est qu'il sont tres facile pratiquer.
Les pays democratique ne marchent pas souvent tres bien aussi. Il etait beaucoup
de pays dans l'Amerique du sud qui a essaie de faire un systeme democratique mais il...
More The French Revolution
essays:
The french revolution- "The Terror was the triumph of violence over ideals"
... was indeed the triumph of violence of ideals. Bibliography: Bosher. Doyle, W The Oxford History of the French Revolution Encyclopaedia Britannica CD- Multi media edition (1998) Hibbert, C. The French Revolution Schama, S. Citizens Sutherland, D.M.G. France 1780-1815 ...
The Reign of Terror and the French Revolution
... the Reign of Terror was the climax of this terrible Revolution. The violence and paranoia of the sans culottes, the lust for political ... become the Insurrectionary Commune. They removed the royalists from any positions of power, along with replacing lawyers with artisans, and on ...
History: French Revolution: Discuss how the social and political situation made fertile ground for the French revolution
... G-d and only G-d can remove him from the Throne and not the people). A question arises : Should the social and Political factors have resulted in a Revolution of ... were going to get change, even if it meant with violence and murder. Regicide meant nothing to Third Estate Bourgeoisie who ...
Legacies Of The France Revolution
... Le Bon, an influential theorist of "crowd" behavior, warned that the French Revolution epitomized the irrationality, savagery, and violence of ... The Italian nationalist Giuseppe Mazzini took the left-wing nationalist position; he believed that nationalism should be revolutionary and allied with ...
Defining the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution.
... Revolution. Its twelve members were Bertrand Barère de Vieuzac, Lazare Carnot, Georges Couthon, M.J. Hérault de Séchelles, Maximilien Robespierre, and Louis de Saint-Just and the Hébertists, J.N. Billaud-Varenne and J.N. Collot d ...
The French Revolution
... THE REVOLUTION The Revolution of 1789 The first phase of the Revolution was marked by moral and physical violence. The ... the growth of a monied middle class that threatened the position of the established landed aristocracy. Other social historians emphasize the ...
Was Napoleon the son or the enemy of the French Revolution? In this essay, I will try and investigate whether Napoleon Bonaparte brought a positive change to France or was he just another tyrant.
... representative. In this sense he was the man of the Revolution (Lefebvre 1969, 68). Despite of his positive political changes, he restricted and limited some aspects in his ... by 1803 there were twenty-two of these, one allocated to each département, to assist in the formulation of policy. Perhaps the ...
"The French Revolution Owed Much to the Philosophes". Discusses the part of the philosophes in causing the French Revolution. Also deals with other long and short term causes.
... democratic state they desired. And, despite the direction that the Revolution went in after 1789, and how it actually turned out ... executive and judiciary powers. This allowed him to defend the position of the nobility as being necessary to stop either the ...