Georges Jacques Danton was born on October 28, 1759 in Arcis-sur-Aube, a department in north-central France. Danton was born into a bourgeois family and his parents were expecting him to become a priest. But, Danton preferred the law, he had a good education in his native town at Troyes, the commune and capital of the Aube Department. He later moved to Paris and being born a well public speaker, he rose in his profession. By 1785, Danton was a well known, successful practitioner before the Parliament
Was Georges Danton or Maximilien Robespierre the hero in Andrzej Wajda’s film adaptation: Danton? During the reign of terror somewhere between 1793-1794 France, Georges Danton, played by Gerard Depardieu, is advocating the end of the terror while taking on Maximilien Robespierre and the Hebertists. In the film, we see Robespierre, played by Wojciech Pszoniak, acting as a sort of dictator towards the people. The peasants are in line for food and the montagnards are rucking up a storm due to high tensions
Georges Jacques Danton was born on October 28, 1759 in Arcis-sur-Aube, a department in north-central France. Danton was born into a upper-middle class family. His parents, Jacques Danton and his second wife Marie-Madeleine Camus were hoping Danton would become a priest. But, Danton would rather include the law, he became a well performed lawyer as well as obtaining a good education in his home town at Troyes, the commune and capital of the Aube Department in which Danton was born. He later moved
Georges-Jacques Danton of France and Leadership What is a leader? A leader as described by Webster's Dictionary is, "person who has commanding authority or influence." A man in history who certainly fits that description is Georges-Jacques Danton of France. Danton had a trouble childhood that included losing his father before his third birthday, and having several encounters with animals that would eventually leave him deformed for life. Danton's early political promise showed most one
It was also believed that Danton had turned against the revolution. Danton was tried and executed, leaving Robespierre with more power than ever before. He was now the sole leader of the Reign of Terror; it was blatantly obvious he was the most feared man in all of France. Robespierre was the main
Marat was sitting in his bathtub, he received a visitor by the name of Charlotte Corday, who had been refused admittance earlier in the day. She claimed to have vital information on escaped Girondins and proceeded to list off the names of the missing Girondins. After he had finished writing out the list, Corday claimed that he told her, "It will not be long before they are guillotined", a statement she later changed at her trial to, "I will shortly have them all guillotined in Paris". With that
Historian Robert Schwartz’s commented, “however flawed it may be Danton (1983) can contribute to a valid historical understanding of the French Revolution.” How accurate is this statement? The 1983 art house movie epic by Andrzej Wadja, Danton delivers a beginners insight to not only life in revolutionary France, but also the political rivalry between Robespierre and the titular Danton. The film is set during the reign of terror in 1794 and while the basic plotline is certainly accurate, it does
The Move to Radicalism -Georges Danton led the Paris Communes and sought revenge on people who aided the king -Jean-Paul Marat published “Friend of the People.” -September 1792: National Convention began its sessions- Acted as ruling body of France -Convention : Lawyers, Professionals
September 5, 1793 A.D. and ended until the year of 1794 A.D. The Terror would claim the lives about 18,000 to 40,000 innocent people. “Thousands would die by means of the guillotine, including many of the greatest lights of the revolution, like Georges Danton. In the single month before it ended, 1,300 executions took place. The deaths can be explained in part by the sense of emergency that gripped the revolutionary leadership as the country teetered on the brink of civil war” (The Reign of Terror
Blood, guillotines, and revolts are words associated with the French Revolution, the reason for this is the revolution was a very violent period in French history. There was civil unrest, people were starving with no money to buy food and high taxation. The lower classes started protesting in the streets, which grew into riots. Revolutionary leaders started partaking in capital punishment and would execute those they deemed enemies of the state; including King Louis XVI and other nobles. These protests