Die Verfassung der Jakobiner von 1793 und ihr historischer Kontext
Nomos, 1. Edition 2019, 313 Pages
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On 10 August 1793, the French nation celebrated the adoption of the Constitution by the people in a gigantic procession. The Constitution of 1793 was not only an attempt to codify the status quo and the achievements of the Revolution, to cast it into a solid and fundamental form, to create a foundation on which to continue developing. It was also a reaction to the present, to the crises and catastrophes, to the internal and external war instigated by the bourgeoisie (the Gironde) and to the capitalist gifts bestowed on the poor and disenfranchised: hunger, need, misery and despair. Last but not least, the Constitution was the result of numerous debates and discussions, but above all of a multifaceted compromise.
The democratic and emancipatory ideas of the Jacobin Constitution of 1793 have never again been achieved or implemented in any constituent society. Is this one of the reasons why the Jacobins around Robespierre are mostly demonised and reduced to the terror they supposedly created, in order to discredit the memory of their political visions and their humanist heritage?
More Information
Edition | 1 |
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ISBN | 978-3-8487-5416-8 |
Publication Date | Oct 10, 2019 |
Year of Publication | 2019 |
Publisher | Nomos |
Format | Softcover |
Language | deutsch |
Pages | 313 |
Medium | Book |
Product Type | Scientific literature |
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- Additional Material
- Cover.pdf
- Leseprobe.pdf