The American and French Revolutions had several causes. The causes that led to both revolutions were very similar. Before the revolutions, the Thirteen Colonies and France were under rule by a monarchy. The monarchies treated the people unfairly. After hearing the ideas of the Enlightenment, the people were even more motivated for revolution. The people wanted a say and wanted…
Hundreds of French soldiers who fought for America were inspired by the experience. The educated French wanted the same type of change the Americans fought for. The American Revolution was fantasized about because intellectuals were unsatisfied with their countries social order. Europeans were under the same tyrannical stress as were the Americans. The Americans instilled confidence and bravery into the Europeans. Therefore, the French thought they could escape the oppression just like their counterparts did. To break out of the control of the monarchy, it started with government. The revolution opened the modern era in politics.…
The American Revolution began in 1775 as open conflict between the united thirteen colonies and Great Britain. By the Treaty of Paris that ended the war in 1783, the colonies had won their independence. While no one event can be pointed to as the actual cause of the revolution, the war began as a disagreement over the way in which Great Britain treated the colonies versus the way the colonies felt they should be treated. Americans felt they deserved all the rights of Englishmen. The British, on the other hand, felt that the colonies were created to be used in the way that best suited the crown and parliament. This conflict is embodied in one of the rallying cries of the American Revolution: No Taxation Without Representation.…
The French and Indian War ensured the dominance of English-speaking peoples over North America and set the stage for the American Revolutionary War (1775–83). At the end of the war France lost all of her lands in present-day Canada to Britain. With the French threat in North America eliminated, Britain and its colonies could wrangle over the nature of the imperial relationship. In addition, many of the men who would later lead the Americans in their struggle against the British, George Washington, Philip Schuyler, and Benjamin Franklin among them, rose to prominence during that conflict.…
The French revolution of 1789 had many long-range causes. Political, social, and economical conditions in France contributed to the discontent felt by many French people especially those of the third estate. The ideas of the intellectuals of the Enlightenment brought new views of government and society. The American Revolution also influenced the coming of the French Revolution. Three of the most important causes of the French Revolution included the lack of skill of Louis XVI, the vast gap between the rich and poor in France, and the revolutionary ideas of the Enlightenment in America.…
In the late 18th century there were two dramatic revolutions that happened. There was the French revolution and the American Revolution. The American Revolution was between the American Settlers and Great Brittan and lasted from years 1775-1783. The French Revolution was between the Clergy and Nobility estates and the 3rd estate and lasted between the years 1789-1799. The French revolution was more radical then the American Revolution because how the revolutions started the French people would kill anyone who supported the king and, the ways the revolutions ended.…
The comparison of the American and French Revolution is all very ironic. Since the French had more control over their people, a political revolution was less likely to occur. But since the American’s had already established the Constitution guaranteed individual rights and freedom, it enabled them to have a more rebellious nature and go for a political…
In the American Revolution, colonists were rebelling against their ruler. The colonists who rebelled didn’t kill King George III, while in the French Revolution they were also rebelling against their ruler but unlike the American colonists they beheaded their king Louis XVI. Both rebelling citizens, in the end gained their freedom and equality.…
As it is shown by the aftermath of the taxation, the taxes forced on the colonists created friction between Britain and their colonies. Certain events like the Boston Tea Party and the Boston Massacre stemmed from taxes and prompted the Revolutionary War. To conclude, the biggest cause of the American Revolution was colonial taxation from the…
Both of the Revolutions were the same and different in their causes. The American Revolution was about the independence of the country and France was mainly about human rights. A similarity they had for the cause of their revolutions was unfair taxation and also war debt. The Americans suffered from unfair taxation because the British needed to find a way to pay their war debt because they had recently fought a war which was the Seven Years War, but the “British were upset about the costs, and felt that the American colonists did not adequately share in the burden” (Armstrong 228). To pay up for the war debt and include unfair taxation, “Britain’s George Grenville and later Charles Townshend passed…
The American Revolution was the political catastrophe during the 18th century, in which the 13 colonies in North America joined together to break away from the British. The American Revolution was the result of a series of political, social, and intellectual shift in early American society. Many people believe that the American Revolution was simply caused by over taxation. There were three main conflicts that led to the American Revolution; the Enlightenment, The French and Indian War, and The Stamp Act. Why were these events so significant to this historical event?…
The political discontent seen in France was one of the causes of the Revolution. In the 17th and 18th centuries, France was ruled by an absolute government. The king had all the political powers. Anyone who criticized the government could be arrested and put in prison without trial. Louis XVI was king at the time of the French Revolution. He was more interested in hunting than governing France. He and his queen lived an extravagant life at the Palace of Versailles. They did not really care about the state of their country. The third was largely ignored when it came to political elections. The first two estates worked together to outvote the large third estate to keep them from becoming a threat to the power. American Independence sparks this French Revolution. The American Revolution also originated from political discontent. However, the America 's discontent stemmed largely from misrepresentation and not over taxation. The Stamp Act was merely a way for the colonist 's to pay for their own defense. Colonists simply felt that they had no voice in Parliament, which was no different from the rest of Britain 's colonies.…
While the timing and reasons leading to the French and American Revolutions were different, the two were similar in many ways including breaking free from oppressive government systems, including stemming off of the Enlightenment ideals when recreating their governments and furthermore, inspiring other countries to start their own revolutions an get rid of monarchy and to create a republic government.…
The American Revolution was an upheaval that took place between 1765 and 1783. The thirteen colonies wanted to be separated from the British Empire, but the King was not to keen on this idea. There were many causes for this: French and Indian War, Stamp Act, Townshend Act, and more. These things brought about effects: Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, Bill of Rights, and eventually, FREEDOM!…
One of the numerous transformations that happened circa the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was called The Revolutionary War known as the American Revolution. The American Revolution occurred in 1775 thru 1783. The American Revolution emerged from growing conflict between the 13 colonies of Great Britain and the colonial government. What prompted the American Revolution was that the British government needed to raise revenue by taxing the settlements which made the Stamp Act of 1765, the Townshend Tariffs of 1767, and Tea Act of 1773. This chosen Revolution went though economic struggles as well as politics.…