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  1. Explore. This exhibit provides an accessible and lively introduction to the French Revolution as well as an extraordinary archive of some of the most important documentary evidence from the Revolution, including 338 texts, 245 images, and a number of maps and songs. Lynn Hunt of UCLA and Jack Censer of George Mason University—both ...

  2. The phrase "liberty, equality and fraternity" encapsulated in three words the dream of a free and equal society in which people treated each other as brothers, rather than the few lording over the ...

  3. Liberty Equality, and Fraternity: Exploring the French Revolution - Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, 26 August 1789; Yale Law School - Lillian Goldman Law Library - The Avalon Project - Declaration of the Rights of Man - 1789; World History Encyclopedia - Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen

  4. The discussion of liberty, equality and fraternity has been a major influence on political thought since the time of the French Revolution. The case can be made for a much longer historical perspective on each – the libertarianism of religious dissenters, the egalitarianism of the Levellers, and the fraternity of the guilds – but the effect of the Revolution was to make these principles ...

  5. Nov 6, 2023 · Fraternity, often overshadowed by the more tangible tenets of Liberty and Equality, played an integral role in shaping the ethos of the French Revolution. At its core, Fraternity evoked a sense of communal belonging, a shared destiny, and a collective purpose.

  6. 1d. Democratic Values — Liberty, Equality, Justice. Liberty and equality. These words represent basic values of democratic political systems, including that of the United States. Rule by absolute monarchs and emperors has often brought peace and order, but at the cost of personal freedoms. Democratic values support the belief that an orderly ...

  7. Monarchy Falls. Although the monarchy had always struggled against elites over the definition of royal power, virtually no one could imagine France being governed without a king. At the outset of the Revolution, only a handful of citizens had even contemplated a republic. Yet only a few years later, in August 1792, Louis XVI was deposed, and ...

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