22 solutions available
Question 1Explain why the artist has portrayed the nobleman as the spider and the peasant as the fly.
Question 2Fill in the blank boxes in Fig. 4 with appropriate terms from among the following:Food riots, scarcity of grain, increased number of...
Question 3What message is Young trying to convey here? Whom does he mean when he speaks of ‘slaves’? Who is he criticising? What dangers does he...
Question 4Representatives of the Third Estate take the oath raising their arms in the direction of Bailly, the President of the Assembly, standing on...
Question 5(1)Identify the symbols in Box 1 which stand for liberty, equality and fraternity.
Question 5(2)Explain the meaning of the painting of the Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen (Fig. 8) by reading only the symbols.
Question 5(3)Compare the political rights which the Constitution of 1791 gave to the citizens with Articles 1 and 6 of the Declaration (Source C)....
Question 5(4)Which groups of French society would have gained from the Constitution of 1791? Which groups would have had reason to be dissatisfied?...
Question 5(5)Imagine the impact of the events in France on neighbouring countries such as Prussia, Austria-Hungary or Spain, all of which were...
Question 6Look carefully at the painting and identify the objects which are political symbols you saw in Box (broken chain, red cap, fasces, Charter...
Question 7Compare the views of Desmoulins and Robespierre. How does each one understand the use of state force? What does Robespierre mean by ‘the...
Question 8Describe the persons represented in Fig. 12 – their actions, their postures, the objects they are carrying. Look carefully to see whether...
Question 9Compare the manifesto drafted by Olympe de Gouges (Source F) with the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen (Source C).Source FSome...
Question 10Imagine yourself to be one of the women in Fig. 13. Formulate a response to the arguments put forward by Chaumette (Source G).Source GIn...
Question 11Record your impressions of this print (Fig. 14). Describe the objects lying on the ground. What do they symbolise? What attitude does the...
Question 12Describe the picture in your own words. What are the images that the artist has used to communicate the following ideas: greed, equality,...
Question 1Describe the circumstances leading to the outbreak of revolutionary protest in France.
Question 2Which groups of French society benefited from the revolution? Which groups were forced to relinquish power? Which sections of society would...
Question 3Describe the legacy of the French Revolution for the peoples of the world during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Question 4Draw up a list of democratic rights we enjoy today whose origins could be traced to the French Revolution.
Question 5Would you agree with the view that the message of universal rights was beset with contradictions? Explain.
Question 6How would you explain the rise of Napoleon?