French Revolution Political Cartoons Explained
French Revolution Political Cartoons Explained
East India Blogging Co. Adding some spice to the world of history blogs!
Adding some spice to the world of history blogs!
The French Revolution was, without hyperbole, a mad time. So, it should come as no surprise that
the political cartoons that came out of the French Revolution were equally insane. Though we won’t
cover every era of the French Revolution through these cartoons, because that would take a book,
this article will explore the earliest stages of the revolution through Reign of Terror by means of
these strange, sarcastic pictures. So buckle up, because it’s about to get weird.
Table of Contents
French Revolution Political Cartoons and the Search for Social Harmony
Le Peuple Sous l’Ancien Régime
Trois Têtes Souls l’Même Bonnet
Political Cartoons and the Early Violence of the French Revolution
Adieu Bastille
Avant-garde des femmes allant à Versaille
French Revolution Political Cartoons and Louis XVI
Les deux ne font qu’un
Hell Broke Loose, or the Murder of Louis, 1793
The Reign of Terror and French Revolution Political Cartoons
Robespierre Exécutant le Bourreau
The Zenith of French Glory
Sources on French Revolution Political Cartoons
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12/8/24, 5:06 PM French Revolution Political Cartoons Explained
In the years leading up to 1789, the main point of tension in French society was the large economic
disparity between the haves and the have-nots. This large gap left the (often poor) many to pay for
the extravagant lifestyles of the few. Though this system had persisted for centuries, it was about
reach a boiling point. Much like the political cartoons that came out of the American Revolution a
decade earlier, the cartoons that depicted these stressors in French society started off more civil
before getting more insane.
The period of French history that led up to the Revolution is known as the ancien régime, or old
regime. In this era, French society was divided into three distinct classes, which the French called
estates. The first two estates were made up of the nobility and the clergy, who, between them,
controlled almost all the land in the French kingdom. The third estate, which comprised 90% of the
French population, were the ‘commoners.’ Not all the commoners were poor, some had even made
themselves rich as merchants, lawyers, and skill artisans, but they had none of the social prestige or
inherited, ungodly amounts of wealth that the nobility enjoyed.
Most significantly, the third estate was burdened with paying almost all the taxes collected within
the kingdom. And that’s what this French Revolution political cartoon is getting at.
At the bottom of the image, on all fours, an emaciated man has his hands and feet bound in chains,
his eyes blindfolded, and his mouth gagged by reins. He is bleeding from one side as a noble man,
wearing a jacket emblazoned with the fleur-de-lis, the symbol of the French monarchy, whips and
spurs him. Behind the noble, two clergymen appear – one wearing a bishops hat, the other with a
massive Jesus piece dangling from his neck. And, in contradiction to the skin-and-bones
appearance of the peasant, the noble and clergy men have rather, well, prodigious girth.
The meaning could not be more clear. The third estate supported the entirety of the kingdom, and
was slowly being worked to death by the Church and nobility.
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Eventually, the Third Estate decided it had had enough. Why should they have to keep the entire
nation on their back? It was high time the clergy and nobility started paying their way.
The early leaders of this rebellion against the established order, however, were the well-to-do
members of the Third Estate who primarily sought equal legal footing with the first two estates.
Compared to the later years of the French Revolution, this early phase had a polite, hopeful outlook
on the fate of the French kingdom, and mankind in general.
In this French Revolution political cartoon, entitled “Trois têtes sous l’même bonnet,” which
translates to “Three heads under the same hat,” a member of the Third Estate sits prominently in
the center of the image. Dressed like a man of means, though not in the gaudy outfits that
categorized the fashion of the French nobility, he holds a triangular painting of men from the three
estates. Interestingly, all three sides, and all three angles, of the frame are of equal dimensions, just
like how the man wishes all three estates to be equal. Finally, a liberty cap is perched on top of the
triangular frame. A symbol of freedom since the days of ancient Rome, the liberty cap here
symbolizes the desire for all three estates to share equally in freedom and liberty.
Farming implements surround the man to drive home the message that he represents the Third
Estate. Also, given that France’s economy was largely agricultural at the time, these symbols of
farming could represent the industry and wealth that France could achieve if all three estates were
made equal.
Finally, in the far left corner of the cartoon, a tablet rests against a tree and has the following
inscribed into it:
“Me, from all walks of life, the foster father, I said that everything would have to be like this [sic]
for our good King and my country.”
In this tablet, we see another appeal for equality. Without liberty and equal standing for the Third
Estate, France cannot achieve harmony or prosperity.
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It didn’t take long for the French Revolution to turn from idealistic pursuit of equality to violent
upheaval of the social order. At first, though, the violent demonstrations committed in the name of
liberty didn’t actually hurt anyone. These actions were more symbolic strikes against the
established order by the Third Estate after their appeals for equality fell on deaf ears.
The two most famous of these incidents were the storming of the Bastille and the women’s march
on Versaille.
Adieu Bastille
The storming of the Bastille was a huge event in not only the French Revolution, but the history of
France itself. It marked one of the first, and boldest, attempts of the lower classes to rise up against
the ruling elite.
The Bastille itself had a long history, dating back well into the Middle Ages. French kings had once
upon a time used it as a prison for criminals and political enemies. By 1789, however, it had largely
fallen out of use, and held only seven prisoners – not exactly Gitmo. Nevertheless, when the citizens
of Paris stormed the Medieval fortress at the heart of the city on July 14, 1789, they dealt a huge
symbolic blow to the power of the aristocracy.
In this French Revolution political cartoon, we can see this scene play out in vivid satire. In the
foreground, a man dressed like a member of the Third Estate plays the bagpipes. With his feet, he
manipulates a marionette string that runs through a member of the clergy and a nobleman. Behind
him, a lion, symbolizing the monarchy, lays at his feet, having been tamed. Finally, in the
background, the Bastille burns, as people on the faraway roof tear it to pieces with pickaxes.
Published in 1789, the year the French Revolution began, this political cartoon may have been a bit
optimistic. The fall of the Bastille, though a symbolic coup, hardly toppled the established order.
The Third Estate had made it known that they meant business, but the Revolution had only just
begun.
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Following the Storming of the Bastille, tensions continued to build in Paris. By the fall, the citizens
of the French capital had had enough. On October 5, 1789, 7,000 Parisian women marched en
masse to Versailles, the small town outside of Paris where the French monarchy resided, to demand
action from their king. Now known as the Women’s March on Versailles, it was arguably the death
blow to the Bourbon’s absolute power.
Beginning in a Parisian market on a rainy day, the march was originally inspired by the ridiculously
high price of bread – the main food staple for the lower classes across Europe. Unable to feed their
families, and knowing full well that Louis and Marie Antoniette were living like, well, royalty, the
women of Paris decided to do something about it.
In the French Revolution political cartoon “Avant-garde des femmes allant à Versaille,” we see a
rather straightforward interpretation of these events. The women of Paris gather, holding
pitchforks, lances, and other makeshift weaponry. The one metaphorical element at play here is the
sign held aloft by a woman in the middle of the crowd.
On the circular sign, we see the scales of justice – now in an even position as the women prepare to
dole out their own version of street justice on the king. Atop this sign sits the ever present liberty
cap, clearly communicating to the Early Modern audience that these women’s main objective was
to obtain liberty.
The day would end well for these women. They would go on to force King Louis XVI and Marie
Antoinette to follow them back to Paris, so they could see how their people were living. The
monarchy would neve again reside on the wondrous Palace of Versailles, and the absolutism of the
Bourbon dynasty was broken.
As the Women’s March on Versaille made plain, the French Revolution quickly turned on the
monarchy. While some wanted a constitutional monarchy in line with the British system, and others
wanted to establish a republic as the United States had done, all could agree that the absolute
power of the Bourbon dynasty had to end.
For the first two years of the Revolution, the royals got off pretty easy as far as revolutions go. Yes,
they were escorted from their palace in Versailles back to Paris by an angry mob of hungry,
pitchfork wielding women. But, hey, at least they weren’t killed.
By 1791, however, the public scrutiny of the king and queen started to rise. In the above French
Revolution political cartoon, “Les deux ne font qu’un,” which translates to “The two are one,” we the
essence of how the public viewed Louis and Marie Antoinette.
To the left, we see Louis, his chubby face accented by rosy cheeks and a smug grin. These features
seem to hint at the well-feed, vain glorious in nature of the monarch, which sat in complete
opposition to many of his subjects, who’s survival depended on a good harvest. But that’s not
where the artist stopped!
Louis’ body looks like a goat or a pig, and a pair of horns sprout out from the top of his head. But
these aren’t just any horns. There were a lot of rumors flying around that Marie-Antoinette
frequently cheated on her husband. So, the artist has here adorned Louis with a symbol everyone in
the 1700s would have known – the horns of cuckold.
Attached to Louis at the midsection, Marie-Antoinette has been given the body of a hyena. On her
head, she wears a crown of snakes, reminiscent of Medusa, along with ostrich feathers. Born in
Austria, the cartoonist gave the queen these feathers as a play on words between the French words
for ostrich (autruche) and Austria (Autriche).
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The larger message to take from this cartoon, though, is that the French royals were starting to use
up their good will with the people.
By 1793, Louis XVI’s luck had run out. After a failed attempt to escape Paris and seek foreign aid to
end the Revolution, the revolutionary government that now effectively ruled France, drug the king
out to the guillotine and chopped off his head. With the hopes some had held for a constitutional
monarchy dying with him, the period known as the reign of terror began with Louis’s death.
This seems to be the not so blunt message of “Hell Broke Loose, or the Murder of Louis.” Though
this French Revolution political cartoon originated in England, it can give us some interesting
insight into how both foreign powers, as well as French royalists, viewed the beheading of their
king.
Outside of France, pretty much everyone wanted the revolution to fail. Other than the Netherlands,
every other country was governed by a monarch. So, if the French could get away with beheading
their king, it would be bad news for them. We can see this sentiment echoed in this English
cartoon.
Devilish creatures fill the sky and surround the podium that Louis is laid out on. As the guillotine
comes down on the king’s neck, the devils sing the words “Ça ira,” the de-facto anthem of the
French Revolution, and “Vive la nation, or, in English, “Long live the nation.” By making devilish
looking creatures sing lyrics emblematic of the French Revolution, the cartoonist is hoping to link
damnation and regicide in the minds of the readers.
Following the death of Louis XVI in 1793, the period of the French Revolution known as the Reign
of Terror began in ernest. The Terror, as it more familiarily called, was a time characterized by
political suspicions, vicious rivalries among leadership, and a lot, I mean a lot, of killing. The Reign
of Terror only last one year. But, in that time, some 17,000 people were killed by the revolutionary
government across France.
Needless to say, not everyone was thrilled with the men in charge during this time.
In this French Revolution political cartoon, we see Robespierre in the foreground ready to execute a
man tied up and laying under the blade of a guillotine. Under Robiespierre’s feet lay to the two
republican constitutions written since the beginning of the revolution.
Behind Robespierre, a giant pyramid rises up to the sky. The words “Cy gut toute la France,” which
translate to “Here rests all of France,” are etched into the pyramid’s face. Finally, a liberty cap flies
upside-down from the top of the pyramid, symbolizing the inversion of justice under Robespierre’s
reign. And, just to drive the point home, the cap is burning.
In the background, dozens of guillotines loom as a reminder of the human cost of the Terror.
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Below him hang three members of the clergy, a nod to the revolutionary government’s seizure of
Church lands as well as its increasing secularization, if not atheism. From the iron rod on which the
clergy have been hung, a liberty cap-topped pole juts out, a symbol of what Gillray saw as the
hypocrisy of the revolution: wanton murder in the name of liberty.
Finally, he plays the fiddle as Paris burns before him, a reference to the Roman emperor Nero who
was rumored to have done the same as Rome burned.
In this man, we are supposed to see a revolutionary tyrant, who, in the guise of liberty, has set the
world on fire.
Below him, throngs of people gather in the square for the days execution, as four rather happy
looking revolutionaries work the guillotine. Above them, a robbed noble hangs, symbolizing the
scores of innocent nobility who lost their lives.
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