Robespierre : The Tyrant

             

Few historical characters excite the degree of controversy that surrounds Maximilien Robespierre, a mild-mannered 5'3" provincial lawyer who only lived to be thirty-six. He was a man full of hypocrisy and violence.  He was once described by a French writer Hippolyte Taine:

"In vain he detached himself from the action and raises his preacher's eyes to heaven, but he cannot hearing and seeing all around him, beneath his feet the cracking of bones, the flowing of blood, the insatiable gaping mouth of the monster he has trained and he bestrides." (Rude 104)

Robespierre was a tyrant and a ruthless, bloodthirsty dictator.  A leader without mercy, perhaps an example of the first modern dictator.  Robespierre, who played a large part in the French Revolution, was a tyrant and believed in murder of his own people.  His economic, social and political policies were unsuccessful and some horrifying. The economic situation in France during the Reign of Terror was untenable, Robespierre claimed he wanted to rejuvenate the system, but failed as he wanted to control every aspect of it.   The political policies passed by him were oppressive and unjust. Robespierre was indeed a murderous political despot and hypocrite in his own right.  The social policies were distressing and the need to be a total dictator of the country brought Robespierre to extreme means to gain his power.

Commencing with his economic control of the prices and inflations, which ruined French people’s chances at any acceptable living standard where they could not afford to even feed their family.  Jacobins were willing to enforce general control of the prices and supplies, which eventually emerged in the Maximum Law of September 29, 1793.( Rude 40 )   Robespierre was convinced that the riots that occurred (because of the food shortages) were provoked by aristocratic elements, he did not see that in reality people were starving in Paris and in the countryside. Robespierre continually stole food from poor peasant farmers to feel the Jacobins and the army, leaving them without any means of survival; little was done to help these farmers. (Palmer 67) 

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Agriculture was the backbone of the French economy, Robespierre accomplished to cripple the merchants by price standards, leaving the tradesmen with little if any income from the sales that were made.  This left two classes now despairing for means of income.  This price control was largely at the expense of the farmers and merchants. (Carr 131) Armed forces were authorized against the farmers, not only if they were not willing to give up all of the crops that they had worked for so hard, but even if they missed an item on a list of crops or goods that they produced. ...

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