Why was the reign of the restored Bourbons, 1814-30, so brief ?

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Why was the reign of the restored Bourbons, 1814-30, so brief ?

Louis had, in 1814, agreed to rule by the terms of the Charter drawn up by his representatives and those of the Napoleonic establishment. Its liberal appearance was helpful if at times misleading, but religious and personal freedom and equality before the law, freedom of opinion and security of property from confiscation were all reassuring for those who had benefitted from the last 25 years of change. The parliament that was set up had little freedom of action and was elected on a very narrow franchise based on property qualifications. The Charter however ensured the acquiescense of the middle ranks of French society who had a great wish for stability but much to lose in any full scale reaction to restore the Ancien Regime.

Louis was also assissted by the exhaustion and the apathy brought on by the appaling cost, in lives and taxes, of Napoleon's adventures. This gave him time to establish his regime. His mistakes were trivial, flags and the like, but his dangers great. The Assembly elected in 1815 was dominated by the Ultras who now organised the 'White Terror' of revenge against known Bonapartists and Republicans. At this point Louis could well, with Ultra support, have carried out a coup to restore the power and trappings of the Ancien Regime. To his great credit he turned his back on this temptation and, by supporting the moderate ministry of Decazes from 1816 to 1820, probably played the key role in the successful restoration of the Bourbons as a regime which was acceptable to enough Frenchmen to ensure its survival. He was assisted by good harvests and general economic recovery but his own good sense in limiting, so far as he was able, the excesses of the privileged survivors of pre-revolutionary France, has been given l

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ess then just recognition in the restoration of the Bourbon regime.

The assassination of Louis' nephew the Duke de Berri marked a turning point, for from 1820 Louis, older and a sick man, proved unable to resist reactionary pressure. By the time of his death in 1824 the regime had a less liberal appearance and the way was already marked for the full royalist reaction which Charles X intended to mount.

The end of the Bourbons may simply be explained in the suggestion that, in his eagerness to restore the full glory of the Ancien Regime, Charles X forgot the ...

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