Enragés

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Enraged Ones
Enragés
LeadersJacques Roux
Théophile Leclerc
Jean Varlet
Claire Lacombe
Founded1792; 232 years ago (1792)
Dissolved1794; 230 years ago (1794)
Split fromJacobin Club
IdeologyDirect democracy
Proto-socialism
Republicanism
Ultra-radicalism[1]
Populism[2][3][4]
Political positionFar-left
Colours  Red

The Enragés (French pronunciation: [ɑ̃ʁɑʒe]; transl. "enraged ones"), commonly known as the Ultra-radicals (French: Ultra-radicaux), were a small number of firebrands known for defending the lower class and expressing the demands of the radical sans-culottes during the French Revolution.[5] They played an active role in the 31 May – 2 June 1793 Paris uprisings that forced the expulsion of the Girondins from the National Convention, allowing the Montagnards to assume full control.[6] The Enragés gained their name for their angry rhetoric appealing to the National Convention to take more measures that would benefit the poor. Jacques Roux, Jean-François Varlet, Jean Théophile Victor Leclerc and Claire Lacombe, the primary leaders of the Enragés, were strident critics of the National Convention for failing to carry out the promises of the French Revolution.[5]

The Enragés were not a unified party, but rather a set of individuals who worked for their own objectives, and evidence of cooperation between them is inconclusive.[7] The leaders did not view themselves as part of a cohesive movement, with Roux even calling for Varlet's arrest at one point.[8] The notion of the Enragés as a cohesive group was perpetuated by the Jacobins, as they lumped their critics Leclerc and Roux into one group.[9]

Primary demands[edit]

In 1793, Jacques Roux delivered a speech at the National Convention known as the Manifesto of the Enragés that represented the essential demands of the group. He asserted that freedom and equality had thus far been "vain phantoms", because the rich had profited from the French Revolution at the expense of the poor. To remedy this, he proposed measures for price controls, arguing, "Those goods necessary to all should be delivered at a price accessible to all". He also called for strict punishments against actors engaged in speculation and monopoly. He demanded the National Convention take severe action to repress counterrevolutionary activity, promising to "show them [enemies] those immortal pikes that overthrew the Bastille". Lastly, he accused the National Convention of ruining the finances of the state and encouraged the exclusive use of the assignat to stabilize finances.[10]

Formation[edit]

The Enragés formed in response to the Jacobins's reluctance to restrain the capitalist bourgeois. Many Parisians feared that the National Convention protected merchants and shopkeepers at the expense of the sans-culottes, the lower-class working peoples. The Enragés, though not a cohesive body, offered these working poor a platform to express their dissent. Their dissent was often conveyed through riots, public demonstrations and passionate oratory.

Jacques Roux and Jean-Francois Varlet emboldened the Parisian working poor to approach the Jacobin Club on 22 February 1793 and persuade them to place price controls on necessary goods. The Enragés appointed two women to represent the movement and their agenda to the National Convention. However, the Convention refused to grant them an audience. This provoked outrage and criticism throughout Paris, and some went as far as to accuse the National Convention of protecting the merchant elite's interests at the expense of the sans-culottes. Further attempts of the Enragés to communicate their position were denied by the National Convention. Determined to be heard, they responded with revolt. They plundered the homes and businesses of the merchant elite, employing direct action to meet their needs. The Enragés were noted for using both legal and extralegal means to achieve their ends.[11]

The Enragés were composed of members within the National Convention and the sans-culottes. They illuminated the internal and external war waged by the sans-culottes. They complained that the National Convention ordered men to fight on the battlefield without providing for the widows and orphans remaining in France. They emphasized the unavailability of basic necessities, particularly bread. In his Manifesto of the Enragés, Jacques Roux colorfully expressed this sentiment to the National Convention, asking,[12]

Is it necessary that the widows of those who died for the cause of freedom pay, at the price of gold, for the cotton they need to wipe away their tears, for the milk and the honey that serves for their children?

They accused the merchant aristocracy of withholding access to goods and supplies to intentionally drive up prices. Roux demanded that the National Convention impose capital punishment upon unethical merchants who used speculation, monopolies and hoarding to increase their personal profits at the expense of the poor. The Enragés labeled price gouging as counter-revolutionary and treasonous. This sentiment also extended to those who sympathized with the recently executed King Louis XVI. They felt that those who sympathized with the monarchy would also sympathize with those who hoarded goods. It is not surprising that many within the Enragés actively worked against the Girondin faction of the Convention and, indeed, contributed to the demise of the moderate Girondins, who were widely seen as having fought to spare the king. Those who adhered to the ideologies presented in the Manifesto of the Enragés wished to emphasize to the National Convention that tyranny was not just the product of monarchy, and that injustice and oppression did not end with the execution of the king. In their view, oppression existed whenever one stratum of society sought to monopolize the majority of resources while simultaneously preventing others from gaining access to those same resources. In their view, the pursuit of resources was acceptable, but the act of limiting access to resources was punishable by death.

The Enragés called on the National Convention to restrict commerce, so that it might not "consist of ruining, rendering hopeless, or starving citizens".[10] While the Enragés occasionally worked within political structures, their primary objective was achieving social and economic reform. They were a direct action group, attempting to meet the immediate needs of the working poor.[11]

Women in the Enragés[edit]

Jean-François Varlet, though a man, understood the enormous influence women possessed, particularly within the French Revolution. Varlet formed the Enragés by provoking and motivating working poor women and organizing them into a semi-cohesive mobile unit. The Enragés often appointed women as speakers to represent the movement in the National Convention. Revolutionary proto-feminists held vital positions within the Enragés, including Claire Lacombe and Pauline Léon. The proto-feminists of the French Revolution are now credited with inspiring feminist movements in the 19th century.[5]

Key leaders[edit]

Jacques Roux[edit]

Jacques Roux, a Roman Catholic priest, was a leader of the Enragés. Roux supported the common people (i.e., the sans-culottes) and republicanism. He participated in peasant movements and endorsed the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, to which he swore an oath on 16 January 1791. Roux famously claimed,[13]

I am ready to give every last drop of my blood to a Revolution that has already altered the fate of the human race by making men equal among themselves as they are all for all eternity before God.

Roux saw violence as a key to the French Revolution’s success. In fact, when King Louis XVI was executed in January 1793, it was Roux who led him to the scaffold.[14]

Jean Varlet[edit]

Jean Varlet, another leader of the Enragés, played a leading role in the fall of the monarchy. When King Louis XVI attempted to flee Paris, Varlet circulated petitions in the National Assembly and spoke against the king. On 10 August 1792, the Legislative Assembly suspended the king and called for the election of a National Convention. Varlet was elected as a deputy in the new Convention. Even as a member of this representative government, though, Varlet mistrusted representation and favored direct universal suffrage which could bind representatives and recall elected legislators. He sought to prevent the wealthy from expanding their profits at the expense of the poor and called for the nationalization of all profits obtained through monopoly and hoarding.[15]

Théophile Leclerc[edit]

In 1790, Théophile Leclerc joined the first battalion of Morbihan volunteers, remaining a member until February 1792. He gained recognition in Paris through a speech to the Jacobins attacking Louis XVI. After moving to Lyon, he joined the Central Club and married Pauline Léon, a revolutionary woman. He approved of radical violence like the other Enragés, calling for the execution of expelled Girondins after the 2 June insurrection.[16]

Claire Lacombe[edit]

In 1793, the actress Claire Lacombe, another individual associated with the Enragés, founded the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women. This group was outraged by high costs of living, lack of necessities and awful living conditions. Lacombe was known for violent rhetoric and action. On 26 May 1793, Lacombe nearly beat to death a Girondin woman, Théroigne de Méricourt, with a whip on the benches of the Convention. She might have killed her if Jean-Paul Marat had not intervened.[16]

Other groups[edit]

To the left of the Montagnards and Hébertists, the Enragés were undermined by Montagnard leader Maximilien Robespierre and Hébertist leader Jacques Hébert, both of whom implemented some of their proposals in order to appeal to the same sans-culottes the Enragés sought to win over. Their ideas were taken up and developed by Gracchus Babeuf and his associates.

Another group styling itself as Enragés emerged in France in 1968 among students at Nanterre University. Inspired by, and closely allied with, the Situationists, these Enragés emerged as one of the leading groups in the May 1968 French protests.[17]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hugh Gough, ed. (2010). The Terror in the French Revolution. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 317. It was also encouraged by small group of ultra radicals, called the Enragés, or 'angry men'. They have attracted a great deal of attention because of their extreme radicalism but they were never a coherent group.
  2. ^ Leslie Herzberger, ed. (2007). The Structure of Thermidor: Some Case Studies. Xlibris Corporation.
  3. ^ David Andress, ed. (2015). The Oxford Handbook of the French Revolution. Oxford University Press. p. 526.
  4. ^ Peter McPhee, ed. (2014). A Companion to the French Revolution. John Wiley & Sons. p. 317.
  5. ^ a b c Jeremy D. Popkin (2015). A Short History of the French Revolution. Hoboken, NJ: Pearson Education, Inc. p. 68.
  6. ^ Paul R. Hanson (2007). The A to Z of the French Revolution. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 120.
  7. ^ R. B. Rose (1965). Enragés: Socialists of the French Revolution?. Sydney: Sydney University Press. p. 73.
  8. ^ R. B. Rose (1965). Enragés: Socialists of the French Revolution?. Sydney: Sydney University Press. p. 74.
  9. ^ R. B. Rose (1965). Enragés: Socialists of the French Revolution?. Sydney: Sydney University Press. p. 75.
  10. ^ a b Jacques Roux (25 June 1793). "Manifesto of the Enragés". Translation by Mitchell Abidor. Marxist Internet Archive.
  11. ^ a b Mitchell Abidor; Henry Heller (1 January 2015). Jaurès, Jean (ed.). A Socialist History of the French Revolution. Pluto Press. pp. 140–168. ISBN 9780745335001. JSTOR j.ctt183p2pt.15.
  12. ^ Jacques Roux. "Manifesto of the Enragés by Jacques Roux 1793". Marxist Internet Archive. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  13. ^ Denis Richet, "Enragés," in Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution, ed. François Furet and Mona Ozouf (Harvard University Press, 1989), p. 338.
  14. ^ Denis Richet (1989). ed. François Furet and Mona Ozouf. "Enragés". In Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution. Harvard University Press. p. 338.
  15. ^ Denis Richet (1989). ed. François Furet and Mona Ozouf. "Enragés". In Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution. Harvard University Press. pp. 337–338.
  16. ^ a b Denis Richet (1989). ed. François Furet and Mona Ozouf. "Enragés". In Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution. Harvard University Press. p. 339.
  17. ^ René Viénet (1992). Enragés and Situationists in the Occupation Movement, France, May '68. New York: Automedia.

Further reading[edit]

  • Hanson, Paul R. (2007). The A to Z of the French Revolution. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, Inc.
  • Giles, David (2003). "Représentation et souveraineté chez les Enragés (1792-1794)". In Le concept de Représentation dans la pensée politique. Presses universitaires d'Aix-Marseille.
  • Guérin, Daniel (1977). Class Struggle in the First French Republic. Translated by Ian Patterson. London: Pluto Press.
  • Leclerc, Théophile (2001). L'Ami du Peuple (1793). No. II. ed. Marc Allan Goldstein. New York: Lang.
  • Mathiez, Albert (January 1977). "Les Enragés Et La Lutte Pour Le Maximum". Annales Révolutionnaires 9. pp. 456–483.
  • Morris, Brian (1990). "The Sans-Culottes and the Enragés - Liberation Movements within the French Revolution". In The Anarchist Papers 3. Black Rose Books Ltd. pp. 132–152.
  • Popkin, Jeremy D. (2015). A Short History of the French Revolution. Hoboken, New Jersey: Pearson Education, Inc.
  • Richet, Denis (1989). "Enragés". In Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution. ed. François Furet and Mona Ozouf. Harvard University Press.
  • Rose, R. B. (1965). The Enragés: Socialists of the French Revolution?. Sydney: Sydney University Press.
  • Roux, Jacques (1793). "Manifesto of the Enragés". Translation by Mitchell Abidor. Marxist Internet Archive.
  • Slavin, Morris (1961). "Left of the Mountain: The Enragés and the French Revolution". Ph.D. diss. ProQuest. UMI Dissertations Publishing.
  • Varlet, Jean-François (1793). "Declaration of the Rights of Man in the Social State". Translation by Mitchell Abidor. Marxist Internet Archive.
  • Jean, Juares (2015). "The Enragés Against the High Cost of Living". In A Socialist History of the French Revolution. Pluto Press. JSTOR j.ctt183p2pt.15.