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Start of Liberalism
It's the result of the political enlightment ideals adopted by the bourgeoisie as the best alternative to absolutism. -
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French revolution
The French Revolution was a social and political conflict, with various periods of violence, that convulsed France and, by extension of its implications, other nations in Europe, pitting supporters and opponents of the system known as the Ancien Régime against each other. -
The Estates-General at Versailles
This assembly was composed of three estates – the clergy, nobility and commoners – who had the power to decide on the levying of new taxes. -
Storming of the Bastille
The storming of the Bastille took place in Paris on Tuesday, July 14, 1789. Although the medieval fortress known as the Bastille held only seven prisoners, its fall at the hands of the Parisian revolutionaries symbolically marked the end of the Ancien Régime and the starting point of the French Revolution. -
Tennis Court Oath
Serment du jeu de Paume was a commitment to a national constitution and representative government, taken by delegates at the Estates-General at Versailles. It has become one of the most iconic scenes of the French Revolution. -
The declarations of rights of men
It affirmed the right of men to liberty, property and recistance to opression -
Storming of the palace of Versailes
In the early morning of October 6, 1789, hundreds of starving, defiant women and men (some disguised as women) from Paris stormed the palace of Versailles, the legendarily extravagant seat of government in France. -
Constitution of 1791
It defined France as a constitutional monarchy and it established division of power -
Execution of Louis XVI
The execution of Louis XVI by guillotine, a major event of the French Revolution, took place publicly on at the Place de la Révolution ("Revolution Square", formerly Place Louis XV, and renamed Place de la Concorde in 1795) in Paris. -
Fall of the Jacobins
The most famous political group of the French Revolution, which became identified with extreme egalitarianism and violence and which led the Revolutionary government from mid-1793 to mid-1794. -
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Napoleonic Empire
It is also known as the Empire of Napoleon Bonaparte or the First French Empire, and lasted from 1804 until Napoleon's final defeat at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. -
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Fredinan VII
Ferran VII d'Espanya, dit el Desitjat (L'Escorial, 14 d'octubre de 1784 - Madrid, 29 de setembre de 1833), fou príncep d'Astúries i rei d'Espanya. -
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Absolutism restoration
Liberals mainly wrote the Constitution of 1812, but some parliamentarians of totalitarianism have already expressed their disagreement.The inquiries revealed that everyone wanted the return of Fernando VII, the monarchists wanted to end the constitutional system, the liberals wanted the recognition of the Constitution of 1812, as well as the changes made in the Cortes. -
Congress of Viena
The Congress of Vienna was an international meeting held in the Austrian capital, convened with the aim of re-establishing the borders of Europe after the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte and reorganizing the political ideologies of the Ancien Régime. -
Holly Alliance
The Holy Alliance was a point concluded, on the initiative of Alexander I of Russia, between Austria, Russia and Prussia on 26 September 1815 in Paris, after the Battle of Waterloo. -
The death of Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleon I Bonaparte was a French military and statesman, republican general during the French Revolution and the Directory, -
Liberal revolution in France
The Revolution of 1830 was a revolutionary process that began in Paris, France, with the so-called July Revolution or the Three Glorious (Trois Glorieuses) revolutionary days in Paris that brought Louis-Philippe I of France to the throne and opened the period known as the July Monarchy. -
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National unifications
Italian Unification was the historical process which, in the course of the 19th century, led to the union of the various states into which the Italian peninsula was divided, most of which were linked to dynasties considered "non-Italian", such as the Habsburgs or the Bourbons. -
Italian unification
The Italian Unification was given because since the disappearance of the Roman Empire at the end of the Old and beginning of the Middle Ages, they had not been able to unify into a single state, but were fragmented, integrating certain kingdoms and other autonomous states. However, it was in the second half of the 19th century that the nationalist and unificationist yearning that stirred Europe also proved to be strong in Italy. Thus it was that the Italian states. -
German unification
The German Empire was founded on 18 January 1871 after Prussia's victory in the Franco-Prussian War and was the unification of the various German states around Prussia, excluding Austria, under the leadership of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. -
Sufragism in Great Britain
These were the marches made by women for their right to vote, in the end, they managed to let women over 30 vote