The British public debate over the French…
1791 CE
Initially many on both sides of the Channel had thought the French would follow the pattern of the English Glorious Revolution of a century before, and the Revolution was viewed positively by a large portion of the British public.
Most Britons had celebrated the storming of the Bastille in 1789, believing that France's absolute monarchy should be replaced by a more democratic form of government.
In these early, heady days, supporters of the Revolution also believe that Britain's own system will be reformed as well: voting rights will be broadened and redistribution of Parliamentary constituency boundaries will eliminate so-called "rotten boroughs".
After the publication of statesman and philosopher Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), in which he surprisingly broke ranks with his liberal Whig colleagues to support the French aristocracy, a pamphlet war discussing the Revolution began in earnest.
Because Burke had supported the American colonists in their rebellion against England, his views had sent a shockwave through the country.
While Burke supports aristocracy, monarchy, and the Established Church, liberals such as Charles James Fox support the Revolution, and a program of individual liberties, civic virtue and religious toleration, while radicals such as Priestley, William Godwin, Thomas Paine, and Mary Wollstonecraft, argue for a further program of republicanism, agrarian socialism, and abolition of the "landed interest".
The events that precipitated the Priestley Riots come less than a month after the attempted flight and arrest of the French Royal family, and at a point when much of the early promise of the Revolution has already dissipated.
However the spiraling violence of the later Revolution is still to begin.