A second Constitutional Committee had quickly replaced…
October 1789 CE
Their greatest controversy faced by this new committee surrounds the issue of citizenship.
Will every subject of the French Crown be given equal rights, as the Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen seems to promise, or will there be some restrictions?
The October Days (5–6 October) intervene and render the question much more complicated.
In the end, a distinction is held between active citizens (over the age of twenty-five, pay direct taxes equal to three days' labor) which have political rights, and passive citizens, who have only civil rights.
This conclusion is intolerable to such radical deputies as Maximilien Robespierre, and thereafter they never can be reconciled to the Constitution of 1791.
Locations
People
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord
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Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès
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François Denis Tronchet
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Gui-Jean-Baptiste Target
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Isaac René Guy Le Chapelier
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Jacques Guillaume Thouret
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Jean-Nicolas Démeunier
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Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne
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Maximilien Robespierre
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