Answer the following about pamphleteering around the outbreak of the French Revolution, for 10 points each.
[10e] Just before the Revolution, the clergyman Abbé Sieyès (“ah-BAY say-YES”) published a pamphlet asking “What is” this group? This group comprised France’s common people, as opposed to the clergy and nobility.
ANSWER: Third Estate [accept “What is the Third Estate?” or “Qu’est-ce que le Tiers-État?”]
[10m] Jean-Paul Marat (“muh-RAH”) agitated against Louis XVI (“the sixteenth”) in this radical newspaper, which was originally called Le Publiciste parisien (“LUH poo-bluh-SEEST puh-rih-zee-EHN”). Marat was correcting a proof of this newspaper when Charlotte Corday murdered him.
ANSWER: L’Ami du peuple [or The Friend of the People]
[10h] In 1793, Napoleon Bonaparte wrote a pro-Jacobin pamphlet titled for “The Supper at” this town that impressed Augustin Robespierre. The pamphlet dramatizes a conversation between Napoleon and four merchants at this town after retaking Avignon (“ah-vee-NYOHN”).
ANSWER: Beaucaire [accept The Supper at Beaucaire or The Dinner at Beaucaire or Le souper de Beaucaire]
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