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Vendémiaire (1795)

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Vendémiaire (1795)
NameVendémiaire (1795)
Date5 October 1795
PlaceParis, France
ResultSuppression of Royalist insurrection; consolidation of the French Directory
Combatant1French First Republic
Combatant2Royalist insurgents
Commander1Paul Barras, Lazare Carnot, Napoléon Bonaparte, Jean-François Reubell
Commander2Comte de Lyon (Louis Stanislas Xavier), Armand-Gaston Camus
Strength1National Guard, Army of Paris, artillery batteries
Strength2Parisian royalists, sections of the National Guard
Casualties1Estimates vary
Casualties2Estimates vary

Vendémiaire (1795) was an insurrection in Paris on 13 Vendémiaire Year IV (5 October 1795) that aimed to overturn the French First Republic and restore the Bourbon Restoration line by force. The uprising was suppressed decisively by troops loyal to the Directory, commanded in the field by Napoléon Bonaparte, consolidating the authority of the Thermidorian Reaction leadership and marking a turning point in the aftermath of the Reign of Terror and the French Revolution. The event influenced the careers of numerous figures associated with the Consulate and the later First French Empire.

Background and Political Context

The insurrection occurred amid the political turmoil following the fall of Maximilien Robespierre and the end of the Committee of Public Safety dominance, during the period known as the Thermidorian Reaction. The National Convention had adopted the Constitution of Year III, creating the Directory (France) and the bicameral legislature of the Council of Five Hundred and the Council of Ancients. Political polarization persisted between Jacobins, Montagnards, Girondins, and the resurgent Royalists, including supporters of the exiled Count of Provence and the Count of Artois (Charles X). Economic distress, inflation, and food shortages exacerbated unrest in Parisian Sections of Paris such as the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, where politicized militants and veterans of the Paris Commune (1792) remained active. Internationally, the War of the First Coalition and campaigns by the Army of the North and the Armée de Sambre-et-Meuse framed fears of counter-revolution and foreign intervention by monarchist coalitions like Great Britain, Austria, and the Kingdom of Prussia.

Course of the Insurrection

On 13 Vendémiaire, armed Royalists and hostile delegates from several Sections of Paris gathered at the Palais Bourbon and marched toward the Place de la Concorde and the Tuileries Palace, seeking to seize the legislative assemblies and overthrow the Directory. The National Guard and elements of the Parisian militia split between sympathizers and loyalists; tensions intensified at barricades near the Rue de Rivoli and the Place Vendôme. The Directory recalled the Army of Paris under figures like Paul Barras and Lazare Carnot; the executive entrusted command of artillery to Napoléon Bonaparte, newly returned from the Siege of Toulon and active in the Italian theatre. Bonaparte deployed grapeshot and cannon to clear streets at strategic locations such as the Rue Saint-Honoré, decisively breaking the insurgent columns. The decisive defense of legislative halls by units loyal to the Directory (France) prevented Royalists from occupying the Hôtel de Ville or forcing a coup. Skirmishes subsided by nightfall as revolutionary tribunals and military detachments arrested hundreds of insurgents.

Key Figures and Forces

Military and political leaders involved included Napoléon Bonaparte, whose artillery tactics earned him the sobriquet "the one who saved the Republic"; members of the Directory such as Paul Barras, Jean-François Reubell, Louis Marie de La Révellière-Lépeaux, and Étienne-François Le Tourneur; and influential Thermidorians like Lazare Carnot and Jean-Lambert Tallien. On the Royalist side, prominent émigrés and legitimists such as the exiled Comte d'Artois (Charles X), supporters of the Comte de Provence (Louis XVIII), and Parisian leaders from conservative clubs and sections marshaled insurrectionary ranks. Units present included battalions from the Army of the Interior, the Army of Italy detachments, Parisian artillery crews trained at the École Polytechnique and veterans from the Siege of Toulon. Political clubs such as the Club des Cordeliers and the residual networks of the Jacobins provided context, while municipal actors from the Section du Panthéon and sympathizers among printers and publishers in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Marcel aided mobilization.

Aftermath and Political Consequences

The suppression consolidated the Directory’s authority, enabling the Council of Five Hundred and the Council of Ancients to continue under executive protection and to pursue a program of repression against Royalists and Jacobins alike. Mass arrests and deportations followed, involving detainees sent to penal colonies and garrisoned prisons like Île Sainte-Marguerite and Fort de Joux; prominent suspects faced trials before military commissions influenced by Directory ministers. The event elevated Napoléon Bonaparte politically and militarily, accelerating his appointment to higher command and his later role in the Coup of 18 Brumaire that overthrew the Directory. The Directory’s reliance on military force deepened civil-military relations between leaders such as Paul Barras, Louis-Nicolas Davout (later), and Jean Lannes in subsequent campaigns of the French Revolutionary Wars. International reactions from monarchies including Spain and the Holy Roman Empire monitored the outcome as an index of revolutionary stability.

Legacy and Historical Interpretations

Historians debate whether the event represented a definitive turn from popular revolution to military-backed republicanism; schools of interpretation consider links to the rise of Bonapartism, the failures of the Thermidorian Reaction to institutionalize a stable republic, and the long-term decline of Parisian popular sovereignty embodied by the Sections of Paris. Revisionist scholars connect the suppression to broader processes of normalization under the Constitution of Year III and the state's monopoly on force, contrasting earlier narratives that emphasize the singular genius of figures like Napoléon Bonaparte with structural analyses invoking fiscal crises, veteran demobilization, and the role of provincial armies from the Armée du Nord. The insurrection remains a focal point in studies of the French Revolution's closing phase, cited in works on Revolutionary France, European conservatism, and the genealogy of modern authoritarianism within political histories of France. Primary sources housed in institutions such as the Archives Nationales (France), the Bibliothèque nationale de France, and contemporary newspapers from the Société Typographique period provide material for ongoing scholarship.

Category:French Revolution Category:1795 in France