Political clubs during the French Revolution [ Politics & Society / Clubs & Societies ]
… to these regulations since it was founded by deputies in the National Assembly. It was formed in the aftermath of the Women’s Bread March on Versailles (October 5-6, 1789), which resulted in forcing the royal family to decamp and live in … universitaires de France, 1989), p. 586. Class was not the only factor producing separate clubs. Gender was as well. Women’s clubs developed early in the Revolution, often as adjuncts of male Jacobin clubs. They initially tended to be … did in 1793, they were targeted by the authorities. On October 30, 1793, the National Convention banned all women’s clubs. The justification for doing so was sexist, but the ban was triggered by the outbreak of violence between …
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