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Bastille Day Origin
Celebrated on July 14, 2007
Americans have 4th of July;
the French have Bastille Day. Bastille Day, on the Fourteenth of July, is
the French symbol of the end of the Monarchy and the beginning of the First
Republic. The national holiday is a time when all citizens can feel
themselves to be members of a republican nation. It is because this national
holiday is rooted in the history of the birth of the Republic that it has
great significance.
On July 14, 1789, an outraged group of Parisians stormed the Bastille, a
fortress and prison in France where prisoners of influence were held, in
hopes of capturing ammunition. Shortly thereafter, King Louis XVI and his
wife Marie Antoinette took refuge in Versailles as the violent peasants
pillaged and burned châteaux, and destroyed records of feudal dues; this
reaction is known as the grande peur (great fear).
Once freedom was won it had to be codified. Jurists, inspired both by the
philosophy of the Enlightenment and by a long-standing French legalist
tradition, dominated the Estates-General. This body, which became the
National Constituent Assembly after the Tennis Court Oath of 20 June 1789,
gave France its first constitution in 1791. Fifteen other constitutions were
to follow, leading to the 1958 Constitution which is in effect today.
For the peasant class, the Bastille stood as a symbol of the hypocrisy and
corruption of the aristocratic government - controlled mostly by nobility
and clergy. This important event marked the entry of the popular class into
the French Revolution. The French recognize Bastille Day as the end of the
monarchy and beginning of the modern republic. The lasting significance of
the event was in its recognition that power could be held by ordinary
citizens, not in the King or in God. Today, Parisians celebrate this
national holiday with a grand military parade up the Champs Elysées,
colorful arts festivals, and raucous parties marking the holiday.
Bastille Day was proclaimed a national holiday in 1880 and in 1848 the motto
"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" was reinstated. In France, most folks take
Bastille Eve off and celebrate with festive balls and brilliant displays of
fireworks. The day that follows is filled with parades, bands, dancing and
general good times.