Society of Revolutionary Republican Women

Club Patriotique de Femmes, c. 1792–1794, Jean-Baptiste Lesueur

The Society of Revolutionary and Republican Women (Société des Citoyennes Républicaines Révolutionnaires, Société des républicaines révolutionnaires) was a female-led revolutionary organization during the French Revolution. The Society officially began on May 10, 1793, and disbanded on September 16 of the same year.[1] The Society managed to draw significant interest within the national political scene, advocating for gender equality in revolutionary politics.

Background

After the beginning of the French Revolution, discussions around the role of women in French society grew, giving rise to a letter addressed to the King Louis XVI on January 1, 1789, entitled "Pétition des femmes du Tiers-État au roi" (transl. "Petition of women of the Third Estate to the King") that declared the need for equality in educational opportunities between men and women. Furthermore, the letter encompassed the demands of French women and requested general equality between the sexes.[2]

Their movement was further solidified by the Women's March on Versailles on October 5, 1789, demanding bread from King Louis XVI.[3] Although women played many parts in the French Revolution, this was the first event consisting entirely of women. The feminist newspaper Étrennes nationales des dames published an article calling on women to take an active role in the National Assembly and reminding them of the day, October 5, when so many women took a stand.[2]

In these early years, Dutch feminist Etta Palm d'Aelders published a pamphlet proposing that a group of women's clubs be organized throughout the country to initiate a welfare program.[4] In that pamphlet, she wrote,

Would it not be useful to form, in each Section of the capital, a patriotic society of citoyennes [women citizens] ... [who] would meet in each Section as frequently as they believed useful for the public good and following their own particular rules; each circle would have its own directorate...Thus, it would be in a position to supervise efficiently the enemies harbored in the midst of the capital and to differentiate the genuinely poor person in need of his brothers’ aid from brigands called out by enemies.[4]

During the specified period in France, political clubs were composed primarily of men, thereby excluding women from their activities. However, women became more involved in politics through mixed fraternal societies. As the concept of women-only clubs gained momentum, they gained significant popularity, particularly in the provinces. While a significant number of these clubs were dedicated to supporting men in the military, there were women who expressed the aspiration to participate alongside their male counterparts in more active roles. Subsequent historical research has identified approximately thirty women's clubs that emerged during this specific historical period.[5]

The clubs organised themselves well, with each having a presiding body which laid out rules for their specific clubs.[6] These clubs had a membership range of two hundred to six hundred members, with an active attendance of about sixty.[6]

Over time, the women's clubs began to widen their political scope and include other issues in their meetings. Soon, the issue of citizenship began to emerge. Not only did they want the title of citizen, or citoyenne, a designation as an inhabitant of the country, but also the rights and responsibilities that came with being a citizen.[6] One woman went before the National Convention to say,[7]

Citizen legislators, you have given men a Constitution; now they enjoy all the rights of free beings, but women are very far from sharing these glories. Women count for nothing in the political system. We ask for primary assemblies and, as the Constitution is based on the Rights of Man, we now demand the full exercise of these rights for ourselves.

In 1791, women's rights activist Olympe de Gouges published one of the most prominent women's rights documents of that time period, The Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Female Citizen. This document introduced the issue of women's rights directly into the French Revolution. It argued that sexual equality had a place in the revolution and that women deserved equal rights.[8]

Origins

In 1793, political chaos reigned. The Jacobins, the leading political force of the era, now allied with the sans-culottes and the Cordeliers, a radical political club in Paris. The coalition took a far-left position, supporting price controls and, what most people deemed, ruthless punishments against those who disputed their views. Rivaling them were the Girondins, who maintained support for a free market.[9] In February 1793, a group of women from the Section des Quatre Nations requested the use of the meeting hall of the Jacobins, for a meeting of their own. The Jacobins refused. Some say that they feared a "massive women's protest."[9] The group of women, who now called themselves the Assembly of Republican Women, persisted and received permission from the Fraternal Society of Patriots of Both Sexes to use their meeting hall.[6] This Assembly's main aim was toward economic stability. However, for some they had larger aspirations and wanted to strive for more political activity.

On May 10, 1793, the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women was formed. Though it was a feminist society, its primary purpose was in defending the revolution. Founders of the society, Pauline Léon and Claire Lancombe, officially registered "The Society of Revolutionary Republican Women" at the Paris Commune.[2] Historian Dominique Godineau [fr] writes,[6]

Several citoyennes presented themselves to the secretariat of the municipality and...declared their intention of assembling and forming a society which admits only women. The Society has for its objective deliberation on the means of frustrating the projects of the republic's enemies. It will bear the name of Revolutionary Republic Society and will meet in the library of the Jacobins, rue Saint-Honoré.

National influence

Rules and regulations were soon established, and soon the Society was a major political player. Several accounts report that the women of the Society would wear red caps of liberty to signify their alliance with the Revolution. They began to have regular meetings and attend National Convention assemblies, which were open to the public. At the Convention, members of the galleries would cheer at speeches they agreed with and boo and make a general ruckus at ones they disagreed with. The Girondins grew tired of the heckling and designated specific galleries for Girondin supporters. The Society was outraged, and at their next meeting, a motion was passed to take direct action to prevent it. From then on, women from the Society would stand guard at the doors to these specific galleries, refusing entrance to them.[6] The Society also worked jointly with the Cordeliers club on several occasions. On May 19, they presented to the Convention a joint delegation to demand harsher laws for counter-revolutionaries and those suspected of being counter-revolutionaries.

Very soon after came the uprising of May 31 to June 2. Around 30 Girondins were expelled from the Convention, leaving the Montagnards as the main political force. The Society aided the insurrection, supporting the radical Jacobins of the Mountain. When the new Montagnard Constitution was adopted in late June, the Society praised it and the Convention, joining in celebratory festivities.[6] They continued to support the new policies and delegations presented by the Jacobins.

On July 13, 1793, Jean-Paul Marat, a left-wing radical whom the Society admired, was stabbed to death by Girondin-sympathizer Charlotte Corday, who hated Marat's radical leftist paper, L'Ami du peuple.[10] During Marat's funeral, the Society women carried the bathtub he was murdered in and threw flowers on his body.[6] On July 24, the Society swore to raise an obelisk in memory of his legacy, which was erected on August 18.[6] The Society remained politically inactive from the time of Marat's death to the day the obelisk was completed. Afterward, they vowed to focus on the issue of national security.[6]

The Society soon began to drift away from the Jacobins and toward the Enragés, a political group led by Jacques Roux, Jean Varlet and Théopile Leclerc, which supported strict economic control and harsh national security.[9] The Society began to feel that the Montagnards were not inclusive enough of the radical demands of the leftist Enragés.

In September, the Society campaigned for numerous petitions, helping enact much of the legislation throughout the month. Pierre Roussel reported hearing at a meeting of the Society a proposal "to present to the Convention... [a call for] a decree obliging women to wear the national cockade."[11] This petition became very influential in the history of the Society. On September 21, as per the Society's demands, the National Convention declared that all women must wear the tricolor cockade of the revolution. Many women hated the decree and refused to wear the cockade. Market women had already begun to turn on the Society and they opposed the Society's views on price controls, among other issues.[9]

Dissolution

September 16, 1793, marked the beginning of the end for the Society. Claire Lacombe, then president of the Society, was publicly denounced by the Jacobins to the Committee of General Security, who accused her of "making counterrevolutionary statements" and having associated and aided a "notorious counterrevolutionary, the Enragé Leclerc".[6] Lacombe was briefly detained, then set free, but the seed of distrust had been planted. The Society tried relentlessly to continue to petition the Convention, but most of the issues that they dealt with were deemed more trivial and less radical than their previous campaigns.

Around the same time, women, especially merchants, began to grow weary of women wearing the cockade and red liberty bonnets. Violence started in the streets between those women who supported the cockades, notably the Society for Revolutionary Republican Women, and those who did not. The market women went to the Convention with their problems and petitioned that the Society be abolished. On October 30, 1793, the National Convention decreed that "clubs and popular societies of women, under whatever denomination, are forbidden".[6] The Society of Revolutionary Republican Women was officially dissolved, despite numerous protests by leading figures in the club. Historian Olwen Hufton writes,[12]

The sans culotte, Chaumette said when he dissolved women's clubs in October 1793, [that he] had a right to expect from his wife [to attend to] the running of his home while he attended political meetings: hers was the care of the family: this was the full extent of her civic duties.

Club organization and regulation

The Society of Revolutionary Republican Women had a very organized governing system. The presiding officers consisted of:

  • Club President – Elected for one month at a time
  • Club Vice-President – Elected for one month at a time
  • Four Secretaries – Elected for one month at a time
  • Club Treasurer – Elected for three months at a time
  • Two Assistant Treasurers – Elected for three months at a time
  • One Archivist – Elected for three months at a time
  • One Assistant Archivist – Elected for three months at a time
  • Two Monitors – Elected for one month at a time

There were three committees in the Society: the Administration Committee, the Relief Committee and the Correspondence Committee.[13] These committees each had twelve elected members each. All of the voting within the Society was done by roll-call voting.

The Society itself had around one hundred seventy members, of which around one hundred were regularly attending meetings.[6] To become a member, one had to be "presented by a member and seconded by two more members", and she had to take an oath "to live for the Republic or die for it".[14] There was also a minimum age of eighteen, but women were allowed to bring their children with them.

Prominent members

  • Pauline Léon, co-founder and president
  • Claire Lacombe, co-founder
  • Anne Félicité Colombe, radical publisher
  • Constance Evrard, cook, associate of Pauline Leon, honored by the Revolution de Paris for having proposed to join the "battalion of tyrannicides".[15]

See also

References

  1. ^ Levy, Darline Gay; Applewhite, Harriet Branson; Johnson, Mary Durham (1979). Women in Revolutionary Paris 1789-1795. Urbana: The University of Illinois. p. 149. ISBN 0-252-00855-3.
  2. ^ a b c Melzer, Sara E., and Leslie W. Rabine. Rebel Daughters: Women and the French Revolution. New York: Oxford UP, 1992. Print.
  3. ^ Women and the French Revolution. Sunshine for Women, 2003. Web. 24 Nov. 2009.
  4. ^ a b d'Aelders, Etta Palm, Lettre d’une amie de la vérité, Etta Palm, née d’Aelders, Hollandoise, sur les demarches des ennemis extérieurs et intérieurs de la France; suivie d’une adresse a toutes les citoyennes patriots, et d’une motion a leur proposer pour l’Assembleé nationale, lue a l’Assemblée fedérative des amis de la vérité, le 23 mars 1791 (n.p., n.d.), in Bibliothèque historique de la Ville de Paris, 12, 807, vol. 1, no. 15, pp. 16-31. Found in: Levy, Darline Gay, Harriet Branson Applewhite and Mary Durham Johnson. Women in Revolutionary Paris 1789-1795. United States of America: University of Illinois Press, 1979. Print.
  5. ^ Melzer, Sara E., and Leslie W. Rabine. Rebel Daughters: Women and the French Revolution. New York: Oxford UP, 1992. Print
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Godineau, Dominique: Translated by Katherine Streip. The Women of Paris and Their French Revolution. United States of America: University of California Press, 1998. Print.
  7. ^ Scott, Joan Wallach. "French Feminists and the Rights of 'Man': Olympe de Gouges's Declarations." History Workshop 28 (1989): 1-21. JSTOR. Web. 21 Nov 2009.
  8. ^ Heuer, Jennifer Ngaire. "Gender and Women's Rights." French Revolution, Encyclopedia of Human Rights. Oxford Reference, 2009. Web. 24 Nov. 2009.
  9. ^ a b c d Levy, Darline Gay, Harriet Branson Applewhite and Mary Durham Johnson. Women in Revolutionary Paris 1789-1795. United States of America: University of Illinois Press, 1979. Print.
  10. ^ Semmer, Beth. Worker's World. Worker's World, 18 July 2002. Web. 21 Nov. 2009.
  11. ^ Roussel, Pierre Joseph Alexis, Le Chateau des Tuileries,2 vols. (Paris: Legouge, 1802), vol.2, pp. 34-46. Found in: Levy, Darline Gay, Harriet Branson Applewhite and Mary Durham Johnson. Women in Revolutionary Paris 1789-1795. United States of America: University of Illinois Press, 1979. Print.
  12. ^ Hufton, Olwen. "Women in Revolution 1789-1796". Past & Present 53 (1971): 90-108. JSTOR. Web. 21 Nov. 2009.
  13. ^ Stark, Nicholas. Political Parties of the French Revolution. Wordpress.com. Web. 20 Nov. 2009.
  14. ^ Réglement de la Société des citoyennes républicaines révolutionnaires de Paris (n.p, n.d.), in Bibliothèque historique de la Ville de Paris, 958939. Found in: Levy, Darline Gay, Harriet Branson Applewhite and Mary Durham Johnson. Women in Revolutionary Paris 1789-1795. United States of America: University of Illinois Press, 1979. Print.
  15. ^ Dominique Godineau: The Women of Paris and Their French Revolution
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