La loi des suspects del 1793 e i migranti: il terrore all'ordine del giorno

With the emergence of the Terror and the seizure by the Giacobins, the French Revolution reaches its most extreme moment. The breaking point generated four years earlier not only destroys the society of the old regime, but also has negative consequences on the law side. In 1793 the national Conventi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vincenzo Toscano
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Cátedra Internacional Conjunta Inocencio III 2020-06-01
Series:Vergentis. Revista de Investigación de la Cátedra Internacional Conjunta Inocencio III
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Online Access:https://vergentis.ucam.edu/index.php/vergentis/article/view/179/144
Description
Summary:With the emergence of the Terror and the seizure by the Giacobins, the French Revolution reaches its most extreme moment. The breaking point generated four years earlier not only destroys the society of the old regime, but also has negative consequences on the law side. In 1793 the national Convention approves a legislative provision that dissolves any glimmer of reason: the Law of suspects, followed by further measures of a similar nature. For the fear of being considered traitors to the homeland and inevitably condemned to death, thousand of French emigrate beyond the borders of their own country, in a forced exodus with uncertain consequences.
ISSN:2445-2394
2445-2394