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See also: political association which played a prominent See also: part during the French Revolution
.
It was founded on the 16t*i of See also: July 1791 by several members of the Jacobin See also: Club, who refused to sign a petition presented by this See also: body, demanding the deposition of See also: Louis XVI
.
Among the dissident members were B
.
Barere, and E
.
J
.
Sieyes, who were later joined by other politicians, among them being
See also: Dupont de Nemours
.
The name of Feuillants was popularly given to this See also: group of men, because they met in the See also: fine buildings which had been occupied by the religious See also: order bearing this name, in the rue See also: Saint-Honore, near the Place See also: Vendome, in See also: Paris
.
The members of the club preserved the title of Amis de la Constitution, as being a sufficient indication of the See also: line they intended to pursue
.
This consisted in opposing everything not contained in the Constitution; in their opinion, the latter was in need of no modification, and they hated alike all those who were opposed to it, whether emigres or See also: Jacobins; they affected to avoid all political discussion, and called themselves merely a " conservative See also: assembly."
This attitude they maintained after the Constituent Assembly had been succeeded by the Legislative, but not many of the new deputies became members of the club
.
With the rapid growth of extreme democratic ideas the Feuillants soon began to be looked upon as reactionaries, and to be classed with " aristocrats." They did, indeed, represent the aristocracy of See also: wealth, for. they had to pay a subscription of four louis, a large sum at that See also: time, besides six livres for attendance
.
Moreover, the luxury with which they surrounded themselves, and the restaurant which they had annexed to their club, seemed to See also: mock the misery of the See also: half-starved See also: proletariat, and added to the suspicion with which they were viewed, especially after the popular triumphs of the 20th of See also: June and the loth of See also: August 1792 (see FRENCH REVOLUTION)
.
A few days after the insurrection of the loth of August, the papers of the Feuillants were seized, and a See also: list was published containing the names of 841 members proclaimed as suspects
.
This was the See also: death-See also: blow of the dub
.
It had made an attempt, though a weak one, to oppose the forward See also: march of the Revolution, but, unlike the Jacobins, had never sent out branches into the provinces
.
The name of Feuillants, as a party designation, survived the club
.
It was applied to those wl advocated a policy of " cowardly moderation," and feuillantisme was associated with aristocratic in the mouths of the sansculottes
.
The
See also: act of separation of the Feuillants from the Jacobins was published in a pamphlet dated the 16th of July 1791, beginning with the words, See also: Les Membres de l'assemblee rationale
.
(Paris, 1791)
.
The statutes of the club were also published in Paris
.
See also A
.
See also: Aulard, Histoire politique de la Revolution franraise (Paris, 1903), 2nd ed., p
.
153
.
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