French Revolution
Collection by Jennifer Gillespie
A ten year period of violent social and poltical upheaval that abolished the monarchy and transformed France into a republic
The Paris National Guard on its way to the Army (detail) by Léon Cogniet (1836)
France, Versailles, The French National Guard leaving to reach the Army by Léon Cogniet as fine art print. High-quality museum quality from Austrian manufactory. Stretched on canvas or printed as photo. We produce your artwork exactly like you wish. With or without painting frame. (#288304)
LA FAYETTE (M.-J., Mis de). Procès-verbal de la confédération des Français, à Paris, le quatorze juillet mil sept-cent-quatre-vingt-dix. À Paris, Chez J.-R. Lottin, Imprimeur-Libraire ordinaire de la Ville, 1790, in-4° de 96 pp., broché, couverture
Buy online, view images and see past prices for LA FAYETTE (M.-J., Mis de). Procès-verbal de la confédération des Français, à Paris, le quatorze juillet mil sept-cent-quatre-vingt-dix. À Paris, Chez J.-R. Lottin, Imprimeur-Libraire ordinaire de la Ville, 1790, in-4° de 96 pp., broché, couverture. Invaluable is the world's largest marketplace for art, antiques, and collectibles.
French Peasant Bonnet (1790)
Detail of David’s painting of the Tennis Court Oath, showing Jean-Sylvian Bailly (1789)
Buy The Tennis Court Oath, 20th June 1789, detail of the group surrounding Bailly, 1791 by Jacques Louis David as art print. High quality museum quality from Austrian manufactory. Using state-of-the-art technology and old crafts, we bring the paintings of the old masters into your home. (#100870)
The Celebration of the Federation, Champ de Mars, Paris (detail) by Charles Thevenin (1790)
Liberty Leading the People (detail) by Eugène Delacroix (1830)
An Allegory of the Revolution by Nicolas Henri Jeaurat de Bertry (1794)
Guillotined heads of Jacques Rene Hébert, Jean-Baptise Carrier, and Maximilien Robespierre
Ghourd containing Louis XVI’s blood, collected right after his execution (1793)
Louis Antoine de Saint-Just by Pierre-Paul Prud'hon (1793)
Young, idealistic and prone to violence, Louis-Antoine de Saint-Just embodied the spirit of the French Revolution. He was devoured by the Terror he helped unleash.