The French Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Life & Change
Transportation & Tech

Revolutionary Symbols & Slogans
100

This King was the last monarch of France before the fall of the monarchy during the Revolution.

Louis XVI

100

Before factories, most goods were produced at home in this "industry" named for a small house.

Cottage Industry

100

Because they were small and could be paid less, this group was often used to crawl under factory machines.

Children (Child Labor)

100

This "iron horse" allowed goods and people to travel across land faster than ever before.

Steam Locomotive 

100

This three-word French motto translates to "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity."

Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité

200

This July 14th event is still celebrated as France's national holiday.

Storming of the Bastille

200

This fossil fuel replaced wood as the primary source of energy for the new industrial age.

Coal

200

This "Revolution" in farming preceded the Industrial one, leading to a massive population boom.

Agricultural Revolution

200

Samuel Morse revolutionized long-distance communication with this "dot and dash" invention.

Telegraph

200

This red, white, and blue flag became the symbol of the French Revolution and is still used today.

Tricolor

300

Representing the commoners, this group broke away from the Estates-General to form their own assembly.

national assembly 

300

This 18th-century "Spinning" invention by James Hargreaves allowed one worker to spin eight spools at once.

spinning jenny 

300

These overcrowded, unsanitary apartment buildings were where many urban workers lived.

Tenements

300

These man-made waterways were built across Britain and the U.S. to transport heavy coal and iron.

Canals

300

Named for their "long trousers," these working-class radicals refused to wear the knee-breeches of the elite.

Sans-culottes

400

She was the Queen of France, often falsely attributed with saying, "Let them eat cake."

Marie Antoinette

400

This process, named for Henry Bessemer, made the mass production of this strong metal possible.

steel

400

This law-making body in Britain passed the first acts to limit the workday for women and children.

Parliament

400

He developed a new method for building roads with layers of crushed stone, a term still used in engineering today.

John McAdam

400

This female figure, often depicted in art leading the people, serves as the national personification of France.

Marianne

500

This period of state-sanctioned violence saw thousands of "enemies of the revolution" executed.

Reign of Terror

500

This American inventor’s "Clermont" was the first commercially successful vessel of its kind.

steam boat

500

Edward Jenner developed the first vaccine during this era to combat this deadly "speckled" disease.

Smallpox

500

This 1851 London exhibition was held in the Crystal Palace to showcase the wonders of the industrial world.

Great Exhibition

500

This song, composed during the Revolution, became the French National Anthem.

La Marseillaise

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