Mirabeau's Foreign PolicyUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 1921 - 86 pages |
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Page 4
... Diplomatic Committee was established , the Assembly had foreign affairs fairly well under control . From the time that Mirabeau and Montmorin became friends until Mirabeau's death , foreign affairs were 5. Stern , Das Leben Mirabeaus II ...
... Diplomatic Committee was established , the Assembly had foreign affairs fairly well under control . From the time that Mirabeau and Montmorin became friends until Mirabeau's death , foreign affairs were 5. Stern , Das Leben Mirabeaus II ...
Page 5
... Diplomatic Committee that Mirabeau influenced foreign affairs . 9 In accordance with Article 34 of the Treaty of ... Diplomatic Committee , as it was called - a committee destined to play an important part in foreign affairs . It not ...
... Diplomatic Committee that Mirabeau influenced foreign affairs . 9 In accordance with Article 34 of the Treaty of ... Diplomatic Committee , as it was called - a committee destined to play an important part in foreign affairs . It not ...
Page 19
... Diplomatic Committee . On Augeot 25th Mirabeau reported on the behalf of this 33 committee . In discussing the question the Committee had been guided by the desire and necessity of peace . Mirabeau expressed regret that nations had to ...
... Diplomatic Committee . On Augeot 25th Mirabeau reported on the behalf of this 33 committee . In discussing the question the Committee had been guided by the desire and necessity of peace . Mirabeau expressed regret that nations had to ...
Page 23
... Diplomatic Committee for discussion . Why did Mirabeau want an alliance with Spain ? William Augustus Miles , a man of considerable diplomatic experience whom Pitt had sent to Paris in July undoubtedly for the pur- pose of breaking the ...
... Diplomatic Committee for discussion . Why did Mirabeau want an alliance with Spain ? William Augustus Miles , a man of considerable diplomatic experience whom Pitt had sent to Paris in July undoubtedly for the pur- pose of breaking the ...
Page 33
... Diplomatic Committee ] would not hesitate to give our opinion ; but we think it is wise to adjourn in- 65 definitely this question . " An applause followed . His mo- tion that the petition be dropped and that the King send troops to ...
... Diplomatic Committee ] would not hesitate to give our opinion ; but we think it is wise to adjourn in- 65 definitely this question . " An applause followed . His mo- tion that the petition be dropped and that the King send troops to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbé Maury abeau accepted money Albert Sorel ally American Historical Archives Parlementaires Assem August 25 August 25th Austria Avignon Bacourt Correspondence Barnave break carried Comte Corps législatif Correspondence between Mirabeau countries Cour de Berlin Courland Court of Berlin Diplomatic Committee Elliot England English exécutif sera tenu Family Compact foreign affairs France Frederick French Revolution French wines Fürstenbund Gouverneur Morris guerre Histoire Holland Ibid influence King L'Europe Lameth Leben Mirabeaus legislative body letter London Marck Methuen Treaty Minister Mirabeau accepted Mirabeau and LaMarck Mirabeau considered Mirabeau thought Mirabeau wrote Mirabeau's foreign policy Mirabeau's Speech Monarchie Prussienne Montmorin motion National Pact National Revival Nootka opinion Oscar Browning paix peace Pitt and National Policy of Pitt Pope Portugese wines pouvoir exécutif Prince Prince of Condé Prussia question right of declaring Secret History sembly sent Sorel Spain Spanish Stadtholder Stern tion Triple Alliance troops Vergennes William Augustus Miles William Pitt
Popular passages
Page 16 - Dans le cas d'hostilités imminentes ou commencées, d'un allié à soutenir, d'un droit à conserver par la force des armes, le roi sera tenu d'en donner, sans aucun délai, la notification au corps législatif, d'en faire connaître les causes et les motifs, et de demander les fonds qu'il croira nécessaires ; et si le corps législatif est en vacance, il se rassemblera sur-le-champ.
Page 16 - Sur la même notification , si le corps législatif décide que la guerre ne doit pas être faite , le pouvoir exécutif sera tenu de prendre sur-le-champ des mesures pour faire cesser ou prévenir toute hostilité , les ministres demeurant responsables des délais.
Page 16 - Le droit de la paix et de la guerre appartient à la nation. La guerre ne pourra être décidée que par un décret du Corps Législatif, qui sera rendu sur la proposition formelle et nécessaire du Roi, et ensuite sanctionné par Sa Majesté.
Page 16 - ... faire des préparatifs de guerre proportionnés à ceux des Etats voisins, distribuer les forces de terre et de mer ainsi qu'il le jugera convenable, et en régler la direction en cas de guerre.
Page 16 - Sur cette notification , si le corps législatif juge que les hostilités commencées sont une agression coupable de la part des ministres ou de quelque autre agent du pouvoir exécutif, l'auteur de cette agression sera poursuivi comme criminel de lèse-nation ; l'assemblée nationale déclarant à cet effet que la nation française renonce à toute espèce de conquête, et qu'elle n'emploiera jamais ses forces contre la liberté d'aucun peuple.
Page 15 - ... declared that while winning an apparent victory, he had suffered a real defeat. In reply to these accusations, Mirabeau published his speeches of the 2Oth and 22d of May, and sent copies to the various departments of France. It was immediately noised abroad by the Lameths that the speech of the 2oth had been systematically tampered with, certain expressions changed, others omitted, and still others added to render it harmonious with the decree passed by the Assembly; they charged Mirabeau with...
Page 2 - I, 176-7. be made to dissolve the Family Compact, provided that France can reckon upon the friendship of England in exchange. Mr. Pitt may count to a certainty on the concurrence of the people with this his favourite object. Mirabeau, Barnave, Lafayette, Frochot, and several other members of the National Assembly, are well disposed to dissolve the compact, but they require, if not an equivalent for the loss of Spain, a something to substitute in its place, so as to fill the vacuum in the foreign...
Page 16 - This entire sentence is omitted from the copy ; and in all places in the original where the assembly was allowed to approve the war, in the copy it is allowed also to disapprove it. In the copy, he stated clearly that " there can be no declaration of war without the concourse of the legislative body " ; the original contains no such declaration. The changes thus made, together with the corresponding expressions from the original, arranged in parallel columns, fill nineteen written quarto pages. After...
Page 15 - Under these circumstances, it would have been madness for Mirabeau to have attempted to maintain the ground taken on the 2Oth. The question was no longer one of royal prerogative ; it was a matter of saving his own public reputation upon which so much depended. This called for a change of base, and here circumstances favored him. Mirabeau seldom wrote his own speeches ; that of the 2oth had formed no exception to the rule. Fortunately for him, it had been composed in such ambiguous language that...
Page 15 - ... decree of the assembly. Mirabeau had apparently won the greatest public triumph of his life. The historians of this period represent him as coming forth victoriously from the struggle. This is not the truth. The discussion did not end with the close of the debate in the assembly. Mirabeau's opponents affirmed that in his second speech he had abandoned his original position and had taken practically the same ground that they took ; that the amendment to his project had changed the entire character...