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Hébertist : ウィキペディア英語版
Hébertists
The Hébertists were a radical revolutionary political group associated with the populist journalist Jacques Hébert. They came to power during the Reign of Terror and played a significant role in the French Revolution.
The Hébertists were ardent supporters of the dechristianization of France and of extreme measures in service of the Terror, including the Law of Suspects enacted in 1793. They favoured the direct intervention of the state in economic matters in order to ensure the adequate supply of commodities, advocating the national requisition of wine and grain.〔Schama, 806〕
The leaders went to the guillotine on March 24, 1794.
==Rise to popularity==
The rise in power of the Hébertists can be largely attributed to the popularity of Hébert's newspaper, ''Le Père Duchesne''. This newspaper, which purported to present the frank opinions of "Père Duchesne," a fictional working-class furnace-maker, had a large following amongst the sans-culottes. The government-funded distribution of ''Le Père Duchesne'' to the French armies, a policy arranged by the Hébertist Minister of War Jean Bouchotte in 1793, widened support and sympathy for Hébertist ideas.
On May 24, 1793, the newly appointed Commission of Twelve ordered the arrest of Hébert, who had been using ''Le Père Duchesne'' to incite violence against members of the Girondin faction. The tremendous public outcry and civil unrest which ensued rapidly resulted in Hébert's release; however, rioting continued, culminating in a series of insurrections. On May 31, a large crowd of sans-culotte agitators surrounded the National Convention in an attempt to force its accession to their demands: the dissolution of the Commission of Twelve, the arrest of a list of Girondin deputies, a tax on the rich, and the restriction of suffrage to sans-culottes.〔Furet, 127〕 The Commission was abolished, but on June 2, the crowds - now supported by National Guard forces headed by Hébertist and newly appointed Commandant-General François Hanriot - returned. Hanriot threatened to set fire to the Convention if the offending Girondin deputies were not expelled. Ultimately, the arrest of twenty-nine Girondins was decreed, marking the end of the Girondin faction's political power.〔Furet, 128〕
Following the assassination of Jean-Paul Marat by a Girondin sympathizer in July 1793, Hébert positioned himself as Marat's natural successor in the affections of those who had shared the dead man's ultra-revolutionary beliefs.〔Furet, 141〕 The Hébertists' popularity grew. Their evident and increasingly destabilizing influence was disturbing to many less extreme revolutionary politicians, including leading Montagnard figures such as Georges Danton and Maximilien Robespierre - the latter of whom especially disapproved of the Hébertists' atheism.〔Furet, 141〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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