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Lesson 10 min 20 XP

Lessons from the Revolution: Patterns That Repeat

What the French Revolution teaches us about political change, radicalization, and the enduring tension between liberty and equality.

Patterns of Revolution

Historians have identified patterns in the French Revolution that recur in later upheavals:

Fiscal crisis triggers political crisis: The revolution began because the state was bankrupt and needed consent to tax. Similarly, the Arab Spring was triggered by economic grievances, and many modern populist movements arise from economic anxiety.

Moderate leaders lose control to radicals: The revolution began with moderate constitutional reformers (Lafayette, Mirabeau) but was taken over by increasingly radical factions (Jacobins, then Robespierre). This pattern repeated in Russia (Kerensky to Lenin) and Iran (liberals to Khomeini).

External war accelerates internal radicalization: War with Austria and Prussia created the emergency atmosphere that justified the Terror. War almost always pushes revolutions toward authoritarianism.

Revolutions often end with a strongman: The chaos of revolution creates demand for order, which a military figure typically fills — Napoleon in France, Cromwell in England, various generals across postcolonial Africa and Latin America.

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