The Plain

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





















The Plain
La Plaine
LeaderEmmanuel Joseph Sieyès
Founded6 September 1791; 227 years ago (1791-09-06)
Dissolved2 November 1795; 223 years ago (1795-11-02)
Headquarters
Tuileries Palace, Paris
NewspaperJournal des débats
Political club
Jacobin Club
(many affiliated)
Ideology
Big tent
Centrism
Political syncretism
Political positionCentre
Colors
     Grey
  • Politics of France

  • Political parties

  • Elections

The Plain (French: La Plaine), better known as The Marsh (French: Le Marais), was a political group in the French National Convention during the French Revolution. Its members were known as Maraisards, or derogatory Toads (French: Crapauds) as toads live in marshes. They sat between the Girondists' right-wing and Montagnards' left-wing. None of these three groups was an organized party as is known today. The Mountain and the Girondists did consist of individuals with similar views and agendas who socialized together and often coordinated political plans. However, The Plain consisted of delegates that did not belong to either of these two groups and as such was even more amorphous. The Plain constituted the majority of delegates to the Convention and would vote with either the Girondists or Mountain depending on the issue at hand, the current circumstances and mood of the Convention. They initially sided with the Girondists, but later backed the Mountain in executing Louis XVI and inaugurating the Terror. They later abandoned the Mountain, inaugurating the Thermidorian Reaction.



Electoral results



























Legislative Assembly
Election year
No. of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
No. of
overall seats won
+/–
Leader

1791
1,978,000 (1st)
46.3


345 / 745



New

Jean Bigot de Préameneu

National Convention

1792
1,747,200 (1st)
51.9


389 / 749




Increase 44

Lazare Carnot

Legislative Body

1795
Did not participate
Did not participate


200 / 750




Decrease 189

Jean Jacques Régis de Cambacérès


References



  • Will and Ariel Durant (1975). The Age of Napoleon. New York: Simon and Schuster.

  • Sylvia Neely (2008). A Concise History of the French Revolution. Lanham – Boulder – New York – Toronto – Plymouth, United Kingdom: Rowman Littlefield Publishers, Inc.


  • Simon Schama (1989). Citizens. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.







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