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456 pages, Paperback
First published September 21, 2012
Some will say that Robespierre forgot all these fine principles once he became the most influential figure on the Committee of Public Safety; that the apostle of liberty got rid of everyone who did not think the same as him; and the opponent of the death penalty chopped off thousands of heads. These are old charges, raised immediately after Thermidor, when it was necessary to legitimise the elimination of a man who personified the Revolution. ‘A blood-drenched tyrant’, we often read. The two terms merit examination.
I simply venture the hypothesis that ‘the Terror’ with a capital T was a creature of the Thermidorians, with the aim of demonising what they had just overthrown. The notion of Terror was then taken up celebrated historians and thinkers of all persuasions…
[...]
It does not make much sense, then, to fix the start of the Terror on 5 September 1793, no more than to see it ending on 9 Thermidor of year II. The guillotine did not stop working on that day, quite the contrary: the White Terror of the Thermidorians was a massacre that rivalled anything carried out by the guillotine in previous months.