Define jocibin club and reign of …

CBSE, JEE, NEET, CUET
Question Bank, Mock Tests, Exam Papers
NCERT Solutions, Sample Papers, Notes, Videos
Posted by Sneha Sahoo 7 years, 4 months ago
- 1 answers
Related Questions
Posted by King Krishna 6 months, 1 week ago
- 2 answers
Posted by Ichchha>> Shukla** 10 months, 3 weeks ago
- 0 answers
Posted by Pranjal Agarwal 1 year, 4 months ago
- 2 answers
Posted by Ayushi Kumari 10 months, 2 weeks ago
- 1 answers
Posted by Shruti Pandey 1 year, 4 months ago
- 0 answers
Posted by Payal . 1 year, 4 months ago
- 1 answers
Posted by Manthan Dambhale 1 year ago
- 0 answers
Posted by Shadma Shafi Shazi 1 year, 4 months ago
- 2 answers
Posted by Tanisha Joshi 1 year, 4 months ago
- 2 answers
Posted by Sidhartha Mohanty 1 year, 4 months ago
- 1 answers

myCBSEguide
Trusted by 1 Crore+ Students

Test Generator
Create papers online. It's FREE.

CUET Mock Tests
75,000+ questions to practice only on myCBSEguide app
myCBSEguide
Yogita Ingle 7 years, 4 months ago
Jacobin club: Jacobin club belonged mainly to the less prosperous section of society. It was a political club formed to discuss government policies and plan their own forms of action. Jacobins planned an insurrection of a large number of Parsians who were angered by the short supplies and high prices of food.
The Reign of Terror: The Reign of Terror (1793–94) was a period of mass executions by which the Paris-based Jacobins secured power through fear against the province-based Girondists after the French Revolution (1789). The Terror famously used the guillotine to behead victims, including Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. The Terror grew out of fears that counter-revolutionary forces were threatening the revolution, but soon led to indiscriminant executions of nobles, clergy, and the educated in general, though the majority of victims are thought to have been peasants who denounced each other for personal rather than political reasons. The terror's leader, Maximilien Robespierre, exercised dictatorial powers as head of the Committee of Public Safety until his own beheading. Political stability eluded post-revolutionary France until Napoleon seized power in 1799.
0Thank You