French emigration (1789–1815)
The French emigration refers to the mass movement of citizens from France to neighbouring countries in reaction to the instability and the upheaval caused by the French Revolution and the succeeding Napoleonic rule. Although initiated in 1789 as a peaceful effort led by the bourgeoisie to increase political equality for the Third Estate, the unprivileged majority of the French people, the revolution soon turned into a violent, popular movement. To escape political tensions and, mainly during the Reign of Terror, to save their lives, a number of individuals emigrated from France and settled in the neighbouring countries though a few also went to the Americas.
Start of revolution
When the Estates General convened in May 1789 and aired out their political grievances, many members of each estate found themselves in agreement with the idea that the bulk of France, the Third Estate, was carrying the tax burden without equitable political representation. They even took the Tennis Court Oath and swore to pursue their political goals and committing to drafting a constitution which codified equality. Soon, the ideologies of fair and equal treatment by the government and liberation from the old regime diffused throughout France.First émigrés
While Abbé Sièyes and several other men of the First and Second Estates supported the Third Estate's desire for equality, several members of the clergy and nobility were averse to it. Under the old regime, they were accustomed with a certain quality of living and with the right to pass this life to their children. The Revolution was looking to remove all privilege in an effort to make everyone politically equal, so the first émigrés, or emigrants, were proponents of the old order and chose to leave France although emigration abroad was still allowed.The summer of 1789 saw the first voluntary émigrés. Many of them were members of the nobility who migrated out of fear sparked by the Storming of the Bastille in July 1789. Notable émigrés include Madames Adélaïde and Victoire, aunts of King Louis XVI, who on 19 February 1791 started their journey to Rome to live nearer to the Pope. However, their journey was stopped by and largely debated by the National Assembly who feared that their emigration implied that King Louis and his family would soon follow suit. While this fear eventually resulted in the Day of Daggers and later the King's attempt to escape Paris, the Madames were permitted to continue their journey after statesman Jacques-François de Menou joking about the Assembly's preoccupation with the actions of "two old women".
Upon settling in neighbouring countries such as Great Britain, they assimilated well and maintained a certain level of comfort in their new lifestyles. It was a significant emigration and marked the presence of many royalists outside France where they could be safe, alive and await their opportunity to reenter the French political climate. However, events in France made the prospect of return to their former way of life uncertain. In November 1791, France passed a law demanding that all noble émigrés return by January 1, 1792. If they chose to disobey, their lands would be confiscated and sold, and any later attempt to re-enter the country would result in execution.
However, the majority of the émigrés left France not in 1789. at the crux of the revolution, but in 1792 after warfare had broken out. Unlike the privileged classes who had voluntarily fled earlier, those displaced by war were driven out by fear for their lives and were of lower status and lesser or no means.
Motivations to leave
As the notions of political freedom and equality spread, people began developing different opinions on who should reap the benefits of active citizenship. The political unity of the revolutionaries had begun to fizzle out by 1791 although they had succeeded in establishing a constitutional monarchy.Simultaneously, the revolution was plagued with many problems. In addition to political divisions, they were dealing with the hyperinflation of the National Convention's fiat paper currency, the assignats, revolts against authority in the countryside, slave uprisings in colonial territories such as the Haitian Revolution and no peaceful end in sight. Someone had to be blamed for the failures of the revolution, and it certainly could not be the fault of the revolutionaries, who considered themselves on the side of liberty and justice. As Thomas E. Kaiser argues in his article "From the Austrian Committee to the Foreign Plot: Marie-Antoinette, Austrophobia, and the Terror", centuries of Austrophobia was reincarnated into a firm belief in an Austrian-led conspiracy aiming to thwart the revolution. Kaiser states that the Foreign Plot:
consisted of a massive, multilayered conspiracy by counterrevolutionary agents abetted by the allies, who allegedly—and quite possibly in reality—sought to undermine the Republic through a coordinated effort to corrupt government officials associated with the more moderate wing of the Jacobin establishment and to defame the government by mobilizing elements on the extreme left."
A political faction known as the Jacobins, who had a very active radical faction, the Girondists, genuinely feared the conspiratorial plot. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, a philosophe influential in the Enlightenment, spread the idea of a "collective will", a singular purpose that all people of a nation must unequivocally support. If anyone was against the collective will, they were a part of this counterrevolutionary conspiracy, and since the momentum of the Revolution had to be protected at all costs, and all such threats had to be eliminated. That attitude toward dissension only grew more violent and bloodthirsty throughout 1793-1794 when Maximilien Robespierre enacted the Reign of Terror. To preserve the "republic of virtue", Robespierre had to "cleanse" the country of anyone who spoke out or acted against the virtues of the revolution by way of the guillotine.
Exodus
During the Terror, no one was safe from scrutiny or potential execution, and even Robespierre was guillotined himself. The omnipresent sense of fear inspired many of lesser means to flee France, often without much preparation and therefore no money or helpful belongings. Those who left France were a heterogeneous bunch socioeconomically and professionally although the vast majority of them were men. While those people came from diverse financial backgrounds, they all more or less suffered the same poverty while they travelled. In his thesis "'La Généreuse Nation!' Britain and the French Emigration 1792-1802", Callum Whittaker recounts that while leaving France one aristocrat "disguised herself as a sailor, and hid for a day in the hold of a ship underneath a pile of ropes". Also, captains and sailors saw that as an opportunity to earn a little on the side and so they levied taxes on the emigrants and left them on the shores of another nation with nothing. Yet still, thousands chose this path of discomfort and destitution because it at least provided the promise of peace.The exodus largely took place during 1791-1794. Groups of émigrés that fled during this period included non-juring priests, who refused to take the oath of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. They fled following the confiscation of their estates as well as legislation in August 1792, which stipulated that refractory priests had to leave France willingly or be deported to French Guiana.
The demise of Robespierre in 1794 provided a brief respite for the royalists at home and abroad. For example, those who had participated in the War in the Vendée communicated with their supporters in Great Britain. The rebels, in collaboration with their British allies, attempted to take a port on the French coast. However, the attempt was unsuccessful and resulted in the execution of 748 royalist officers, an event that became known as the Quiberon disaster. As the Republic evolved into the Directory, fears that émigrés with royalist leanings would return prompted harsher legislation to be passed against them, including the 1799 Law of Hostages, which considered relatives of émigrés as hostages and ordered them to surrender within ten days or be treated as émigrés themselves.
Jewish migration
The Jewish people were viewed with suspicion during this time. While a few of the Jewish people were politically aligned with the royalists, the distrust was unwarranted. Most Jews were not counterrevolutionaries and did not partake in crimes against the republic such as money crimes with the assignats although that was highly speculated. In Alsace, minorities such as the Jews and Protestants supported the revolution, unlike the Catholic majority. However, as Zosa Szajkowski states in his Jews and the French Revolutions of 1789, 1830, and 1848, it was still a widely held belief that "the Jews wanted to bring about a counter-revolution with all its destruction and death". Thus, the Jews were continuously unfairly suspected of fraud although rarely ever convicted for it. Also, their correspondence in Hebrew with those living outside France was restricted.August Mauger, the leader of the Terror in Nancy refused to give Jews passports. Those emigrating had to do so illegally, without proper documentation and thus without guarantee of success. The threat of execution was very real for many more people than simply the Jewish population of France. Lacoste, the safety commissioner of Alsace, believed that one fourth of the Parisian population should be guillotined. Jewish and non-Jewish alike emigrated to the Upper Rhine; despite periodic pogroms in the area, it was still better than the Lower Rhine, where the Terror was rampant; very few Jewish Frenchmen remained in Alsace. The Jewish émigrés had to face the challenges of assimilating to a new culture, which harboured a strong anti-Jewish and anti-French sentiment. Furthermore, the annual summertime invasions of the French Army from 1793 to 1799 meant the immediate evacuation of any immigrant population. Consequently, the exact number of French in any specific area varied at any given time, but historical estimates place the number in the several thousand.