In short
On July 14, 1789, thousands of Parisians stormed the Bastille, a fortress-prison that symbolized the French king's unchecked power. Though it held only seven prisoners, the assault became the symbolic beginning of the French Revolution-the moment when ordinary people decided to challenge absolute monarchy. The event killed roughly 100 people and set France on a path toward constitutional government, democratic ideals, and years of violent upheaval.
How it unfolded.
The five-minute version
What actually happened.
The Bastille was never the nightmare prison of popular imagination-by 1789, it held just seven inmates-but it stood as a monument to arbitrary royal power. King Louis XVI's government was broke, having spent vast sums on wars and court extravagance. In May 1789, he convened the Estates-General, an assembly of clergy, nobility, and commoners meant to approve new taxes. Instead, the commoners broke away to form the National Assembly and began drafting a constitution without the king's blessing.
By early July, the situation in Paris had grown volatile. Bread prices had spiked, and rumors swirled that the king was amassing troops to crush the Assembly. On July 12, when news broke that the popular finance minister Jacques Necker had been fired, crowds took to the streets. By July 14, a mob estimated at several thousand had gathered outside the Bastille in the eastern part of the city, demanding weapons and gunpowder they believed were stored inside.
The fortress's commander, the Marquis de Launay, tried negotiating but eventually ordered his garrison of about 30 invalides (retired soldiers) and 32 Swiss Guards to fire on the crowd. Roughly 100 people died in the initial volleys, but the mob overwhelmed the defenders through sheer numbers and determination. By mid-afternoon, the Bastille's gates had fallen. The crowd executed de Launay and several guards, parading their heads on pikes through the streets-a brutality that foreshadowed the Revolution's darker turns.
The storming had immediate ripple effects. On July 15, Louis XVI accepted the Assembly's authority and recalled Necker. By August, the Assembly abolished feudalism and drafted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. The Bastille itself was demolished within weeks, its stones sold as souvenirs and its site left empty. July 14 became the national holiday of France-Bastille Day-and remains so today.
What made July 14 revolutionary wasn't just the violence; it was the moment ordinary people decided that power didn't belong solely to kings and nobles. The storming didn't end the Revolution-far from it-but it shattered the ancien régime's psychological hold on France and showed that a crowd with conviction could topple symbols of state power.
Day by day.
Across 181 days, 9 pivotal moments.
Timeline
How it actually unfolded.
Estates-General convenes
King Louis XVI calls the Estates-General to address the fiscal crisis. The assembly includes clergy, nobility, and commoners.
National Assembly formed
The Third Estate (commoners) breaks away to form the National Assembly and begins drafting a constitution without royal approval.
Necker dismissed and Paris erupts
King Louis XVI fires the popular finance minister Jacques Necker. News of his dismissal triggers riots in Paris and a call to arms.
Crowds arm themselves
Parisians raid the Invalides and seize approximately 30,000 muskets and other weapons. Makeshift militias begin forming across the city.
Storming of the Bastille
A crowd of thousands surrounds the Bastille fortress demanding weapons and gunpowder. After failed negotiations, the garrison fires on the crowd. The fortress is overwhelmed by mid-afternoon; its commander and several guards are executed.
Louis XVI capitulates
The king accepts the Assembly's authority and recalls Necker. Royal troops are ordered to withdraw from Paris.
Feudalism abolished
The National Assembly votes to abolish feudal rights and privileges, removing the legal basis of the old feudal system.
Declaration of Rights adopted
The National Assembly adopts the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, establishing principles of liberty, equality, and popular sovereignty.
Church property nationalized
The National Assembly votes to seize Church lands and property to help pay off the state debt, deepening the break between the Revolution and the Catholic hierarchy.
Where it happened.
Location inferred from recap.country via OSM Nominatim.
What they said.
5 witnesses speak: Synthesized, Royal.
People's voice
What people said, then.
Quotes drawn from contemporaneous newspapers, blogs, comment threads, interviews, and published opinion polls - ranked by how much each line shaped the discourse around the event.
Sentiment mix · 5 voices
- Shocked40%
- Celebratory20%
- Predictive20%
- Skeptical20%
“Is it a revolt? No, sire, it is a revolution.”
- CelebratoryMediaJul 1789
“The Bastille is taken! This fortress of tyranny has fallen to the people. The chains of despotism are broken!”
Synthesized from period accounts - Revolutionary pamphlets and eyewitness testimonies, July 1789 - Desmoulins witnessed the storming firsthand and immediately documented the event for contemporaneous circulation. - PredictiveExpertJul 1789
“The taking of the Bastille is not the work of reason-it is the thunder of the people. We must now channel this force or perish.”
Synthesized from Mirabeau's remarks in the National Assembly and correspondence, July 1789 - The influential deputy and voice of moderate reform offered early analysis of the revolution's trajectory. - SkepticalAnalystJul 1789
“While we seek rational reform through law, the mob has seized power through blood. This portends chaos, not order.”
Synthesized from Mounier's speeches and writings in the National Assembly, July-August 1789 - A constitutional moderate assessing the violent turn of events during early revolutionary debates. - ShockedConsumerJul 1789
“The people are mad with joy; they parade the heads of guards upon pikes. Civilization itself seems suspended.”
Synthesized from period letters and dispatches to British officials, July 1789 - British observers in Paris transmitted accounts of the panic and euphoria among ordinary citizens in the immediate aftermath.
The visual record.
Front pages.
3 outlets carried the story: Gazette de France, The Gentleman's Magazine, Moniteur Universel.
Media coverage
What the world was reading.
4 pieces, ranked by how much they shaped the discourse.
Gazette de France
Newspaper · France · Jul 15, 1789
"Événements Tumultueux à Paris - La Bastille Emportée par la Multitude"
Synthesized from period reporting - A mob of Parisians, numbering in the thousands, breached the fortress-prison of the Bastille on the afternoon of July 14th, overwhelming the garrison and claiming the symbol of ministerial despotism for the people.
- Jul 16, 1789
Moniteur Universel
Newspaper · France
"La Prise de la Bastille - Triomphe du Peuple Parisien"
Synthesized from period reporting - The fortress fell after a fierce engagement; soldiers deserted their posts as crowds surged through the gates, liberating political prisoners and claiming keys and arms as trophies of popular victory.
- Aug 1, 1789
The Gentleman's Magazine
Magazine · United Kingdom
"Insurrection in Paris: The Fall of the Bastille and the Portents for European Monarchy"
Synthesized from period reporting - London observers regard the storming of France's most notorious dungeon as a watershed moment signalling the potential collapse of absolute rule and the rise of popular sovereignty.
- Jul 25, 1789
Wiener Zeitung
Newspaper · Austria
"Unruhen in Frankreich - Festung Bastille Erstürmt"
Synthesized from period reporting - Vienna's court circles grow alarmed as reports confirm the seizure of the Bastille by Paris mobs, signalling revolutionary ferment that may spread beyond French borders and threaten the old order.
At the cinema, on the charts.
The world it landed in
What was on the radio, the screen, and everyone's mind.
La Marsellaise - Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle
Composed as a revolutionary battle hymn; became the French national anthem and remains a symbol of republican defiance.
Ça ira - Étienne Méhul (later versions)
Revolutionary song popularized at rallies and marches; became one of the most recognizable melodies of the period.
Same week, elsewhere
The Revolution saturated European culture with images of enlightened reason clashing against aristocratic corruption. By 1789, Enlightenment philosophy from Rousseau, Montesquieu, and Voltaire had primed educated elites to see absolute monarchy as intellectually and morally bankrupt. The storming of the Bastille validated what the era's most influential writers had already declared: the old order was not just wrong, but finished.
Then and now.
4 measurements then and now - the deltas the event left behind.
Then & now
The world the event landed in vs. the one it left behind.
Life expectancy in France
~28 years
1789
82.9 years
2024
Revolutionary reforms eventually improved public health infrastructure and nutrition, though immediate consequences were brutal.
French government structure
Absolute monarchy with feudal estates
1789
Semi-presidential republic with separated powers
2024
The Fifth Republic (established 1958) traces its legitimacy directly to revolutionary sovereignty principles.
Literacy rate in France
~37%
1789
99%
2024
Revolutionary commitment to public education eventually transformed France into a literate nation.
Legal code basis
Fragmented regional customary laws and royal decree
1789
Napoleonic Code and its descendants (still foundational)
2024
The Code Civil (1804) emerged directly from Revolutionary legal rationalization and remains Europe's most influential legal model.
The chain begins -
The chain of consequence.
Impact
What followed.
On July 14, 1789, Parisians stormed the Bastille fortress, a symbol of royal tyranny that had housed political prisoners for centuries. The assault unleashed a cascade of revolution across France and Europe, dismantling feudalism, monarchy, and the ancien régime in less than a decade. It remains the foundational act of modern democratic upheaval.
Threads pulled by this event
- 1789
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen
Drafted by the National Constituent Assembly in August 1789, this document established principles of liberty, equality, and natural rights that became the philosophical backbone of modern democracy and human rights frameworks.
- 1789
Abolition of Feudalism
On August 4, 1789, the National Assembly voted to eliminate feudal privileges and the feudal system itself, ending centuries of hierarchical land tenure and serfdom across France.
- 1793
Execution of King Louis XVI
Louis XVI was guillotined on January 21, 1793, following his trial for treason. His death crystallized the Revolution's break with absolute monarchy and reverberated across European courts.
- 1793
Reign of Terror
From September 1793 to July 1794, Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety orchestrated mass executions of perceived enemies of the Republic, killing an estimated 40,000 people and traumatizing European consciousness.
- 1799
Napoleonic Wars Begin
Napoleon Bonaparte seized power on November 9, 1799, and within five years launched military campaigns across Europe, spreading and then distorting revolutionary ideals through conquest and imperial rule.
Where does this story go next?
Next in the chain
Revolutions across Europe
Liberals, nationalists, and working-class radicals stormed European capitals demanding constitutions, independence, and land reform. Most…
Or follow another branch
The Fall of the Berlin Wall
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A small memory check
Test your memory.
Three quick questions about French Revolution Begins (Storming of the Bastille). No score, no streak - just a beat to see what stuck.
1.What happened on August 4, 1789?
2.When was the date?
3.What was the Commander of the Bastille?