In short
In July 1830, Parisians built barricades and took to the streets after King Charles X tried to seize more power through a series of decrees that gutted the electorate and press freedom. Within three days of fighting, Charles X fled France, ending a decade-long attempt to restore absolute monarchy. The revolution installed his cousin Louis-Philippe as a constitutional monarch, reshaping French politics for the next 18 years.
How it unfolded.
The five-minute version
What actually happened.
Charles X had spent his reign undoing the constitutional gains of the Restoration, moving steadily rightward with policies that angered liberals, republicans, and the middle class alike. By 1830, he controlled neither the Chamber of Deputies nor public opinion. On July 25, he issued the Four Ordinances-decrees that dissolved the recently elected chamber, restricted voting rights, muzzled the press, and essentially abolished constitutional government. Paris erupted within 24 hours.
The barricades went up on July 27 across the Left Bank and Marais districts, built from paving stones, furniture, and whatever else could be hauled into the streets. Troops under Marshal Marmont fired on crowds; crowds fired back. The fighting was vicious and disorganized-no clear leadership, no unified demand, just the accumulated fury of years of broken promises. Over three days, estimates put deaths between 500 and 1,000, with far more wounded. The army, stretched thin and demoralized, lost control of the capital.
Charles X blinked first. On July 30, he revoked the ordinances-too late. The king's own advisors had already concluded his position was hopeless. By August 2, Charles had signed the abdication documents and fled toward the coast, eventually reaching England. The Bourbons, returned to power in 1815, were done. The question became: what came next?
The Chamber of Deputies had largely sat out the actual fighting, but they seized the moment to shape the aftermath. They rejected Charles's young grandson in favor of his cousin Louis-Philippe, Duke of Orléans, who at least had a track record of constitutional support. Louis-Philippe took the throne as a 'citizen king'-not by divine right, but by parliamentary choice. It was a narrower revolution than republicans wanted and less of a break than radicals demanded, but it reset French politics for the next 18 years.
Day by day.
Across 6 years, 8 pivotal moments.
Timeline
How it actually unfolded.
Charles X assumes throne
Charles, brother of Louis XVIII, becomes king and immediately signals a more absolutist approach, alarming liberals and constitutionalists.
Chamber of Deputies elected, liberals gain seats
Elections strengthen anti-Charles forces in parliament, limiting his legislative power.
The Four Ordinances issued
Charles X issues decrees dissolving the Chamber, restricting suffrage, controlling the press, and reasserting royal authority. Published in the Moniteur Universel.
Barricades erected in Paris
Street fighting erupts across the Left Bank and Marais. Crowds build barricades; troops under Marshal Marmont attempt to suppress them.
Fighting peaks; royal forces collapse
Army control of Paris disintegrates. Marmont withdraws; the barricades hold. Charles X recognizes his position is untenable.
Charles X signs abdication
The king formally renounces the throne and flees toward the coast, ending 15 years of Bourbon restoration.
Louis-Philippe proclaimed king
The Chamber of Deputies offers the crown to Louis-Philippe, Duke of Orléans, who accepts as a constitutional, not absolute, monarch.
Constitutional Charter adopted
Louis-Philippe's government establishes a revised constitutional framework, reinforcing parliamentary authority and limiting royal prerogative.
Where it happened.
Location inferred from recap.country via OSM Nominatim.
What they said.
5 witnesses speak: Royal, Synthesized.
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
- Grieving20%
- Supportive20%
- Predictive20%
- Skeptical20%
- Celebratory20%
“I would rather saw wood than remain King of the French under such conditions. I abdicate in favor of my grandson.”
- SupportiveExpertJul 1830
“The throne may change hands, but liberty-once tasted by the people-cannot be forgotten. We must now build a republic or a genuine constitutional monarchy.”
Synthesized from period accounts - Lafayette's July 1830 statements to peers - Lafayette emerged from semi-retirement to lead National Guard forces and broker a constitutional settlement as the old order collapsed. - PredictiveMediaJul 1830
“The people will not tolerate the resurrection of despotism. Charles has ignited a fire that no ordinance can extinguish.”
Synthesized from period accounts - *Le Constitutionnel*, July 1830 - Thiers, editor of the liberal *Constitutionnel*, commented on the uprising's causes as fighting raged in the streets. - SkepticalOfficialAug 1830
“The infection of French revolutionary sentiment will spread to our neighbors. We must be vigilant lest the contagion reach our own shores.”
Synthesized from period accounts - Wellington's correspondence and cabinet minutes, August 1830 - Wellington, then UK PM, watched France's upheaval with alarm, fearing it would spread across Europe and destabilize the Concert of Europe. - CelebratoryConsumerJul 1830
“The King sent soldiers; we sent back stones and courage. By the third day, Paris had reclaimed itself from the hands of tyrants.”
Synthesized from period accounts - Anonymous Paris diary entries, July 27–30, 1830 - A Parisian diarist recorded eyewitness observations as three days of street fighting toppled the Bourbon restoration on July 27–29.
The visual record.
Front pages.
3 outlets carried the story: Le Moniteur Universel, The Times of London, Allgemeine Zeitung.
Media coverage
What the world was reading.
4 pieces, ranked by how much they shaped the discourse.
Le Moniteur Universel
Newspaper · France · Jul 30, 1830
"Les Trois Glorieuses: Paris en Insurrection contre le Roi"
Synthesized from period reporting - The streets of Paris erupted in barricades as citizens rose against King Charles X's ordinances suspending the press and dissolving the Chamber of Deputies. By Thursday evening, the monarch's government had collapsed.
- Aug 3, 1830
The Times of London
Newspaper · United Kingdom
"Revolution in France: Charles X Forced to Abdicate; The Bourbons Fall"
Synthesized from period reporting - In a stunning reversal of the Restoration settlement, King Charles X has abandoned his throne after three days of pitched street fighting in the capital. The absolutist experiment has ended in spectacular failure.
- Aug 5, 1830
Allgemeine Zeitung
Newspaper · German Confederation
"Französischer König weicht Barrikaden: Abdankung nach Straßenkampf"
Synthesized from period reporting - The German press reports with alarm on France's descent into revolutionary chaos as Charles X's attempt to restore monarchical absolutism triggered the swift mobilization of Parisian workers and students.
- Aug 10, 1830
National Intelligencer
Newspaper · United States
"The French Throne Shaken: A Republic Looms in Europe"
Synthesized from period reporting - American observers watch closely as France convulses once more, with Charles X's ouster suggesting that liberal nationalism-not divine-right kingship-shall shape the continent's future.
At the cinema, on the charts.
The world it landed in
What was on the radio, the screen, and everyone's mind.
Same week, elsewhere
The July Revolution occurred in the twilight of Romanticism and during the rise of industrial capitalism. Eugène Delacroix's *Liberty Leading the People* (1830) became the visual apotheosis of the moment, depicting a bare-breasted Liberty striding over barricades-a painting that still defines how we visualize democratic revolution. The uprising took place amid rapid urbanization of Paris, where working-class discontent and bourgeois liberalism converged. Intellectuals like Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas drew inspiration; Hugo's *Notre-Dame de Paris* (1831) and later *Les Misérables* were deeply shaped by the memory of July's violence and idealism.
Then and now.
3 measurements then and now - the deltas the event left behind.
Then & now
The world the event landed in vs. the one it left behind.
French government form
Absolute monarchy under Bourbon restoration
1824
Fifth Republic (semi-presidential democracy)
2024
The July Revolution began the shift from absolutism toward democratic representation that continues today.
Voting rights in France
~100,000 male landowners (roughly 0.3% of population)
1830
Universal adult suffrage (~67 million eligible voters)
2024
The July Monarchy slightly expanded the franchise; true universal manhood suffrage arrived in 1848.
Role of popular uprising in European politics
Rare, often brutally suppressed; 1830 was a watershed
1830
Normalized as a democratic tool; street protest commonplace
2024
The July Revolution demonstrated that mass mobilization could force regime change, altering expectations of political change across the West.
The chain begins -
The chain of consequence.
Impact
What followed.
The July Revolution of 1830 toppled King Charles X and swept away the restored Bourbon order, replacing it with a constitutional monarchy under Louis-Philippe. It proved that popular uprising could reshape European governance, emboldening liberal movements across the continent for decades and shattering the post-Napoleonic settlement of 1815.
Threads pulled by this event
- 1830
Louis-Philippe becomes King
Following Charles X's abdication on August 2, the July Monarchy is established with Louis-Philippe as a 'citizen king,' promising constitutional rule and limiting royal power.
- 1830
Belgium gains independence
The Belgian Revolution, inspired by Paris's success, erupts in August 1830, leading to Belgian secession from the United Kingdom of the Netherlands by October.
- 1830
Nationalist uprisings across Europe
Polish, Italian, and German liberals launch revolts in 1830–31, emboldened by France's example, though most are suppressed by conservative powers.
- 1831
Constitutional monarchy becomes European template
Belgium adopts a written constitution modeled on liberal principles, establishing the constitutional monarchy as a viable alternative to absolute rule.
- 1848
Rise of republican and socialist ideologies
The July Revolution's limited reforms fuel radical movements; the February Revolution of 1848 topples Louis-Philippe's regime and briefly establishes the Second Republic.
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A small memory check
Test your memory.
Three quick questions about July Revolution in France. No score, no streak - just a beat to see what stuck.
1.What happened on August 2, 1830?
2.How many Estimated deaths?
3.When was the duration?