forbidden to remove more than twenty leagues from Paris;
urged to escape;
escapes, and is arrested and brought back;
acceptance of the new Constitution by the king;
dissolves the first constituent assembly;
refuses his assent to the decrees against the priests and emigrants;
issues a circular condemning emigration;
apathy of;
made to put on the red cap of liberty;
a plot to assassinate;
appears at the Feast of Federation;
holds his last ball, August 5th, 1792;
reviews the troops for the last time;
appeals to the Assembly for protection;
receives notice that his authority is a nullity;
made prisoner with his wife and family;
sent to the Temple;
trial of;
insults offered to;
condemned to death;
execution of.
Louvre, visit by the dauphin and dauphiness to the.
Luckner, Marshal.
Luxembourg, Count de, and the military banquet at Versailles.
Luzerne, M. de.
“MADAME DEFICIT,” a nickname given to
the queen.
Madame Royale refused in marriage to the Duc de Chartres.
Maillard, M., and the insurgents of 1789.
Mailly, Marshal de.
Maine, Duke de.
Malesherbes, M.
Malouet, M.
Mandat, M.; assassination of.
Mandense, Abbe.
Marat, M., denounces the queen.
Marchioness de Tourzel.
Marck, Count de la.
Maria Teresa, Empress of Austria, her habits and life;
her feelings at the departure of her daughter;
letter from, to the dauphin;
letter of advice to her daughter;
appoints Comte de Mercy as Embassador
to France;
letters from Marie Antoinette to;
advice to Marie Antoinette;
disapproval of her daughter appearing
in the hunting field;
expresses her approval of her daughter’s
liberality;
receives a letter from her daughter on
her state entrance into Paris;
anxieties about her daughter since her
accession as queen of France;
cautions her daughter against extravagances;
admonishes her daughter;
solicits an alliance between France and
Austria against Prussia;
writes about the birth of her daughter’s
child;
death of.
Marie Antoinette, importance of, in the French Revolution
of 1789;
estimation of her character formed from
her correspondences;
her birth, November 2d, 1755;
her childhood;
projects for her marriage;
her education;
proposal of marriage to the dauphin;
leaves Vienna April 26th, 1770;
Strasburg, reception at;
at Soissons;
meeting the king and dauphin at Compiegne;
visits the Princess Louise at the Convent
of St. Denis;
married at Versailles, May 16th, 1770;
difficulties in the path of;
courage in her conduct;
letter of advice from her mother;
her sympathy with the sufferers at the
fire-work explosion at Paris and
with the peasant at Fontainebleau