
Respuesta :
Check all these as applying:
- a support of secularism Â
- a rejection of the aristocracy
- an interest in equality and liberty
- a pursuit of freedom and fairness
Historical context:
Prior to the French Revolution, the vast majority of the people (98% of the population), were all considered "the lower class" or "commoners," referred to as the 3rd Estate. Â (The clergy and aristocracy were the 1st and 2nd Estates.) Â Â So, a "lower class" person could have been a wealthy, bourgeois wine merchant ... or a day laborer in the city ... or a peasant farmer. Â They paid the taxes that supported the nation, while the clergy and aristocracy were almost entirely tax exempt. Â And the bulk of the population lived in poverty as city laborers or rural peasants. Â Bourgeois merchant-class folks had much more economic advantage, but also were taxed heavily and slighted on political rights.
So you can see why there was a movement against the aristocracy in the French Revolution -- as well as a movement in support of secularism. Â The church had been in collusion with the nobility to keep the traditional social order in place, and the Revolution was concerned about establishing equality and liberty, freedom and fairness.