“Let them eat cake”: drought, peasant uprisings, and demand for institutional change in the French Revolution
研究1788年干旱是否影响法国大革命期间农民起义的爆发,发现干旱严重的社区更易发生反封建起义,且受影响者通过陈情书表达了对制度变革的更高需求。
Abstract The paper studies whether a drought in 1788 affected the outbreak of peasant revolts during the French Revolution. I construct a community-level data set with information on local drought severity and peasant uprisings in 1789. Communities with severe drought conditions more often experienced peasant revolts against the feudal system. Then, I investigate a mechanism through which drought may have affected peasant revolts. Those more affected by the drought had higher demand for institutional change as expressed in the lists of grievances. The results provide evidence on specific ways in which the drought of 1788 impacted the French Revolution, a milestone in the democratization of Western Europe.